U.S. fighter jet crashes in Libya
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
A United States F-15E Strike Eagle fighter jet has crashed in Libya the U.S. military said. The U.S. Air Force jet, flying in support of the no-fly zone over Libya as part of Operation Odyssey Dawn, crashed somewhere outside of Benghazi last night around 10:30pm CET (9:30pm UTC), according to the Daily Telegraph. Telegraph reporter Rob Crilly found the wreckage, saying on his Twitter feed: "[J]ust found a crashed US warplane in a field. believe a mechanical failure brought it down[.]"
The crew members - the pilot and his weapons officer - both ejected safely. A U.S. rescue helicopter found the pilot, while the weapons officer was found and cared for by Libyan rebels until U.S. forces retrieved him. Both crew members suffered only minor injuries, the military said. The pilots' identities will be released after the next of kin are notified.
A spokesman for the U.S. Africa Command said it was believed the crash was caused by mechanical failure and was not shot down by hostile forces. However, an investigation into the cause of the incident is underway, according to the military. The aircraft, based out of RAF Lakenheath, England, flew out of Aviano Air Base in Italy.
Sources
- Rob Crilly, James Kirkup and Rob Winnett. "Libya: US fighter jet crash lands in field near Benghazi" — Daily Telegraph, March 22, 2011
- Elisabeth Bumiller, Kareem Fahim and Alan Cowell. "American Warplane Crashes in Libya as Ground Fighting Continues" — New York Times, March 22, 2011
- "U.S. fighter crashes in Libya" — CNN, March 22, 2011
- Justin Weaver. "US Air Force F-15E Incident in Libya; Crew Safe" — U.S. Africa Command, March 22, 2011
- Rob Crilly. "just found a crashed US warplane in a field." — Twitter, March 22, 2011