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USAF MQ-4C “Triton” Drone Sends
Emergency Signal After Conducting ISR Mission in the Black Sea
According to recent reports from Open Source Intelligence (OSINT), a
United States Air Force (USAF) MQ-4C Triton drone, operating under the callsign
BLKCAT6, issued an emergency signal during an Intelligence, Surveillance, and
Reconnaissance (ISR) mission over the Black Sea, before landing at a naval
airbase in Sigonella, Sicily, Italy.
IMAGENEWSINTERNATIONALREGIONAL
(DEFENCE
SECURITY ASIA) — The United States Air Force’s (USAF) MQ-4C “Triton” drone has
been deployed to conduct Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR)
missions over the Black Sea, specifically to closely monitor Russian military
movements in the annexed Crimea region of Ukraine.
However,
recent reports indicate that a USAF MQ-4C Triton drone, using the callsign
BLKCAT6 while on an ISR mission in the Black Sea, issued an emergency signal
before landing at a naval airbase in Sigonella, Sicily, Italy.
According
to information from the flight tracking application RadarBox, the drone with
callsign BLKCAT6 transmitted a 7700 signal through its transponder, a code
recognized by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) indicating
an emergency during flight.
The
MQ-4C was detected landing shortly after sending the emergency signal.
In addition to RadarBox, other flight monitoring applications such as Flight Emergency Alerts and SquawkAlert also reported that the High Altitude Long Endurance (HALE) drone issued an emergency signal.
ICAO
emergency codes include 7700 (general emergency), 7600 (communication
problems), and 7500 (aircraft hijacking).
Further
reports have emerged suggesting the drone, valued at approximately $125
million, crashed near the Romanian coast.
Unconfirmed
reports have also stated that the U.S. military deployed several Black Hawk
helicopters to the Romanian coastal area in an attempt to locate the wreckage
of the Triton.
While
some sources attribute the crash to bad weather, other reports claim the
incident was not weather-related.
The
United States and NATO have been actively deploying their reconnaissance
aircraft, including the recently deployed MQ-4C Triton, to Europe to undertake
missions gathering intelligence in the Black Sea.
The
intelligence gathered by these aircraft, including the P-8 Poseidon and MQ-4C
Triton, is then relayed to Ukrainian forces to facilitate more precise
targeting of Russian military positions in Crimea.
Reports
have linked a recent significant missile attack by Ukrainian forces using
MGM-140 ATACMS against Russian military positions in Crimea to these
reconnaissance flights by American and NATO drones in the Black Sea.
Recently,
Russia has threatened to take more severe actions against U.S. and NATO drones
operating in the Black Sea, though Moscow has not elaborated on the nature of
these actions.
In
an incident in March last year, a Russian Su-27 fighter jet intercepted and
allegedly “clipped” the propeller of a USAF MQ-9 Reaper drone, causing it to
crash into the Black Sea.
The
U.S. military condemned the Russian jet’s “unsafe” flying behavior which led to
the drone’s crash. At the time, the drone was engaged in an ISR mission near
Crimea, a region formerly belonging to Ukraine but now occupied by Russia.
The
Russian Defense Ministry denied any contact between its fighter jet and the
American drone, claiming it crashed due to “sharp maneuvers” performed during
the flight.
The
Triton drone, developed by Northrop Grumman and based on the “RQ-4 Global
Hawk,” is considered more advanced and capable, equipped with sophisticated
phased array antenna radar, cameras, and sensors to monitor coastal areas and
maritime environments.
It
is operated by a crew of four, capable of flying missions longer than 30 hours
and reaching altitudes above 60,000 feet. — DSA
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