View Full Version : C17 hit by SAM yesterday?
Argyll
12-10-2003, 10:36 AM
Anyone got more info on this?
Also just heard an AH64 has also crashed(controlled landing!!) in Iraq!.....no fatalities !!
Argyll
12-10-2003, 11:12 AM
33 views and no comments?
I guess you never knew about the C17 then or it's not been reported!
Roger Rabbit
12-10-2003, 11:16 AM
Where did you find out about it?
There is anything on the BBC website or ******* when i just looked.
Roger Rabbit
12-10-2003, 11:16 AM
Where did you find out about it?
There is anything on the BBC website or ******* when i just looked.
Eddie
12-10-2003, 11:18 AM
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/afp/20031210/wl_mideast_afp/iraq_us_missile_engine&cid=1514&ncid=1478
BAGHDAD (AFP) - A US Air Force plane made an emergency landing after one of its engines exploded after takeoff from Baghdad, an air force spokeswoman said after reports from Washington of a possible missile hit.
AFP/File Photo
"It was yesterday (Tuesday) morning about 4:00 am (0100 GMT). A C-17 shortly after departure from the airport had a flight emergency. They had an explosion in one of their engines," Captain Carrie Clear, of the 447 Air Expeditionary Group, told AFP Wednesday.
One person was slightly hurt and the aircraft landed safely, she said.
The C-17, a cargo and troop transport plane, was carrying three crew and 13 passengers, Clear said.
"The cause of the explosion is still being investigated," she said.
A US defence official speaking on condition of anonymity in Washington said "they believe it was hit by a surface-to-air missile based on witness reports."
Carrie said that "of course" a missile strike is one possible cause but a bird strike or rock entering the engine also may have been responsible.
"They're looking at everything," Clear said.
In the only confirmed missile strike at the airport since major combat operations ended in Iraq (news - web sites) on May 1, a DHL cargo plane was hit by a shoulder- fired SA-14 surface-to-air missile as it took off from Baghdad airport on November 22.
DHL resumed flights into Iraq on December 3.
Seoulstriker
12-10-2003, 11:18 AM
there is nothing on any of the major news networks or anything from the DoD press service.
Argyll
12-10-2003, 11:18 AM
There was something on sky news about an hour ago round about the same time as the AH64 reports came in,according to them the Pentagon confirmed that the plane was hit by a SAM as it took off from B'dad Intl in the early hours of yesterday morning!
Seoulstriker
12-10-2003, 11:21 AM
ahhhhh...
i found it.
http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_story/0,3566,105339,00.html
Two U.S. Soldiers Killed; Plane Attacked
Wednesday, December 10, 2003
BAGHDAD, Iraq — Two U.S. soldiers were killed and four wounded in separate attacks Wednesday in the northern city of Mosul (search), the military said. American troops in another northern city arrested five Iraqi policemen and 24 others suspected of ties to insurgents.
Meanwhile, guerrillas hit a U.S. Air Force transport plane with a surface-to-air missile, causing the engine to explode, a senior Pentagon source said Wednesday. The plane landed safely.
And the military said the emergency landing of a U.S. helicopter near Fallujah (search), west of Baghdad, was likely the result of ground fire by insurgents.
In the Mosul attacks, guerrillas fired on soldiers guarding a gasoline station, killing one and injuring another, said a spokesman for the U.S. Army's 101st Airborne Division (search).
A few hours later, guerrillas detonated a roadside bomb and opened fire on a U.S. military convoy, killing one soldier and wounding three others, the spokesman said on condition of anonymity.
At the gas station, U.S. soldiers returned fire and killed one assailant, the spokesman said. But witnesses said the attackers escaped, and that U.S. troops opened fire on passing cars, killing a driver.
Witnesses identified the driver as a member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, or PUK, a major pro-American political party. The PUK's Mosul headquarters is across the street from the gas station.
An Associated Press reporter saw blood stains at the spot where witnesses said the soldiers had stood, and a bullet-riddled and bloodstained car said to belong to the PUK member.
Early Wednesday, U.S. troops and Iraqi police in the oil-rich northern city of Kirkuk arrested 29 people, including five policemen, who were suspected of ties to the former regime of Saddam Hussein, said Adnan Mohammed Saleh, a city police officer. Saleh said the policemen were suspected of passing intelligence to anti-occupation rebels.
With the plane incident, a C-17 had just lifted off from Baghdad International Airport before dawn Tuesday when the engine exploded, slightly injuring one of the 16 passengers and crew, said U.S. Air Force Capt. Carrie Clear of 447th Air Expeditionary Group, based at the airport.
The plane returned to the airport and landed safely, Clear said.
A senior Pentagon official, speaking on condition of anonymity, described the explosion as a direct hit by a ground-fired missile, "like the DHL" incident that damaged a cargo plane departing the airport last month. That plane, too, landed safely.
In the downing of the helicopter, the U.S. military said the OH-58D Kiowa observation helicopter took fire Tuesday just south of the town of Fallujah, west of Baghdad, and was forced to make an emergency landing.
A U.S. military official who declined to be identified said Wednesday that a preliminary examination indicated the aircraft had been brought down by small-arms fire or a projectile fired from the ground. Neither of the two crew members was injured.
It was the fifth U.S. helicopter downed in Iraq in just over five weeks.
Fallujah has been a focus of resistance to the U.S. occupation, although the city has been relatively peaceful of late. The town sits in the heart of the Sunni Triangle where the majority of attacks on American forces have occurred since the ouster of Saddam.
In Baghdad on Wednesday, 3,000 funeral marchers mourned three men killed in a bombing of a Sunni mosque a day earlier. The mosque's imam, Farouk Khamis, accused Shiite Muslim extremists of carrying out the attack.
"Prominent Shiite clerics are urged to deter those politically motivated groups so that the unity of Muslims in this country can be preserved," Khamis told the mourners.
Also Wednesday, Iraq-based members of the Iranian opposition group, the Mujahedeen Khalq, denounced a decision by Iraq's U.S.-appointed Governing Council to expel them from the country by the end of the year.
In a statement released at the group's camp northeast of Baghdad, the group said the decision favored Iran's efforts to establish a "satellite theocratic dictatorship in Iraq."
Mujahedeen members should be out of Iraq by the end of the year and the group's offices in Iraq will be closed, the Governing Council said. A reporter who visited the group's Baghdad office on Wednesday found it occupied by squatters who said the militia had abandoned it.
The group has battled Iran's theocratic regime since the late 1970s. In 1999, it was listed as a terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department.
Over the years, the U.S. government had maintained an ambiguous posture toward the group, even allowing it and an associated organization, the Paris-based National Council of Resistance of Iran, to maintain offices in Washington. In August, however, the State Department shut down both groups' offices, earning rare praise from Iran.
In Baghdad, Iraq's interim government voted to establish a war crimes tribunal to prosecute top members of Saddam's regime, two people who attended the meeting said. Officials planned to establish the tribunal Wednesday.
U.S. authorities are holding several dozen of Saddam's top aides who could be tried under the new measure.
aktarian
12-10-2003, 11:42 AM
C-17, hit by SAM, lands safely
Associated Press
BAGHDAD, Iraq — Guerrillas hit an Air Force transport plane with a surface-to-air missile, causing the engine to explode, a senior Pentagon source said Wednesday. The plane landed safely.
The C-17 had just lifted off from Baghdad International Airport before dawn Tuesday when the engine exploded, slightly injuring one of the 16 passengers and crew, said Air Force Capt. Carrie Clear of 447th Air Expeditionary Group, based at the airport.
The plane returned to the airport and landed safely, Clear said.
A senior Pentagon official, speaking on condition of anonymity, described the explosion as a direct hit by a ground-fired missile, “like the DHL” incident that damaged a cargo plane departing the airport last month. That plane, too, landed safely.
Clear said the incident was under investigation.
http://www.airforcetimes.com/story.php?f=1-292925-2468345.php
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