Please keep the families involved in your prayers, a C-17 carrying 4 aircrew crashed near Elemendorf....still waiting on word from friends stationed there...![Sad :( :(](/forum/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/icon_sad.gif)
![Sad :( :(](/forum/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/icon_sad.gif)
Elmendorf officials have confirmed the aircraft, which was on a "local training
mission" when it crashed at 6:14 p.m. The conditions of the crew,
assigned to Elmendorf's 3rd Wing, is unknown, the Air Force said.
Initial reports indicated the plane had
crashed into a wooded area about two miles north and east of the
runway. The plane had apparently been headed east off Runway 5 and was
banking left, to the north, when it went down.
"I was watching it do maneuvers,
thinking it was practicing for the Air Show this weekend," wrote one
witness on base who asked to remain anonymous. He wrote, he then saw it
just drop out of the sky followed by a huge fireball. RIP fellow
brothers."
A black plume of smoke was visible rising from the base starting about 6:45 p.m.
Firefighters at the downtown Station 1
say they saw a ball of flames and a plume of black smoke rise from base.
They were called for an agency assist to a report of a plane crash but
then were called off the summons moments later as they got out on the
street, according to firefighters.
Roger Herrera, 35, said he had been driving on Turpin Street south of Elmendorf when he saw a ball of fire erupt on base.
"It was huge," he said. "My wife thought it was a nuclear bomb."
He reached for his camera, but by the
time he had it the flames had given way to massive pillar of black smoke
billowing into the sky, he said.
The crash comes on the cusp of
Elmendorf's immensely popular Arctic Thunder air show and open house,
which is set for this weekend.
Military acts have been gathering on
base this week to prepare, but it wasn't clear if the C-17 was part of
the show. It also wasn't immediately clear whether the air show will go
on as scheduled. The announced headline acts are the U.S. Navy Blue
Angels and the Canadian Snowbirds. In the past, the air show has drawn
the largest two-day crowds in Alaska.
The C-17 is commonly featured in air shows, particularly the aircraft's ability to take off and land in short distances.
The Boeing C-17 is a large military
transport aircraft. It's powered by four engines and can "carry large
equipment, supplies and troops directly to small airfields in harsh
terrain anywhere in the world day or night," according to a description
on Boeing's Web site of the C-17 Globemaster III. "The massive, sturdy,
long-haul aircraft tackles distance, destination and heavy, oversized
payloads in unpredictable conditions."
The C-17 holds more than 20 world-class
airlift records, including one in which a C-17 took off and landed in
less than 1,400 feet carrying a payload of 44,000 pounds, according to TheAviationZone.com.
The worst crash at Elmendorf happened
in September 1995 when an AWACS jet hit a flock of geese. Twenty-four
airmen were killed when the radar plane went down. It was the first ever
crash for an AWACS jet.