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   sci.military.naval      Navies of the world, past, present and f      118,642 messages   

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   David P to All   
   Kenneth Rowe, Who Defected From North Ko   
   10 Jan 23 00:09:17   
   
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   Subject: Kenneth Rowe, Who Defected From North Korea With His Jet, Dies at 90   
   From: David P    
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   From: imbibe@mindspring.com   
      
   Kenneth Rowe, Who Defected From North Korea With His Jet, Dies at 90   
   By Richard Goldstein, Jan. 5, 2023, NY Times   
      
   Two months after the Korean War armistice, Lt. No Kum-Sok of the NK Air Force   
   broke away from his 16-plane patrol near the nation’s capital, Pyongyang;   
   streaked undetected into South Korea in his Soviet-built MIG jet fighter; and   
   landed at a military    
   airfield manned by the United States Air Force and airmen from allied nations.   
      
   A veteran of more than 100 combat flights, the 21-year-old pilot climbed out   
   of his silver swept-wing plane, which was emblazoned with a red star and   
   bristling with machine guns, as astonished airmen surrounded him. He had   
   fulfilled his dream of fleeing    
   Communism, and he brought a gift for the USAF: — the first intact MIG to   
   fall into its hands.   
      
   A year later, he had a new name — Kenneth Rowe — and a new country, having   
   begun life in America as a college student.   
      
   When Mr. Rowe died at 90 on Dec. 26 at his home in Daytona Beach, he was   
   remembered for having handed America an intelligence bonanza with his   
   headline-making flight in a MIG-15bis, a late-model version of the fighters   
   that dueled with American F-86    
   Sabre jets in the Korean War.   
      
   His death was confirmed by his daughter, Bonnie Rowe.   
      
   Mr. Rowe had become a member of North Korea’s Communist Party and “played   
   the Communist zealot,” as he put it, while serving in the Korean War. But he   
   had been influenced by his anti-Communist father and his mother’s Roman   
   Catholic upbringing to    
   yearn for life in a democracy. He had been thinking of a way to get to America   
   since Korea was divided after WWII and the Soviet-backed Kim Il-sung imposed   
   Communist rule over what became North Korea.   
      
   When he landed at the Kimpo (now Gimpo) airport on the morning of Sept. 21,   
   1953, he had seemingly pulled off a flawless escape. But disaster almost   
   struck. As his wheels hit the runway, an F-86 that had just landed came   
   roaring toward him from the    
   opposite end. The two pilots brushed past each other, barely avoiding a   
   collision.   
      
   “I unfastened my oxygen mask and breathed free air for the first time in my   
   life,” he remembered in his memoir, “A MiG-15 to Freedom” (1996),   
   written with J. Roger Osterholm.   
      
   He parked amid a cluster of American warplanes, tore a framed photograph of   
   Kim Il-sung from his instrument panel, jumped out of his cockpit and threw the   
   picture to the ground.   
      
   And then, as he remembered it, “all hell broke loose around the air base.”   
   Dozens of airmen scrambled to reach him, and the commander of the Fifth Air   
   Force, Lt. Gen. Samuel E. Anderson, rushed to the base.   
      
   “Nobody seemed to know what to do,” Mr. Rowe recalled. “I shouted   
   ‘Motorcar, motorcar, motorcar,’ which was about the only English I   
   remembered from high school, hoping that someone would bring an automobile to   
   drive me to HQ.”   
      
   Two pilots put him into a jeep; told him to turn over his semiautomatic   
   pistol, which he gladly did; and brought him to a building for interrogation.   
   The incident became a major news story.   
      
   “Red Lands MIG Near Seoul and Surrenders to the Allies,” The New York   
   Times reported in a Page 1 headline.   
      
   Seeking to determine the MIG’s strengths and weaknesses in anticipation of   
   future conflicts with the Soviet Union and its allies, the Air Force   
   dispatched some of its most accomplished test pilots — including Maj. Chuck   
   Yeager, who had gained fame in    
   1947 as the first flier to break the sound barrier — to put the MIG-15   
   through strenuous maneuvers. Their verdict: The F-86 was the superior warplane.   
      
   Kenneth Hill Rowe, as he came to be known, was born on Jan. 10, 1932, in a   
   town of 10,000 in the northern part of the Japanese-occupied Korean Peninsula.   
   His father, No Zae, was an administrator for a Japanese industrial   
   conglomerate in Korea. His mother,   
    Veronica Ko, was a homemaker.   
      
   He became a naval cadet in 1949 as an avenue to completing a free college   
   education — and perhaps one day getting a chance to defect at a foreign   
   port. He was later transferred to the Air Force and received jet-fighter   
   training from Soviet airmen in    
   Manchuria. He got his wings at 19.   
      
   Eight weeks after the Korean armistice, he peeled off from his patrol, reached   
   an altitude of 23,000 feet and turned south for a 13-minute flight across the   
   Demilitarized Zone to Kimpo.   
      
   Luck was with him. The American air defense radar just north of the airport   
   had been shut down for routine maintenance, and neither American planes aloft   
   nor antiaircraft crews had spotted him.   
      
   During the late stages of the Korean War, the Air Force had dropped leaflets   
   over North Korea offering a $100,000 reward to the first North Korean pilot to   
   defect with a MIG. Mr. Rowe maintained that he knew nothing of that reward and   
   said he had simply    
   wanted to live a free life. But he accepted it.   
      
   He came to the United States in May 1954 and was something of a celebrity. He   
   was introduced to Vice President Richard M. Nixon, was interviewed by Dave   
   Garroway on NBC’s “Today” program and appeared on broadcasts for the   
   Voice of America. He    
   received an engineering degree from the University of Delaware, became an   
   American citizen in 1962 and worked as an engineer for major defense and   
   aerospace companies. He was later a professor of engineering at Embry-Riddle   
   Aeronautical University in    
   Daytona Beach.   
      
   In addition to his daughter, Mr. Rowe is survived by his wife, Clara (Kim)   
   Rowe; his son, Raymond; and a grandson.   
      
   When Mr. Rowe arrived in the United States, his MIG-15bis was brought over as   
   well, for additional flight testing by the Air Force.   
      
   Seven decades later, that plane still exists, and resides at the National   
   Museum of the U.S. Air Force near Dayton, Ohio.   
      
   Its red star repainted, it is on display alongside an American F-86 Sabre jet,   
   a remembrance of the dogfights of the Korean War in the swath of sky known as   
   MIG Alley.   
      
   https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/05/world/asia/kenneth-rowe-dead.html   
      
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