Flight
data recorders from crashed Japanese navy helicopters show no sign of
mechanical failure
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Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force
TOKYO –
An initial analysis of flight data recorders recovered from the crash of two Japanese navy
helicopters showed no sign of mechanical
problems, Japan’s defense minister said Monday, indicating likely human error.
One of the eight crew members died and a search is continuing for the seven
others.
Defense Minister
Minoru Kihara said an initial analysis of data from the two flight data
recorders on each helicopter showed no abnormality during their flight and that
mechanical failure was most likely not the cause of the crash.
The two SH-60K
reconnaissance helicopters from the Maritime Self-Defense Force lost contact
late Saturday during nighttime anti-submarine training near Torishima island,
about 600 kilometers (370 miles) south of Tokyo, officials said.
A crew member who was
recovered early Sunday from the water was later pronounced dead. Searches
continued Monday for the seven who were still missing, along with the fuselage
of the aircraft. The seabed at the crash site east of Torishima is about 5.5
kilometers (3.4 miles) deep and the recovery is considered a challenge.
Officials believe the
two helicopters likely came too close and collided, Kihara said.
The flight data
recorders from the two aircraft were found close together, along with a blade
from each helicopter, a number of helmets and fragments believed to be from
both aircraft — signs the two SH-60Ks crashed almost at the same spot,
officials said.
The twin-engine,
multi-mission helicopters developed by Sikorsky and known as Seahawks were
modified and produced in Japan by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries. Japan has about
70 of the modified Seahawks.
The crash comes as
Japan, under its 2022 security strategy, accelerates
its military buildup and fortifies its defenses on southwestern Japanese
islands in the Pacific and East China Sea to counter threats from China’s
increasingly assertive military. Japan in recent years has conducted its own
extensive naval exercises as well as joint drills with the United States and
other partners.
Saturday’s nighttime
anti-submarine warfare training involved only the Japanese navy, navy chief of
staff Ryo Sakai said.
In 2017, a Japanese
navy SH-60J, an earlier generation Seahawk, crashed during nighttime
training due to human error, killing three
crew. In July 2021, two SH-60s had a minor collision off the southern island of
Amami Oshima, with both suffering blade damage, but causing no injuries.
Following the 2021
collision, the navy introduced a set of measures aimed at ensuring enough
distance between aircraft. Sakai said Saturday’s crash could have been
prevented if all safety measures had been adequately followed.
In the U.S., the fatal crash of a MH-60S Seahawk during
training off the coast of California in 2021 was attributed to mechanical
failure from unsuspected damage during maintenance, according to the U.S. Navy.
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