Hindustan Times (Delhi)

US: F-35 fighter jet crashes, pilot ejects

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com

A US military F-35B fighter jet crashed near the Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort in South Carolina on Friday, for reasons that are under investigat­ion, local law officials and the US military said.

The pilot, the only person aboard the craft, ejected safely and was being checked for injuries, said a Pentagon spokesman, adding that there were no other injuries.

The jet crashed just before noon local time. It was a Lockheed Martin F-35B, a short takeoff/vertical landing version of the F-35, said a U.S. military official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

It was the first crash of an F-35 fighter jet since they became operationa­l in 2006, said another military official, also speaking on the condition of anonymity. Friday’s incident also marked the first time a pilot had ejected from an F-35B, the official said.

Neither military nor local offi- cials immediatel­y offered a cause for the crash. Military officials said the crash was under investigat­ion. Lockheed referred Reuters to the military for comment on the incident. The F-35B stealth fighter jet was used by the United States in combat this week for the first time, against the Taliban in Afghanista­n, after taking off from an amphibious assault ship in the Arabian Sea.

Israel in May was the first country to use the F-35 stealth fighter in combat. The crash came on the same day that the Pentagon announced an $11.5 billion contract for 141 F-35 fighter jets from Lockheed, which lowers the price for the most common version of the stealthy jet by 5.4%.

The plane in the South Carolina crash was one of 245 F-35 fighter jets in the US military, a Pentagon official said, and one of a total of 320 F-35 jets being flown around the world.

Under the new contract signed on Friday, the next deliveries of F-35B jets will cost about $115 million each, military officials told Reuters.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant (left) and Jimmy Page
AP FILE Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant (left) and Jimmy Page

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