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Plane

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Active from 1996
Members Yusuke Kikuchi
Yoshifumi Kida
Masaki Hisamitsu
Keisuke Kamimoto
AlbumsSlow Express
seat22
laundry
Record labels Toy's Factory
#NMNL Records
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2180996
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About Plane


Debris found in search for F-35 jet - authorities

Debris found in search for F-35 jet - authorities
Sep 18,2023 7:41 pm

... The debris of the $100m (£80m) Plane - which disappeared on Sunday afternoon - was discovered in rural Williamsburg County, said authorities...

Rogue Russian pilot tried to shoot down RAF aircraft in 2022

Rogue Russian pilot tried to shoot down RAF aircraft in 2022
Sep 14,2023 1:21 am

...By Jonathan BealeDefence correspondent, BBC NewsA Russian pilot tried to shoot down an RAF surveillance Plane after believing he had permission to fire, the BBC has learned...

'Kudos' for pilot who landed plane safely on A40 near Cheltenham

'Kudos' for pilot who landed plane safely on A40 near Cheltenham
Aug 11,2023 7:41 am

... The Plane landed on the central reservation of the A40 Golden Valley, close to Churchdown, near Cheltenham after a suspected engine failure...

Joe Lewis: UK tycoon bailed in US fraud case but can't use superyacht

Joe Lewis: UK tycoon bailed in US fraud case but can't use superyacht
Jul 26,2023 4:01 pm

... The tycoon, whose family trust owns Tottenham Hotspur football club, can still use his private Plane - for business - within the boundaries of restricted domestic travel...

Laura Nuttall's sister Gracie: 'It feels like losing a future and a sibling'

Laura Nuttall's sister Gracie: 'It feels like losing a future and a sibling'
Jun 25,2023 7:11 pm

... " So what s our excuse? We haven t got a time limit so why don t we just do those silly things? Let s jump out of a Plane...

Sudan: Second evacuation flight of Britons lands in Cyprus

Sudan: Second evacuation flight of Britons lands in Cyprus
Apr 25,2023 11:40 pm

... The BBC was told 39 people were flown out on the first RAF Plane - and three rescue flights are planned in total...

Trump arraignment: Private plane, agents, protests expected on journey

Trump arraignment: Private plane, agents, protests expected on journey
Apr 3,2023 1:21 pm

...By Gareth EvansBBC NewsDonald Trump has left his Florida home and boarded his private Plane to take a roughly three-hour flight to New York City ahead of his court appearance there...

Five planets to line up in night sky

Five planets to line up in night sky
Mar 27,2023 10:40 am

... This is often called " a Planetary parade" and will be visible after sunset in the west...

Rogue Russian pilot tried to shoot down RAF aircraft in 2022

Feb 28,2023 4:10 pm

By Jonathan BealeDefence correspondent, BBC News

A Russian pilot tried to Shoot Down an RAF surveillance Plane After believing he had permission to fire, The Bbc has learned.

The Pilot fired two missiles, The First of which missed rather than malfunctioned as.

Russia had claimed The Incident last September was caused by a " technical malfunction".

The UK's Ministry of Defence (MoD) publicly accepted The Russian explanation.

But now three senior Western defence sources with knowledge of The Incident have told The Bbc that Russian communications intercepted by the RAF RC-135 Rivet Joint aircraft give a very different account from the official version.

The RAF Plane - with a crew of up to 30 - was flying a surveillance mission over The Black Sea in international airspace on 29 September Last Year when it encountered two Russian SU-27 fighter jets.

The intercepted communications show that One of The Russian pilots thought he had been given permission to target The British aircraft, following an ambiguous command from a Russian ground station.

However, The Second Russian pilot did not. He remonstrated and swore at his wingman when he fired The First missile.

The Rivet Joint is loaded with sensors to intercept communications. The RAF crew would have been able to Listen In to The Incident which could have resulted in their own deaths.

The MoD will not release details of those communications.

Responding to these new revelations an MoD spokesperson said: " Our intent has always been to protect the safety of our operations, avoid unnecessary Escalation and inform The Public and international community. "

What really happened

As the two Russian SU-27s approached the RAF spy Plane , they received a communication from their ground station controller.

One western source told The Bbc The Words they received were to the effect of " you have the target".

This ambiguous language was interpreted by One of The Russian pilots as permission to fire.

The loose language appears to have shown a high degree of unprofessionalism by those involved, sources said. In contrast, Nato pilots use very precise language when asking for and receiving permission to fire.

The Russian pilot released an air-to-air missile, which successfully launched but failed to lock on to its target, The Bbc has been told. It was a miss, not a malfunction.

Defence sources have told The Bbc that a row then broke out between the two Russian pilots.

The Pilot of The Second SU-27 did not think they had been given permission to fire.

He is said to have sworn at his comrade, effectively asking him what he thought he was doing.

Yet The First pilot still released another missile.

We had been told that The Second missile simply fell from The Wing - suggesting The Weapon either malfunctioned or that The Launch was aborted.

What the UK MoD said happened

Three weeks later, the UK government confirmed The Incident had taken place - After an explanation from The Russian Ministry of Defence called it a " technical malfunction. "

In a statement to MPs on 20 October, the then Defence Secretary Ben Wallace called it a " potentially dangerous engagement".

But he accepted The Russian explanation, saying: " We do not Consider This incident to constitute a deliberate Escalation on the part of the Russians, and our analysis concurs that it was due to a malfunction. "

What the US said happened

However, A Secret intelligence leak revealed that the US military spoke of What Happened in more stark terms.

In a raft of documents, published online by US airman Jack Teixera, the same incident was described as " a near shoot-down".

" The Incident was far more serious than originally portrayed and could have amounted to an act of war, " the New York Times reported.

According to two US defence officials, the newspaper said, The Russian pilot had misinterpreted an order from the ground.

The Russian pilot " who'd locked on The British Aircraft, fired, but the missile did not launch properly. "

The newspaper also quoted an unnamed US defence official describing The Incident " as really, really scary".

In response to the leaked report of a " near shoot-down" the UK MoD issued another statement which added more fog than clarity.

The MoD claimed a " significant proportion of the content of these reports [from the documents] is untrue, manipulated or both".

Why the secrecy?

There may be several reasons why the UK's MoD was reluctant to give the full details.

First, the UK would not want to publicise the extent of its Intelligence Gathering and details of the intercepted communications.

More importantly neither side wanted an Escalation - One which could potentially draw a Nato member into military confrontation with Russia.

But The Incident does show, Once Again , how One mistake and miscalculation by One individual could spark a wider conflict.

The MoD has now told The Bbc that " this incident is a stark reminder of the potential consequences of Putin's barbaric invasion of Ukraine. "

This is not the First Time a reckless Russian pilot has targeted a Nato aircraft in international air space.

In March earlier this year, a Russian jet brought down a US unmanned surveillance drone, also flying over The Black Sea.

In that incident The Russian pilot was awarded a medal, but most experts agree it was down to luck rather than skill or judgement.

It highlights serious questions about the discipline and professionalism of Russia's Air Force .

Despite the near Shoot Down , the RAF has continued to conduct surveillance flights over The Black Sea - a testament to the courage of the crews who narrowly avoided a disaster.

Since The Incident , these RAF surveillance flights have been escorted by Typhoon fighter jets armed with air-to-air missiles.

The UK is the only Nato ally to conduct crewed missions over The Black Sea.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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