Japan's air force loses contact with F-35 stealth fighter
This incident is like the Twight Zone.
The US Navy has officially called off its search for Japan’s missing F-35A, with Tokyo promising to continue looking for the plane’s remains, as well as its missing pilot, using its own
state of the art military and civilian vessels.
The US deployment included a guided-missile destroyer,
multiple P-8A Poseidon aircraft, at least one U-2 spy plane and a remotely operated CURV 21 salvaging vehicle with advanced sonar onboard.
The US swept the area where the plane had disappeared on April 9, combing over 5,000 square nautical miles of ocean.
However, apart from a
flight data recorder which was damaged beyond repair, a piece of the
canopy, and parts from the plane’s tail fins, the joint search
has recovered little evidence which could help the countries determine the cause of the accident.
Amid the lack of new information, CNN has swathed the accident in an air of mystery, reporting that a full month after the plane’s disappearance,
Japan and its US allies were no closer to finding what caused it.
“This week, the Japanese government announced it recovered part of the jet’s flight data recorder, but it was so damaged that the cause of the expensive stealth fighter crash is still a mystery,” CNN reporter Ivan Watson
said in a news report on the subject.
The news network’s bewilderment is not without merit. Among its series of safety systems, the F-35 is said to be fitted with a transponder which could reveal its location on radar in the event of an emergency, including a crash.
What happened to that transponder is unknown.
Moreover, in hopes of expediting the search, the US Navy
deployed a Towed Pinger Locater 25, a device specifically designed to detect pings from the F-35’s emergency systems at
depths of up to 25,000 feet, but had no luck.
Adding to the air of mystery was the background of the plane’s pilot, 41-year-old Maj. Akinori Hosomi, who,
with his estimated 3,200 hours of flight time under his belt, was no rookie.
On the day of the crash, Hosomi communicated to radar operators and his fellow airmen that he planned to abort the routine training session, but did not specify a reason, with no emergency signals sent before he and his plane disappeared from
radars at 7:29 pm local time.
According to a Japanese Air Force official, the training was
not taking place in low-altitude conditions,
meaning that Hosomi should have had ample time to react to an emergency had something gone wrong.
In late April, Japanese media
sparked fears that the plane’s security may have been compromised before it went down, with Nikkei reporting that the
US military was “looking into” the risk that the plane’s oxygen system had been corrupted by hackers, “perhaps during system updates –
to plant the seeds for future software problems.”
The concerns were
exacerbated amid
fears stoked by US media of a
“nightmare scenario” in which America’s adversaries
Russia or
China might join the search for the plane.
In the month since, these fears proved unsubstantiated, with
Japanese Defence Minister Takeshi Iwaya saying there was no unusual activity to report from the presumed crash site.
US acting Defence Secretary Patrick Shanahan similarly indicated that he was not at all concerned about the prospect of China getting to the crash site first,
saying the Japanese were leading the investigation, with the US “working very collaboratively with them,
and we’ve got a lot of capability if what they have doesn’t prove to be sufficient, okay?”
A month after the crash, with no explanation regarding the vanishing plane provided, and with little wreckage found, Japan will now take up the search alone. Meanwhile, Tokyo has
assured its US partners that it will continue buying the American fighter jets in the coming years.
Japan’s fleet of F-35s presently stands at a dozen F-35As, a conventional takeoff and landing variant of the aircraft.
In late December, Japan increased its total
F-35 order to 147, including F-35As and F-35B variants of the plane
The crash of a U.S. Marine Corps F-35B that temporarily grounded the entire fleet of next-generation jets in 2018 was caused by a manufacturing defect in a fuel tube made by a United Technologies subcontractor, according to congressional investigators.
www.japantimes.co.jp
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More aviation anomalies????
Video
Chief of Naval Air Training officials said a jet crashed Friday at Naval Air Station-Kingsville.
Lt. Michelle Tucker said a T-45 Goshawk trainer crashed about 2:38 p.m.
Following a loss of engine power, a McDonnell Douglas (now Boeing) T-45 Goshawk impacted the terrain shortly after takeoff from Kingsville Naval Air Station (NQI/KNQI), Kingsville, Texas.
The aeroplane sustained unreported damage and the two pilots on board ejected, receiving minor injuries.
Both were transported to the hospital for treatment of minor injuries.
Officials said the pilots of a T-45 trainer jet saw an engine warning light come upon just before takeoff and crashed on the runway. The two pilots ejected and were taken to the hospital with minor injuries.
An official cause for the accident has been undetermined.
This is a developing story and we’ll have more as we learn about it.