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US E-11A BACN crashes near Ghanzi, Afghanistan

dapaterson

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Numerous sources reporting a USAF BACN (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battlefield_Airborne_Communications_Node) crashed just outside Ghanzi earlier today.

https://samchui.com/2020/01/27/unidentified-aircraft-crashes-in-afghanistan/#.Xi8iiEdKiUk
 
There were 5 on board and went down in Ghazni, Taliban country.

https://www.foxnews.com/world/us-military-plane-crashes-in-afghanistan
 
Taliban are claiming to have splashed it with a Strela. Doubtful of course, but you never know...
 
Two bodies have been recovered. RIP.

https://www.stripes.com/news/middle-east/two-bodies-recovered-by-us-from-site-of-air-force-plane-crash-in-afghanistan-1.616569

 
Halfway down this article: 2 may still be alive.
https://nationalpost.com/news/world/taliban-claims-responsibility-for-downing-special-american-aircraft-in-afghanistan
 
The USAF had 4 of these aircraft. My earlier comment about the aircraft's condition might be wrong as the aircraft appears to have skidded making an emergency landing. It is said that 2 crew members may be missing hence the large US and Afghan commando prence now on scene. Fingers crossed.
 
My initial thought after seeing the videos was that the crash did look survivable as the crash appeared to be controlled. The last report I read was that there was only 2 onboard.

The main cabin door was still closed, however the starboard emergency egress door was missing (probably melted out).
 
My understanding is that if it were on an operational flight there would be two or three techs in addition to the aircrew. It seems likely that if all the crew were accounted for, USAF would have said something to that effect. I really, really hope there’s aren’t a couple crew/their bodies missing.
 
If I was aircrew that was enacting my E&E plan I probably wouldn't want the media telling the world  I was missing.

 
That's why DoD said the aircraft had a crew less than 5. If there were MIA then they would be E&E. The ANA and SEAL tm 6 are all over the AO so hopefully there will be a resolution sooner than later.
 
heavy Taliban presence had blocked access for some 300 elite commandos who’d been sent to the crash site. “As a result, one commando soldier was killed and all of the commando forces retreated and returned back to the city yesterday,”

Humm
 
And now for some totally up to date aircrew E&E pointers: https://youtu.be/FGCsgdG-cOc
 
According to Stars & Stripe two bodies have been recovered and that they were the only two onboard.

Remains of two US service members recovered from site of plane crash in Afghanistan

By PHILLIP WALTER WELLMAN AND CAITLIN KENNEY | STARS AND STRIPES Published: January 28, 2020

KABUL, Afghanistan — American troops recovered the remains of two U.S. service members killed in the crash of an Air Force aircraft that went down in a Taliban-controlled area of Afghanistan, the U.S. military said Tuesday.

The service members were aboard an Air Force Bombardier E-11A communications aircraft that crashed Monday in Ghazni province. They were the only people aboard the plane at the time of the crash, a U.S. defense official said on condition of anonymity.

The plane’s flight data recorder also was recovered from the site, and the remnants of the plane were destroyed by American troops, according to a statement issued by U.S. Forces-Afghanistan. The cause of the crash is under investigation.

No further details were provided about the crash, which occurred about 80 miles southwest of Kabul.

U.S. forces reached the crash site overnight Monday and cordoned off the area, said Arif Noori, a spokesman for Ghazni province’s governor. No insurgents were in the area when the U.S. troops arrived, he said.

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

The names of the two service members will be released once they have been positively identified and 24 hours have passed after their next of kin has been notified in accordance with Defense Department policy.

The Taliban have claimed responsibility for downing the aircraft, but the U.S. military in Afghanistan said there was no indication the plane was brought down by enemy fire. Afghans near the crash site — about 10 miles from Ghazni city — said the aircraft appeared to be having technical problems before it crashed.
related articles

The Air Force’s four E-11A aircraft are assigned to the 430th Expeditionary Electronic Combat Squadron and operate out of Kandahar Airfield.

Equipped with the Battlefield Airborne Communications Node, the E-11A helps to ensure communication in a country where mountains and poor infrastructure pose challenges for military operations.

Dubbed “Wi-Fi in the sky,” they are in the air every minute of the day, the Air Force has said.

Reporter Zubair Babakarkhail contributed to this report.

Link


 
An official announcement from DOD.

DOD Identifies Air Force Casualties
Jan. 29, 2020

The Department of Defense announced today the deaths of two Airmen who were supporting Operation Freedom's Sentinel. They died January 27 in the crash of a Bombardier E-11A aircraft in Ghazni Province, Afghanistan. The cause of the crash is under investigation.

Killed were:

Lt. Col. Paul K. Voss, 46, of Yigo, Guam. He was assigned to Headquarters Air Combat Command at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia. For more information, media may contact the Air Combat Command public affairs office at (757) 764-5007.

Capt. Ryan S. Phaneuf, 30, of Hudson, New Hampshire. He was assigned to the 37th Bomb Squadron at Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota. For more information, media may contact the 28th Bomb Wing public affairs office at (605) 385-5056.

https://www.defense.gov/Newsroom/Releases/Release/Article/2069206/dod-identifies-air-force-casualties/source/GovDelivery/
 
A little more about LTC Voss and Captain Phaneuf. Phaneuf was a rated B1 bomber pilot.

https://www.stripes.com/news/middle-east/air-force-aviators-killed-in-afghanistan-crash-were-lieutenant-colonel-with-25-years-of-service-and-b-1-bomber-pilot-1.616815
 
Additional information on the crash.

E-11A Pilots Died Flying An Aircraft From A Fleet So Small None Are In The U.S. For Training

All of the individuals who fly these highly specialized planes, all of which are forward-deployed in Afghanistan, volunteer for the job.

By Joseph TrevithickJanuary 29, 2020

The Pentagon has identified the two pilots who died in the crash of a U.S. Air Force E-11A Battlefield Airborne Communications Node, or BACN, aircraft in Afghanistan earlier this week. The announcement highlights the fact that all individuals who fly these highly specialized communications aircraft volunteer for this job and that there are so few of these planes that they're all forward-deployed in Afghanistan. This means that aviators have no chance to train directly on an E-11A in the United States before they head to Kandahar Airfield to begin flying actual operational sorties.

It's important to stress that there is no indication that this Air Force practice of soliciting volunteers who may have limited immediate experience on the E-11A or similar aircraft types in any way contributed to the mishap in Afghanistan on Jan. 27. Much of the circumstances about that crash and its immediate aftermath remain unclear.

On Jan. 29, 2020, the U.S. military officially announced that Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Paul Voss and Captain Ryan Phaneuf had died in the mishap. The E-11A, with the serial number 11-9358, had crashed in Afghanistan's Ghazni Province on Jan. 27. Voss and Phaneuf were the only two individuals on board the aircraft when it went down, despite initial reports that there might have been as many as five people on board. The Pentagon has also denied claims since then that the Taliban shot the aircraft down and says the investigation into the incident is still ongoing. There is also no evidence to support the militant group's assertion that a senior Central Intelligence Agency officer had been on the plane.

The E-11A that crashed, along with the three remaining aircraft of this type that the Air Force operates, are all assigned to the 430th Expeditionary Electronic Combat Squadron at Kandahar Airfield. However, the Pentagon's statement said that Lieutenant Colonel Voss was assigned to Headquarters, Air Combat Command, situated at Joint Base Langley-Eustis in Virginia and that Captain Phaneuf was a member of the 37th Bomb Squadron based at Ellsworth Air Force Base in South Dakota.

Headquarters, Air Combat Command is not a flying unit and 37th Bomb Squadron, part of the 28th Bomb Wing, flies B-1 Bone bombers, making it somewhat curious that members of both organizations would be in Afghanistan flying the E-11A, which are derived from the Bombardier BD-700 business jet. Stars & Stripes reporter Chad Garland helped explain the situation on Twitter.

"Worth noting that the Air Force has said the pilots who fly the E-11A mission all volunteered," he wrote in a Tweet after the Pentagon identified Voss and Phaneuf as those who had tragically perished in the crash. "They fly combat missions beginning from their first sortie in the unique modified Bombardier Aviation jet, which they don’t even get to fly until they reach Kandahar, per the USAF."


    They fly combat missions beginning from their first sortie in the unique modified Bombardier Aviation jet, which they don’t even get to fly until they reach Kandahar, per the USAF. https://t.co/H3PJV3NxFV
    — Chad Garland (@chadgarland) January 29, 2020

Pilots bound for the 430th Expeditionary Electronic Combat Squadron do get a month's worth of training in a simulator before they go to Afghanistan. They then get a week of "in-theater indoctrination training" on the E-11A once they arrive.

All of this only further underscores how the fleet of E-11As, just three aircraft now, is the perfect definition of a high-value, but very-low-density asset. Beyond these manned jets, the only other platforms that carry the Battlefield Airborne Control Node (BACN) payload are three EQ-4B Global Hawk drones.

BACN is a very specialized aerial communications suite that allows the E-11As and EQ-4Bs to quickly send and receive information across various waveforms and between a wide variety of other aerial platforms and forces on the ground. In Afghanistan, the E-11As also just provide an extremely valuable communications relay capability in a country where the mountainous terrain can often limit the range of line-of-sight communications systems and data links.

Helping to coordinate airstrikes is a big part of what the E-11As do in Afghanistan and that keeps them extremely busy, with what was then a four aircraft fleet supporting approximately 7,000 strikes in 2016 alone, according to figures the Air Force previously provided to The War Zone. The type flew its 10,000 sortie on Feb. 14, 2017. You can read much more about these manned and unmanned aircraft and their obscure, but vital missions in this highly in-depth War Zone feature.

Newsweek reported that the plane was flying at a cruising altitude of 42,000 feet when the pilots issued a mayday call. Ghazni provincial government spokesman Arif Noori posited that the plane appeared to be flying north from the 430th Expeditionary Electronic Combat Squadron's main base of operations in Kandahar to Afghanistan's capital Kabul, according to CBS News.

Pictures from the crash site in the Dih Yak district of Ghazni province showed that the plane had skidded along the ground for a considerable distance before coming to a rest, indicating that the crew might have attempted to make an emergency landing. It's not clear if the aircraft was on fire before or after hitting the ground.

    @Aviation_Intel , she slid. This looked controlled until the end. pic.twitter.com/sQzUZ86hii
    — Evergreen Intel (@vcdgf555) January 27, 2020

Dih Yak is under the control of the Taliban, who claimed initially to have secured the crash site and reportedly fought off initial attempts by local Afghan forces to reach the aircraft. The U.S. military reportedly subsequently dispatched a special operations force made up of elements from the secretive Joint Special Operations Command, including members of Seal Team Six, according to Newsweek. That force faced no resistance in getting to the crash site and successfully recovered Voss and Phaneuf's bodies.

"The force also recovered what is assessed to be the aircraft flight data recorder," U.S. Army Colonel Sonny Leggett, the top spokesman for U.S. Forces Afghanistan (USFOR-A), added in a statement on Jan. 28. "The remains were found near the crash site, treated with dignity and respect by the local Afghan community, in accordance with their culture."

    pic.twitter.com/Gv3m63qE6y
    — USFOR-A Spokesman Col Sonny Leggett (@USFOR_A) January 28, 2020


"U.S. forces destroyed the remnants of the aircraft," Leggett added. Newsweek had reported that the special operators on the ground had destroyed what was left of the plane before departing the site, but that U.S. officials were considering using airstrikes, as well, to ensure that neither the Taliban nor anyone else could attempt to recover sensitive equipment or documents from the wreckage. It's unclear if those strikes ultimately occurred.

Hopefully, the analysis of the apparent flight data recorder will shed more light on this accident. In the meantime, volunteers from around the Air Force will continue flying the remaining E-11As in Afghanistan as they continue to provide vital communications support for U.S. forces in that country.

Contact the author: [email protected]

Original article contains additional links, photos and videos.

Also from The Warzone an in-depth on the EA-11 BACN and EQ-4B:

We Chew The Fat About BACN With Program Boss And Airman Who Used It In Combat

 
Bombardier will be getting additional orders both to make up for the loss but also expanding the fleet which provided wifi and other battlefield capabilities.
 
It surprises me the US only had 4 of these aircraft, and 3 UAV's equipped to provide this capability if it's truly that important.

With the amount of money they spend per Littoral Combat Ship, and money constantly being used to purchase tanks the US Army has said it doesn't want or need - I'd think if they were determined to spend money on military industry, the money would go towards expanding a capability like this instead. 

Especially with conflict with China basically on the horizon at some point, as well as stirring up Iran, etc - you'd think a capability like this would be a priority for expanding.
 
Other platforms can provide some of the relay/bridging functions though;  example TDL (J & F/J series) relaying, use of JREAP, BLOS comms.
 
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