• ?! Russia Shoots Down Its Own Su-27 Fighter Jet Over Black Sea

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 30 09:33:31 2024
    XPost: sci.military.naval, soc.history.war.misc

    I love this part,
    "The human factor was at work—one of the operators was eager
    to get a medal and didn't bother to find out whose plane it
    was," he added,----"
    Won't my Mommy be so proud of me!!

    from https://www.newsweek.com/ukraine-russia-sukhoi-crash-su-27-1885226?utm_source=spotim&utm_medium=spotim_recirculation&spot_im_redirect_source=pitc&spot_im_comment_id=sp_vNTS7w0J_article-1885226_c_2ePDU9Lj0K2NBs1ZdIRV2IDu67j&spot_im_highlight_immediate=true

    Russia Shoots Down Its Own Su-27 Fighter Jet Over Black Sea: Kyiv
    Published Mar 30, 2024 at 5:36 AM EDT
    Updated Mar 30, 2024 at 11:22 AM EDT

    00:59
    Russia's Celebration Over Hitting Ukraine's 'Su-25 Jet' Proves Short Lived
    By Brendan Cole
    Senior News Reporter

    Russian forces downed one of their own Sukhoi Su-27 fighter jets over
    Crimea by accident, according to Kyiv.

    A state of heightened "combat readiness" was to blame for the incident
    over the occupied peninsula on Thursday, Ukraine's Navy spokesman Dmytro Pletenchuk said on Ukrainian television.

    The Moscow-installed leader in Sevastopol, Mikhail Razvozhayev, had said
    that a Russian warplane had "crashed" off the Crimean coast without
    naming the cause and that the pilot ejected safely and was picked up by
    rescue services.

    Russian Telegram channels shared purported footage of the plane which
    was burning as it fell and a parachute of the ejected pilot.

    The Crimean Wind Telegram channel claimed the plane was accidentally
    shot down by Russia's own forces after taking off from the Belbek
    military airfield.

    Sukhoi Su-27 Airplane
    This undated illustrative image shows a Sukhoi Su-27 Airplane. One of
    the planes belonging to Russia's forces was shot down in friendly fire
    on March 28, 2024, according to Ukraine's military.
    ALAIN NOGUES/GETTY IMAGES

    But Pletenchuk told Ukrainian television on Friday: "We confirm that
    this aircraft belonged to the Russian Federation and that it was
    destroyed by their own forces.

    "They were on alert, on combat readiness. The human factor was at
    work—one of the operators was eager to get a medal and didn't bother to
    find out whose plane it was," he added, according to a report of his
    comments by Ukrainian outlet Pravda.

    Newsweek has contacted the Russian Defense Ministry about Kyiv's claims.

    Over the last two months, Russia's Air Force has suffered particularly
    heavy aircraft losses including more than a dozen warplanes such as
    Su-34 fighter bombers, Su-35 fighter jets, and a rare A-50 military spy
    plane.

    Meanwhile, Ukraine is anticipating a boost in its own aviation
    capabilities, announcing that the first F-16 fighter jets supplied by
    its allies would be in operation within a few months.

    READ MORE
    Putin friend predicts nuclear strike "most likely" coming
    Ukraine celebrates as downing of Russian jets hits new milestone
    Russia loses 12th warplane in 12 days
    Chinese state media warns US ally will suffer "losses" as tensions grow Following the U.S. approval for the American-made planes to be used, a coalition of countries has pledged to provide the fourth-generation jets
    whose technology is a step up from the Soviet-era MiG and Sukhoi jets
    Kyiv now relies on.

    Belgian Defense Minister Ludivine Dedonder announced on Friday a
    military assistance package which contains $107 million to maintain and
    support the jets.

    Denmark said Ukraine could receive its F-16 fighter jets "this summer"
    and The Telegraph estimated that Kyiv may receive as many as 60 of the aircraft.

    When asked about Ukraine getting the aircraft from allies, Russian
    President Vladimir Putin said this week that they would be a "legitimate target" for Russian pilots even on "airfields of third countries."

    "We will destroy their planes in the same way that we destroy their
    tanks," and other equipment, he said at the 344th Army Aviation Centre
    in Torzhok, 160 miles northwest of Moscow, although he dismissed
    speculation that Russia would attack NATO members as "nonsense."

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    About the writer
    Brendan Cole
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    Brendan Cole is a Newsweek Senior News Reporter based in London, UK. His
    focus is Russia and Ukraine, in particular ... read more

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