You should worry about our military...
224 killed, 186 aircraft lost. Military pilots worry about being ‘the next accident’ Military aviation accidents have killed 224 pilots or aircrew, destroyed 186 aircraft and cost more than $11.6 billion since 2013
By Tara Copp, McClatchy Washington Bureau | Published Dec 4, 2020 2:52 PM
News Tech & Tactics

SHARE WASHINGTON — Military aviation accidents have killed 224 pilots or aircrew, destroyed 186 aircraft, and cost more than $11.6 billion since 2013 — and many aviators believe those numbers will keep rising, a congressional commission established to investigate those crashes has found.
The bipartisan National Commission on Military Aviation Safety was established by Congress “to make an assessment of the causes contributing to military aviation mishaps” after a string of deadly military crashes in 2018.
The commission conducted confidential interviews with thousands of military pilots, maintainers, aircrew and ground crew and looked at five years of accident data from 2013 to 2018 to get a better understanding about why the non-combat crashes were occurring.
McClatchy obtained a copy of the commission’s report, which was publicly released later on Thursday.
“You’d like to think after 18 months we came up with some silver bullet recommendations,” Army Gen. Richard Cody, chairman of the commission, said in an interview with McClatchy. “But it’s a whole bunch of things that are out of balance.”
What they did hear repeatedly from pilots and maintainers was that the situation had not improved.
“We went to 80 different places, 200 different units,” said Cody, who over his 36-year military career flew more than 5,000 hours in Army helicopters.
“They all worried about being the unit that was going to have the next accident. Almost every interview.” |