Friday, January 28, 2022

Images emerge of one the US Navy's newest stealth fighters crashing into the sea

 

begin quote from:

https://www.cnn.com/2022/01/28/asia/us-navy-f-35-crash-photos-intl-hnk-ml/index.html

Images emerge of one the US Navy's newest stealth fighters crashing into the sea

Lockheed F-35C Lightning II of #USNavy that crashed near the northwest coast of Philippines 3 days ago. This happened due to pilot's mistake during landing on USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70) aircraft carrier on January 24, 2022. VFA-147 Argonauts now has eight F-35Cs left.

Seoul, South Korea (CNN)Images have emerged of a US Navy F-35C stealth fighter crashing into the South China Sea earlier this week.

The F-35C, a single-engine stealth fighter and the newest jet in the US Navy fleet, crash-landed on the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson during routine operations on Monday, the Navy said.
The $100 million warplane impacted the flight deck of the 100,000-ton aircraft carrier and then fell into the water as its pilot ejected, Navy officials said. The pilot and six sailors aboard the Vinson were injured.
    CNN's Ivan Watson explains US Navy's race to salvage its fighter jet:
      Here's why the US doesn't want its F-35 wreckage to fall into China's hands 03:03
      A spokesperson for the US Navy's 7th Fleet said Friday that an investigation into the incident is continuing while confirming images that have emerged on social media since the crash are genuine.
        "The ship has assessed that the video and photo covered by media today were taken onboard USS Carl Vinson ... during the crash," Cmdr. Hayley Sims, public affairs officer for the 7th Fleet said.
        A still photograph shows the stealth fighter floating on the surface of the South China Sea, its cockpit open and ejection seat missing.
          A video shows the F-35 on its landing approach to the aircraft carrier but cuts off before the plane impacts the flight deck.
          The Navy said earlier this week that the damage to the Vinson was only superficial, and it and the carrier's air wing have resumed normal operations.
          An effort to recover the fighter jet from the bottom of the South China Sea had begun, said Lt. Nicholas Lingo, another 7th Fleet spokesperson.
          Analysts said raising the aircraft would likely be a complex operation, and one that would be monitored by China, which claims almost all of the 1.3 million-square-mile South China Sea as its territory.
          The F-35C contains some of the Navy's most advanced technology, and the analysts said Washington would want to keep it out of Beijing's hands.
            However, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said on Thursday they were aware that a US Navy stealth fighter had crashed in the South China Sea, but "had no interests in their plane."
            "We advise [the US] to contribute more to regional peace and stability, rather than flexing force at every turn in [the South China Sea]," China's Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said.

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