US F-16 fighter jet pilot ejects as plane crashes
in South
Korea during training
Pilot of F-16 fighter believed to have escaped
from plane moments before it plunged into sea
7 hours ago
Related FILE: Pilot ejects
from F-16 fighter jet before it smashed into warehouse
A US F-16 fighter jet crashed into the Yellow
Sea off the Korean
Peninsula as the pilot ejected
from the plane and was rescued, according to Yonhap News.
The fighter jet crashed in the waters on Monday while it was training near
the US Air Force base in Gunsan, it added, citing a military source.
The pilot ejected from the flight moments before the crash and was safely rescued by US military
officials, it said.
US officials in South
Korea and South Korea’s
defence ministry spokesperson could not immediately confirm the report.
The US military base at Gunsan airport is about 180km (110m) south of
Seoul and has approximately 2,800 air force members, army soldiers and other
officials at the installation.
It comes as North Korea on
Monday criticised South Korea and the US for “walking on the path of confrontation and war” by staging joint military drills, according to
Pyongyang’s official Rodong Sinmun newspaper.
It called the joint drills "futile" provocative acts that
will only hasten the South Korea’s destruction and slammed Seoul for
“recklessly” running amok to stage a war in the peninsula.
US Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcon and F-35A Lightning II fighter jets taxiing at Kunsan Air Base on 3 December, 2017 in Gunsan, South Korea
(U.S. Air
Force via Getty Images)
"Having the US on its back, the puppet group is pursuing an
ambition for a northern invasion and walking on the path to confrontation and
war. Its rash act is foolish and a futile bravado that hastens its ruin,"
it said.
US Air force F-16 jet
fighters taxi for take off during the “Max Thunder” South Korea-US military
joint air exercise at a US air base in the southwestern port city of Gunsan in
2017
(AFP via
Getty Images)
South Korea and the US have intensified training exercises in the
region in the wake of North Korea’s increasing ballistic missile tests,
including the banned new solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).
Although the allies argue that the field exercises are intended for
planning their response to a potential North Korean attack, Pyongyang
consistently denounces them as a rehearsal for invasion and has in the past
countered with missile launches.
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