Los Angeles Times

U.S. service member killed

The pilot was one of two who died in a jet crash during military exercises in Ukraine.

- By Sabra Ayres Ayres is a special correspond­ent.

MOSCOW — A U.S. serviceman was killed in Ukraine on Tuesday when a Ukrainian Su-27 fighter jet crashed during large-scale training exercises in the embattled former Soviet republic.

The Ukrainian military issued a statement that said both pilots — one Ukrainian, one American — were killed when the jet crashed in the Vinnytsia region, about 140 miles southwest of Kiev, Ukraine’s capital.

“We are sad to report that according to the search and rescue group, the bodies of two pilots were found,” the Ministry of Defense said on its website.

The pilots were taking part in a “training and combat flight” as part of multinatio­nal military exercises with the United States and seven other North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on countries.

The exercises, called Clear Sky 2018, include members of the California National Guard’s Fresnobase­d 144th Fighter Wing group, according to a Facebook post. The post showed F-15C Eagle fighter jets arriving in western Ukraine a week ago.

The U.S. Air Forces in Europe and U.S. Air Forces Africa, which are overseeing the American component of the training session, said they were still investigat­ing the crash.

“We have seen reports claiming a U.S. casualty and can confirm a U.S. service member was involved in this incident,” they said on their website. “It is currently under investigat­ion and we will continue to provide more informatio­n as it becomes available.”

The United States and some of its European allies have been conducting military training exercises in Ukraine since 2015 in support of the country’s war with Russia-backed separatist­s in the eastern part of the country. This was the first combat air training between U.S. and Ukrainian forces since those exercises began.

Armed rebel groups backed by Moscow took over large swaths of Ukraine’s industrial­ized eastern regions in 2014 just weeks after Moscow annexed Crimea. Ukrainian forces were illprepare­d to battle the separatist forces, which created a self-declared republic now heavily financed by the Kremlin.

Despite a cease-fire, daily casualties continue to mount on both sides. More than 10,000 people have been killed, mostly civilians, and more than 1.2 million people have been displaced as a result of the conflict.

The United States blames Russia and its president, Vladimir Putin, for continuing to support the rebel forces and not doing enough to end the conflict, now in its fourth year.

The military exercises have infuriated the Kremlin, which sees them as Western powers “fermenting the war” between rebel fighters and Ukrainian national troops.

The United States this year began sending Javelin antitank missile systems to Ukraine, angering Moscow. Washington fiercely debated whether to send the lethal weapons to Ukraine for months, with the Trump administra­tion initially reluctant to make the decision. The first Javelins arrived in April.

 ?? Sergey Dolzhenko EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? A UKRAINIAN fighter jet lands during training exercises in Ukraine last week. Members of the California National Guard’s 144th Fighter Wing group have been participat­ing in the multinatio­nal military exercises.
Sergey Dolzhenko EPA/Shuttersto­ck A UKRAINIAN fighter jet lands during training exercises in Ukraine last week. Members of the California National Guard’s 144th Fighter Wing group have been participat­ing in the multinatio­nal military exercises.

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