29 April 2023

Unexplained Black Hawk and Apache AH-64 Helicopters Crashes

 

29 Apr, 2023 04:59

Deadly crashes ground US Army flights

Twelve soldiers have been killed in incidents over the last month, including a fatal episode earlier this week

Deadly crashes ground US Army flights











"The US Army has ordered non-critical military flights to be grounded after lethal helicopter crashes in Alaska and Kentucky. The Pentagon said all aviators, including active-duty troops, must undergo additional safety training.

The military branch announced the move on Friday, saying the order is effective immediately for all Army personnel excluding those “participating in critical missions.” 

“The safety of our aviators is our top priority, and this stand down is an important step to make certain we are doing everything possible to prevent accidents and protect our personnel,” Army Chief of Staff James McConville said.

The ground stop was prompted by a string of recent mishaps involving Army aircraft. On Thursday, two AH-64 Apache helicopters crashed near Healy, Alaska following a training mission, leaving three soldiers dead and another wounded. The military has not yet determined the cause of the incident, but investigators were expected to arrive at the scene of the crash on Saturday.

Nine Army troops from the 101st Airborne Division were also killed in a separate training accident in Kentucky last month. During a nighttime mission, two UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters collided in midair while flying in formation, leaving no survivors.

Yet another helicopter wreck took place in Alaska last February, also involving an Apache gunship, which resulted in injuries to soldiers and damage to the aircraft but no fatalities.

Though the lethal crashes are still under investigation, the Army said “there is no indication of any pattern between the two mishaps.”

To avoid incidents going forward, active duty troops are set to receive new safety training between May 1 and 5, while National Guard and Reserve members will have until May 31 to complete the course, according to Army spokesman Lt. Col. Terence Kelley."

RELATED Ground Self-Defense Force 

Military.com
Japan Ground Self-Defense Force Trains with U.S. Marines
A live-fire training with the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force and U.S. Marines as part of Exercise Iron Fist.
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1 week ago
A Japan Ground-Self Defense Force UH-60JA Black Hawk similar to this one crashed into the East China Sea near Miyako Island, April 6, 2023, while conducting surveillance.

A Japan Ground-Self Defense Force UH-60JA Black Hawk similar to this one crashed into the East China Sea near Miyako Island, April 6, 2023, while conducting surveillance. (JGSDF)

CAMP FOSTER, Okinawa — Japan’s army has identified another two officers whose remains were recovered from the wreckage of a military helicopter that crashed into the East China Sea earlier this month with 10 aboard, including a division commander.

Maj. Akira Yamai, 47, and 2nd Lt. Keisuke Uchima, 27, both from the 8th Air Wing at Vice-Camp Takayubaru in Kumamoto prefecture, were among the five bodies recovered from the UH-60JA Black Hawk since April 16, a Japan Ministry of Defense statement said Tuesday.

Five of the six bodies found in a section of the fuselage have been recovered and identified. One body remains with the aircraft section found April 13 in 350 feet of water just offshore of Irabu Island, southwest of Okinawa. 

Four people aboard the Black Hawk are unaccounted for.

Yamai and Uchima were piloting the aircraft when it crashed April 6 shortly after departing Miyako Airport, Japanese public broadcaster NHK reported Tuesday. A Ground Self-Defense Force spokeswoman on Thursday declined to confirm those details.

The Black Hawk was on a reconnaissance flight 11 miles northwest of Miyako Airport when it went down with Lt. Gen. Yuichi Sakamoto, commander of the Ground Self-Defense Force’s 8th Division, four members of the division’s headquarters staff, four members of the wing and Camp Miyako commander Col. Masahito Iyota aboard.

Sakamoto, 55, was appointed division commander less than a week before the crash. His body was identified on April 21, the same day Japan’s coast guard suspended around-the-clock search efforts.

The Self-Defense Force continued the search this week and navy divers are headed back to the wreck site, the spokeswoman said.

Offshore Engineering Co. of Tokyo has been hired to raise the aircraft section from the seabed, a Ground Self-Defense Force spokesman said Tuesday. Work could begin as soon as Saturday.

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Keishi Koja is an Okinawa-based reporter/translator who joined Stars and Stripes in August 2022. He studied International Communication at the University of Okinawa and previously worked in education.
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Matthew M. Burke has been reporting from Okinawa for Stars and Stripes since 2014. The Massachusetts native and UMass Amherst alumnus previously covered Sasebo Naval Base and Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, Japan, for the newspaper. His work has also appeared in the Boston Globe, Cape Cod Times and other publications.

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