Gubbermint claims to have found the wreckage of the F-35. I think it is still out there, running wild and living free.
|
F-35 Jet Mystery Ends as Wreckage Is Found
Debris was found north of Charleston, S.C., one day after a pilot on a training mission ejected and the military lost track of his jet.
By Michael Levenson and Rebecca Carballo
Sept. 18, 2023
Updated 8:08 p.m. ET
The United States military said on Monday evening that searchers had found the wreckage of an F-35 jet in South Carolina, one day after the Marine Corps inexplicably lost track of it when the pilot ejected with a parachute.
Joint Base Charleston said in a statement that searchers who had been looking for the missing warplane located debris in Williamsburg County, north of Charleston. A spokesman for the U.S. Marine Corps later confirmed that it was from the jet.
“Members of the community should avoid the area as the recovery team secures the debris field,” the statement said, adding that Joint Base Charleston was handing command of the incident to the Marine Corps “as they begin the recovery process.”
The discovery came after an array of government and civilian agencies had spent more than 24 hours searching for the missing F-35. Joint Base Charleston had even made an unusual plea for help, releasing a phone number for members of the public to call with information about the lost plane.
Before the debris was found, the search had prompted widespread speculation. Was the jet still somehow airborne, perhaps flying on autopilot? Had it crashed undetected into a lake or the ocean? Did the Pentagon really have no method for tracing it?
“How in the hell do you lose an F-35?” Representative Nancy Mace, a South Carolina Republican and the first woman to graduate from the Citadel, had asked her social media followers. “We’re asking the public to what, find a jet and turn it in?”
The mystery began when a Marine pilot used an emergency parachute to eject from the F-35B Lightning II on Sunday afternoon over North Charleston, S.C. He was taken to a local medical center and was in stable condition there, Jeremy Huggins, a spokesman for Joint Base Charleston, said Sunday.
It was unclear why the pilot needed to bail out. A second F-35 pilot who had also been on the training mission landed without any problems, Tech. Sgt. James Cason, another base spokesman, said.
Based on the missing plane’s last known position, the base had been focusing on an area around Lake Moultrie, a large lake about 33 miles north of Charleston, and Lake Marion, the state’s largest lake, in coordination with the Federal Aviation Administration, Joint Base Charleston said.
Williamsburg County, where the debris was found, is not far from those lakes.
It was not immediately clear if anyone in the vicinity had reported seeing or hearing a crash.
The search involved the Marines, its Second Marine Aircraft Wing, Navy regional authorities in the Southeast, the Civil Air Patrol and the Federal Aviation Administration. Law enforcement teams across the state were also helping.
The disappearance of the jet had prompted jokes and memes on social media.
On Threads, the Instagram platform, the actor Misha Collins wrote under a picture of the jet: “That’s what they get for leaving the keys in the ignition. In other news, check out my new listing on Craigslist. No lowball offers!”
“What’s the problem?” Tim Robinson, the editor in chief of Aerospace, the magazine of the Royal Aeronautical Society, asked on X (formerly Twitter). He posted a photo of an F-35 on a golf course. “I just sneaked off for a quick round of golf.”
More seriously, the incident prompted broader safety concerns.
The Marines released a statement on Monday saying that Gen. Eric M. Smith, the acting commander of the Marines, had directed all Marine Corps aviation units to conduct a two-day “pause in operations” this week to discuss aviation safety matters and best practices.
The statement said the directive came after three “Class-A aviation mishaps” over the last six weeks. Such mishaps involve property damage of $2.5 million or more, according to a Marine Corps document.
During the “safety stand down,” aviation commanders will lead discussions with Marines focusing on the fundamentals of safe flight operations, ground safety, maintenance and flight procedure and maintaining combat readiness, the statement said.
The F-35 is one of three types of small jets that have been made for the U.S. military.
The F-35B, which can both take off and land vertically as well as hover in place, is only operated by the Marine Corps, which can fly them from aircraft carriers and smaller amphibious assault ships alike.
The jet is designed to carry weapons like air-to-air missiles and guided bombs in internal bays, which reduces the warplane’s radar signature, making it harder for potential enemies to find. That stealthiness may also be partially responsible for why the Pentagon appears to have lost contact with the plane.
Manufactured by Lockheed Martin, the F-35B Lightning II completed its first combat strikes for the Marine Corps in Afghanistan in 2018.
The F-35’s Joint Strike Fighter program is the Department of Defense’s most expensive weapon system program, with estimates that it will cost nearly $1.7 trillion to buy, operate, and sustain the aircraft and systems over their lifetime, the Government Accountability Office said in a report released in May
The cost of the Marine Corps jet has varied over the life of the program. The federal government said it was as low as $70 million in 2012, and the Project on Government Oversight said it was as high as $135 million in 2020.
John Ismay, Jesus Jiménez and Christine Hauser contributed reporting.
Michael Levenson joined The Times in December 2019. He was previously a reporter at The Boston Globe, where he covered local, state and national politics and news. More about Michael Levenson
Rebecca Carballo is a reporter based in New York. More about Rebecca Carballo
|
Responses:
|
Replies are disabled on threads older than 7 days.
|
|