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KABUL, Afghanistan - The U.S. military says that a U.S. Navy patrol plane
overshot the runway at an airfield in Afghanistan and was destroyed. A crew member broke an ankle, but the rest of the crew survived the Tuesday crash. The military's statement does not give further details on who was onboard the aircraft. The statement says a Navy P-3 Orion airplane sustained "serious structural and fire damage" at Bagram Airfield, the main U.S. military base north of Kabul. The military says it is investigating the accident. -- IN LIFE`S JOURNEY IT IS NOT ABOUT GOING TO THE GRAVE IN A WELL PRESERVED BODY , BUT SLIDING IN SIDEWAYS IN A TOTALLY WORN OUT BODY SAYING HOLY **** WHAT A RIDE!!!!!! Aviation is proof, that given the will, we have the capacity to achieve the impossible." - Captain Edward Rickenbacker "What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." Pericles |
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"SKUNK WORKS" wrote in message
... KABUL, Afghanistan - The U.S. military says that a U.S. Navy patrol plane overshot the runway at an airfield in Afghanistan and was destroyed. Why was a P-3 in a land-locked country? |
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"Alan Erskine" wrote in
: "SKUNK WORKS" wrote in message ... KABUL, Afghanistan - The U.S. military says that a U.S. Navy patrol plane overshot the runway at an airfield in Afghanistan and was destroyed. Why was a P-3 in a land-locked country? Just guessing..for lack of futher data.. Most likly an EP-3E ARIES [Airborne Reconnaissance Integrated Electronics System] bird.. |
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"John Szalay" wrote in message
42... "Alan Erskine" wrote in : Why was a P-3 in a land-locked country? Just guessing..for lack of futher data.. Most likly an EP-3E ARIES [Airborne Reconnaissance Integrated Electronics System] bird.. Ahhh... That would explain it. |
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"Alan Erskine" wrote in news:AkvLk.7526$sc2.987@
Just guessing..for lack of futher data.. Most likly an EP-3E ARIES [Airborne Reconnaissance Integrated Electronics System] bird.. Ahhh... That would explain it. Mo appears it MAY BE a P-3C of Recon Wing 5, ( VP-8, VP-10 or VP-26 ) http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...reconwing5.htm ================================================== ========================= = BRUNSWICK ME,— For the first time in more than 30 years, a Brunswick Naval Air Station-based plane crashed Tuesday, as a P-3 Orion missed a runway in Afghanistan and was destroyed. There were no fatalities in the crash, and only one crew member suffered a minor injury. John James, public affairs Officer at the Brunswick base, said Tuesday he couldn't divulge which patrol squadron the plane belonged to, nor the name of the crew member who was injured. "It was a Wing 5 aircraft deployed to Bagram in support of Operation Enduring Freedom," James told The Times Record. "The aircraft overshot the runway at Bagram Airfield. The right main landing gear collapsed and both right engines then caught fire. The Bagram Airfield fire department responded immediately and distinguished the fire. "All of the crew exited the left side of the airplane and there was only one minor injury, which was a sprained ankle," he continued. An American Forces Press Service report from Afghanistan claims that the injured crew member was treated at Craig Joint Theater Hospital at the Bagram location. The report also said the crash is still under investigation. |
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John Szalay wrote in
42: "Alan Erskine" wrote in news:AkvLk.7526$sc2.987@ Just guessing..for lack of futher data.. Most likly an EP-3E ARIES [Airborne Reconnaissance Integrated Electronics System] bird.. Ahhh... That would explain it. Mo appears it MAY BE a P-3C of Recon Wing 5, ( VP-8, VP-10 or VP-26 ) http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...reconwing5.htm ================================================== ==================== = ==== = BRUNSWICK ME,— For the first time in more than 30 years, a Brunswick Naval Air Station-based plane crashed Tuesday, as a P-3 Orion missed a runway in Afghanistan and was destroyed. There were no fatalities in the crash, and only one crew member suffered a minor injury. John James, public affairs Officer at the Brunswick base, said Tuesday he couldn't divulge which patrol squadron the plane belonged to, nor the name of the crew member who was injured. "It was a Wing 5 aircraft deployed to Bagram in support of Operation Enduring Freedom," James told The Times Record. "The aircraft overshot the runway at Bagram Airfield. The right main landing gear collapsed and both right engines then caught fire. The Bagram Airfield fire department responded immediately and distinguished the fire. "All of the crew exited the left side of the airplane and there was only one minor injury, which was a sprained ankle," he continued. An American Forces Press Service report from Afghanistan claims that the injured crew member was treated at Craig Joint Theater Hospital at the Bagram location. The report also said the crash is still under investigation. Wait a minute. Did the article actually say this: "The Bagram Airfield fire department responded immediately and distinguished the fire." Distinguished?!! I wonder who is handling editing up in Maine these days. Sure glad the crew got out okay from such a distinguished crash. Gary Anderson |
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On Tue, 21 Oct 2008 13:54:47 -0400, Alan Erskine wrote
(in article ): "SKUNK WORKS" wrote in message ... KABUL, Afghanistan - The U.S. military says that a U.S. Navy patrol plane overshot the runway at an airfield in Afghanistan and was destroyed. Why was a P-3 in a land-locked country? Anyone can find subs out in the ocean. It takes real skill to find 'em up in the mountains. That, or maybe, just maybe, that was an EP-3 of some kind. Which might be why no-one wants to say anything about who was aboard or what it was doing. BTW, Alan-me-lad... have you reported my 'forged' headers to Newsguy yet? Didn't think so. |
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Alan Erskine wrote:
"SKUNK WORKS" wrote in message ... KABUL, Afghanistan - The U.S. military says that a U.S. Navy patrol plane overshot the runway at an airfield in Afghanistan and was destroyed. Why was a P-3 in a land-locked country? Best Aircraft for the job. |
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![]() "Maple1" wrote in message ... Alan Erskine wrote: "SKUNK WORKS" wrote in message ... KABUL, Afghanistan - The U.S. military says that a U.S. Navy patrol plane overshot the runway at an airfield in Afghanistan and was destroyed. Why was a P-3 in a land-locked country? Best Aircraft for the job. The press is known for misidentifying aircraft types. The P-3 many have been an EP-3. http://vq-1.ahf.nmci.navy.mil/history.htm http://rota.navy.mil/vq2/History.htm Wayne http://www.soaridaho.com/ |
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"Wayne Paul" wrote in message
news ![]() The press is known for misidentifying aircraft types. The P-3 many have been an EP-3. Wayne http://www.soaridaho.com/ The RAAF have also based a couple of P-3s there for the last year or so, from 10 Sqn I believe. There are AP-3Cs, which are your common or garden variety sub-chaser with a few more antennae with fox tails. AIUI, they perform electronic surveillance and signal gathering functions. This sort of thing isn't new, I read in a squadron history (no cite unforch) during the Vietnam war, 10 Sqn Neptunes out of Butterworth in Malaysia would patrol northwards over Thailand to detect SAM launches over NVN. -- Cheers Dave Kearton |
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