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19 soldiers killed in controversial military plane
By Larry Roberts
21 April 2000
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On Saturday evening, April 8, an experimental US military plane,
the V-22 tilt-rotor Osprey, crashed during a military exercise
near Tucson, Arizona killing all 19 Marines aboard.
The planebuilt to land like a helicopter and fly like
a planehas been the source of controversy between the Pentagon
and Congress since it was proposed 18 years ago. The V-22 was
developed as an alternative to the Chinook helicopter used extensively
by the military during the Vietnam War.
The crashed plane was one of the first five Ospreys delivered
to the Marines only six months ago. The cause of the crash is
still unknown and could take months to determine. In the intervening
period military officials have decided to ground the craft until
the cause of the crash is known.
Already questions have been raised about the future of the
V-22 project. The manufacturers of the experimental plane, Boeing
Company and Bell Helicopter Textron, won a $37.3 billion contract
to produce 460 of the aircraft despite repeated attempts by the
Pentagon to stop the production of the plane. A broad coalition
in Congress, including right-wing Republicans and liberal Democrats,
were wooed by the plane's manufacturers to provide the funding
with the promise of high-tech jobs in 40 different states. Others
brought on board to support the project included the United Auto
Workers union.
The order called for 360 V-22s to be delivered to the Marines,
and 50 each for the Army and Navy, all over the next 10 years
at a price tag of $60 million each.
The revolutionary concept of the Osprey, stated
former Navy Secretary Sean O'Keefe, entranced Congress but was
too hard to realize. This was within the realm of the believable.
But all of the work needed to be done, to this day hasn't been
accomplished.
Reports state Pentagon officials had repeated disagreements
with Congress over the development of the aircraft, citing concerns
about safety and the belief that the plane could not provide what
it promised. In 1989 Pentagon officials tried to cancel the program,
charging that the plane was too expensive and too experimental
to ferry 20 to 24 men from a boat to shore. During the next four
years the Pentagon tried unsuccessfully to stop the program altogether.
In 1992 O'Keefe testified before the House Armed Services Committee,
stating he would not spend the $790 million Congress authorized
to build three Ospreys. It's an engineering impossibility,
said O'Keefe. The V-22 cannot be built to meet the requirements
specified.
A report issued by the General Accounting Office (the investigative
arm of Congress) in 1994, called the plane inadequate and
untested. The Pentagon's inspector general said the aircraft
had gone into development without proper authorization
and without formal review, the result of highly
unusual political factors.
Another report issued by the Pentagon in 1997 said the plane's
prototypes still were unable to carry passengers or hover over
unprepared landing zones, criticizing tests as extremely
superficial. In 1998 a GAO report concluded, after
15 years of development effort, the V-22 design has not been stabilized.
However sections within the military, particularly the Marine
Corps, without an alternative to its older helicopters, embraced
the manufacturers' promises that the plane would work wonders,
moving men in and out at speeds never before witnessed.
The crash two weeks ago is the second involving multiple deaths
on the V-22. On July 20, 1992 seven Marines were killed when an
Osprey plunged into the Potomac River near the Marine base at
Quantico, Virginia, outside Washington DC. Another crash involving
a V-22 took place at a Boeing test facility near Wilmington, Delaware
in 1999, resulting in no fatalities. The report states that the
Delaware crash was caused by a mechanical failure that resulted
in a fire in the aircraft's wing. The crew and plane were saved
by an automatic fire suppression system that extinguished the
blaze thus saving the aircraft from a catastrophic loss,
according to the report.
See Also:
Air Safety
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