2 Rescued, 5 Missing After US Warplanes Collide

They crashed into the ocean off Japan
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Dec 6, 2018 12:34 AM CST
5 Missing After 2 US Warplanes Crash Off Japan
A US Marine Corps KC-130 refueling plane in Ginowan city, Okinawa, southwestern Japan.   (Yuki Sato/Kyodo News via AP)

A Marine refueling plane and a fighter jet crashed into the Pacific Ocean off Japan's southwestern coast after colliding early Thursday, and rescuers found two of the seven crew members, one of them in stable condition, officials said. The US Marine Corps said that the 2am crash involved an F/A-18 fighter jet and a KC-130 refueling aircraft during regular refueling training after the planes took off from their base in Iwakuni, near Hiroshima in western Japan, the AP reports. The crash took place 200 miles off the coast, according to the US military. Japanese officials said it occurred closer to the coast, about 60 miles, and that's where the search and rescue mission found two crew members.

The two aircraft were carrying seven crew members in total, two in the F/A-18 and five others in the KC-130, when they collided and crashed into the sea south of the Muroto Cape on Shikoku island in southwestern Japan. The cause of the crash is under investigation. The Maritime Self-Defense Force, which dispatched aircraft and vessels to join in the search operation, said Japanese rescuers found one of the crew from the fighter jet in stable condition. Details of the second crew member, including his or her condition, were not released.

(More US military stories.)

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