Time Expired
As I said in the above post that article is very good, I just cannot find an open link to it. However again using US sources trying to get anything here is just about impossible. So I head south and then back track.
POW/Missing/Database(just WW2 but links off to other era's Korea, Vietnam, Gulf war) and worth the visit
http://www.aiipowmia.com/wwii/
I will keep poking around
Edit:
INDEPTH: CANADIAN PRISONERS OF WAR Behind barbed wire http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/cdnpows/
and
A.1.6. Maj. “Andrew Robert Makken” (Canadian)
In Operational Summary No. 00341 from the Headquarters of the 64th IAK in Andung to Moscow on December 6, 1952, an addendum to Operational Report No. 00340 for December 5, 1952 is included. The addendum reads, “On 5 December, our fighters shot down the leader of a group of four from the 51st Air Group made up of Canadian VVS trainees. The commander of the squadron, Major Andrew Robert Makken, parachuted and landed in the area of Supkhuni near the 51st anti-aircraft battery. Prior to the approach by our personnel, Maj. Makken opened fire with a pistol. He surrendered after we retaliated. He was turned over to the Chinese authorities.”
A Canadian F86 pilot, Squadron Leader Andrew Robert MacKenzie, 39th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, 51st Fighter-Interceptor Group, was shot down on December 5, 1952. MacKenzie, the most publicized Canadian POW of the Korean War, was held as a political prisoner in China until 1955. MacKenzie's casualty record states, “Lost while on combat mission over NK. Sq. leader MACKENZIE was last seen at XE 4767 (6135- III),” near Uiju, North Korea. MacKenzie claimed, upon repatriation, that he had been shot down by an F-86. 45 A board of inquiry examined MacKenzie's claim after the Korean War, but the results of this inquiry are not known.
Conclusion: 1) The Soviet version and UN version are consistent with the capture of Squadron Leader Andrew Robert MacKenzie, a Canadian F-86 pilot who lives in Canada today. 2) The MacKenzie case confirms the direct participation of Soviet forces in the pursuit and capture of UNC air crews. MacKenzie's casualty status is POW/repatriated. http://www.aiipowmia.com/koreacw/mockbacole02.html
Edit to add:
The eleven U.S. "political prisoners," were not the only U.S. servicemen the Chinese held after the Korean War. The New York Times,reported Communist China is holding prisoner other United States Air Force personnel besides the eleven who were recently sentenced on spying charges following their capture during the Korean War. This information was brought out of China by Squadron Leader Andrew R. MacKenzie, a Canadian flier who was released today by the Chinese at the Hong Kong border. He reached freedom here two years to the day after he was shot down and fell into Communist hands in North Korea...Held back from the Korean war prisoner exchange, he was released by the Peiping [sic] regime following a period of negotiations through diplomatic channels... Wing Comdr. Donald Skene, his brother-in-law who was sent here from Canada to meet him, said guardedly at a press conference later that an undisclosed number of United States airmen had been in the same camp with Squadron Leader MacKenzie...Wing Commander Skene said none of the Americans in the camp was on the list of eleven whose sentencing was announced by the Chinese November 23 [,1954].[11]http://www.nationalalliance.org/vietnam/ovrvw05.htm
Edit to add+add:
Objects of Concern: Canadian Prisoners of War Through the Twentieth Century
http://books.google.com/books?id=j7yJM6mG1PoC&pg=PA236&lpg=PA236&dq=canadian+prisoners+korea&source=web&ots=KbRm1z7Q0b&sig=pw3Jx3EtckwICYxjDModNS5TdUc#PPA235,M1