Otis Willie
February 3rd 04, 10:28 PM
Two Enterprise F-14 Tomcats collide; crews survive, By JACK DORSEY,
The Virginian-Pilot
(EXCERPT) © February 2, 2004 |
Last updated 9:04 PM Feb. 2
Two F-14 Tomcat crews survived a mid-air collision over the Red Sea on
Monday, managing to return to the Norfolk-based carrier Enterprise
with successful landings and no injuries.
The accident occurred early in the evening local time – about midday
in Norfolk – while the ship was making its way back toward the
Mediterranean Sea.
The aircraft are assigned to the Fighting Checkmates of Fighter
Squadron 211, based at Oceana Naval Air Station in Virginia Beach and
attached to Carrier Air Wing 1.
Names of the aircrews were not released.
“We have very few details about how the mid-air occurred, but the main
issue is everybody made it back on deck safe,” said Mike Maus, a
spokesman for the Atlantic Fleet Naval Air Force, headquartered in
Norfolk.
The extent of damage to the two F-14s also was unknown, Maus said.
They were believed to have made relatively routine cable-arrested
landings on deck, using their tailhooks to stop.
The nearly 30-year-old planes are twin-engine, swept-wing
fighter/bomber jets capable of flying in excess of twice the speed of
sound, or more than 1,400 mph.
They were...
U.S. and friendly nation laws prohibit fully reproducing
copyrighted material. In abidance with our laws this report
cannot be provided in its entirety. However, you can read it
in full today, 03 Feb 2004, at the following URL. (COMBINE
the following lines into your web browser.) The
subject/content of this report is not necessarily the
viewpoint of the distributing Library. This report is provided
for your information and discussion.
http://home.hamptonroads.com/stories/story.cfm?story=65569&ran=207114
---------------------------
Otis Willie
Associate Librarian
The American War Library
http://www.americanwarlibrary.com
The Virginian-Pilot
(EXCERPT) © February 2, 2004 |
Last updated 9:04 PM Feb. 2
Two F-14 Tomcat crews survived a mid-air collision over the Red Sea on
Monday, managing to return to the Norfolk-based carrier Enterprise
with successful landings and no injuries.
The accident occurred early in the evening local time – about midday
in Norfolk – while the ship was making its way back toward the
Mediterranean Sea.
The aircraft are assigned to the Fighting Checkmates of Fighter
Squadron 211, based at Oceana Naval Air Station in Virginia Beach and
attached to Carrier Air Wing 1.
Names of the aircrews were not released.
“We have very few details about how the mid-air occurred, but the main
issue is everybody made it back on deck safe,” said Mike Maus, a
spokesman for the Atlantic Fleet Naval Air Force, headquartered in
Norfolk.
The extent of damage to the two F-14s also was unknown, Maus said.
They were believed to have made relatively routine cable-arrested
landings on deck, using their tailhooks to stop.
The nearly 30-year-old planes are twin-engine, swept-wing
fighter/bomber jets capable of flying in excess of twice the speed of
sound, or more than 1,400 mph.
They were...
U.S. and friendly nation laws prohibit fully reproducing
copyrighted material. In abidance with our laws this report
cannot be provided in its entirety. However, you can read it
in full today, 03 Feb 2004, at the following URL. (COMBINE
the following lines into your web browser.) The
subject/content of this report is not necessarily the
viewpoint of the distributing Library. This report is provided
for your information and discussion.
http://home.hamptonroads.com/stories/story.cfm?story=65569&ran=207114
---------------------------
Otis Willie
Associate Librarian
The American War Library
http://www.americanwarlibrary.com