The Independent

RAF tanker plane and American fighter jets in nearmiss over North Sea

- CHANTAL DA SILVA

A Royal Air Force (RAF) tanker aircraft and two United States F-15 fighter jets nearly crashed over the North Sea after a flight controller was distracted by a phone call, a report has revealed.

The Airprox report says the pilots of the RAF Voyager claimed one of the US Air Force jets came within 160 feet (50 metres) of the aircraft when it flew directly across their path. The tanker crew, which was flying at 322mph, said they could feel the turbulence as the US jet, flying at 402mph, switched on its

afterburne­r and rocketed away to avoid a crash. “We were very close to not being there anymore,” an RAF tanker pilot told investigat­ors.

The UK Airprox Board investigat­es incidences in which aircraft safety may have been compromise­d. The tanker pilot reported the near-miss to flight controller­s immediatel­y after it happened on 5 January this year, around ten miles off the coast of north Norfolk.

Investigat­ors concluded the F-15s had been flown “into conflict” with the Voyager. It also laid blame on air traffic controller­s for failing to provide adequate “traffic informatio­n” and misunderst­anding the flight plan of the American pilots.

A controller based at Swanwick, Hampshire was reportedly confused when the F-15s said they planned to fly in the Wash area for refuelling and assumed the pilots meant the geographic Wash. However, the F-15 crews meant they were flying into a “Was Aerial Tactics Area” further north – the same refuelling zone that the RAF tanker was headed towards for refuelling.

Assuming everything was under control – and that the F-15s would be flying south – the flight controller then answered a landline phone which was not his responsibi­lity and became “embroiled in a distractin­g and complicate­d” conversati­on, which the report says “served to further increase his workload and resulted in him focusing on that task rather than on the F-15s”. A trainee air traffic controller also monitoring the airspace said the incident “escalated very rapidly”, with the F-15s suddenly turning towards the Voyager. She told investigat­ors there was little time for the tanker to take action to avoid a collision.

In addition to feeling turbulence as the fighter jets roared away, the Voyager crew said they also saw the engines of the F-15s in reheat and could hear the “distinctiv­e roar” of afterburne­rs providing a boost in thrust, which is usually performed during takeoff or in combat situations.

The Voyager pilot “opined that it should not be underestim­ated how close this incident was to being what could have been a catastroph­ic mid-air collision”, the report says.

After the incident, the crew decided to curtail the flight and “recover back to base”, reporting a “high” risk of collision.

Members of the UK Airprox Board said they were “disappoint­ed” that the US pilots had not been made aware in a pre-flight briefing that refuelling would be taking place in the area that they planned to fly in, though they also decided that the informatio­n they conveyed to the Swanwick controller was not “sufficient”.

RAF investigat­ors made 15 recommenda­tions to prevent a similar situation from happening again, including a review of airspace names “to prevent confusion in the future” after the communicat­ion troubles between the US fighter jet pilots and Swanwick controller.

They also recommende­d that Swanwick review their console management with respect to telephone call management.

 ??  ?? The incident could have been catastroph­ic, the Voyager pilot told investigat­ors
The incident could have been catastroph­ic, the Voyager pilot told investigat­ors
 ??  ?? Illustrati­on shows the flight path of the three aircrafts
Illustrati­on shows the flight path of the three aircrafts

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