Select date

May 2024
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

UPDATE: Mystery Crash of US Air Force E-11A Military Plane in Afghanistan

30-1-2020 < 21st Century Wire 22 709 words
 

Yesterday, US officials announced their successful reconnaissance mission to the crash site for USAF Bombardier E-11A spy plane recently downed over Taliban-controlled Ghazni province in Afghanistan.





U.S. military command in Kabul claim to have recovered the bodies of two U.S. service members on Tuesday of this week, from the site of an American surveillance plane crash in Taliban-controlled territory in Afghanistan.




In addition, they have indicated that to the flight data recorder was also retrieved from the crash site, but that the plane’s remains were destroyed.


The US say the cause of the crash is unknown and deny any Taliban involvement, stating that, “there are no indications the crash was caused by enemy fire.”








However, there seems to be much more to this story than the Pentagon is letting on. The trepidation we’re seeing could be for a number of obvious reasons, either strategic or political…






South Front reports…


US Navy Seals, reinforced by Afghan Security Forces recovered the remains of the crew who died when a US Air Force Bombardier E-11A crashed in the Taliban-controlled Ghazni province. The plane crashed on January 27th, and the US troops allegedly went there on January 28th, but the timeline is suspect.


The Bombardier E-11A is a electronic surveillance aircraft and is likely from the 430th Expeditionary Electronic Combat Squadron based out of Kandahar Airfield, which is located approximately 286 kilometers away from where it crashed. The Bombardier E-11A typically carries a Battlefield Airborne Communications Node (BACN), which is a communications relay and gateway system that enables real-time information flow across the battlespace between similar and dissimilar tactical data link and voice systems through relay, bridging, and data translation in line-of-sight and beyond-line-of-sight situations.


Ghazni police chief Khaled Wardak said US choppers landed at the site in the late afternoon on January 28th.



“Following the removal of the bodies, our forces have moved back to their bases. We don’t know where the foreigners have taken the bodies,” added Wardak.



Nasir Ahmad Faqiri, the head of the provincial council in Ghazni, confirmed the operation, saying the Americans took at least two bodies from the scene.


The US Forces in Afghanistan spokesperson Col. Sonny Leggett confirmed the operation, saying that the remains of two individuals were recovered, not revealing their identities.




“The remains were found near the crash site, treated with dignity and respect by the local Afghan community, in accordance with their culture,” said the statement from U.S. Forces-Afghanistan.


The Taliban were first to report the crash and have not claimed responsibility for crashing it. Media attributed it to them, but the US said that there was no indication of it being downed by enemy fire.


“The crash is under investigation, there are no indications the crash was caused by enemy fire. We will provide additional information as it becomes available,” said U.S. Army Colonel Sonny Leggett, a spokesman for U.S. Forces-Afghanistan on Twitter. “Taliban claims that additional aircraft have crashed are false.”


It is unclear, however, how the US forces entered the Taliban-controlled area unimpeded, after there were numerous photographs and footage of the group being deployed to the location of the crash. The US allegedly recovered the remains with helicopters, and it is also unclear how that happened, since the Taliban have, more than once, proven more than capable of dealing with enemy helicopters.


There are videos showing numerous military vehicles, and aircraft circling above en route to the crash site, as early as on January 27th, thus it is questionable that the Taliban simply packed up and left, allowing the US to recover the remains and black box.


Print