 During World War II aircraft flew missions over Japan to strike and destroy targets. Some would never make it back. Petty Officer Jeremy Graham shows us how one of those aircraft is making its way back home after 70 years. In March 1945 a U.S. Navy F-4U Corsair fighter bomber made an emergency water landing after being damaged in an air raid against the Japanese base. The pilot of the plane was never found, but parts of the plane were rediscovered almost 50 years later when the propeller and engine were tangled in a fisherman's net off the coast of Psyche City. During the departure ceremony, the mayor of Psyche City formally turned over the parts inventory to commander U.S. Fleet Activity Sausagebow, Captain Matthew Oveus, who accepted on behalf of the Naval History and Heritage Command. As this remnant from World War II makes its way back home, it will serve as a reminder of the close bond built between Japan and the United States of America. Petty Officer Jeremy Graham, Fleet Activities, Sausagebow, Japan.