San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

4 U.S. troops die in plane crash at NATO drill

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HELSINKI — Four U.S. Marines were killed when their Osprey aircraft crashed in a Norwegian town in the Arctic Circle during a NATO exercise unrelated to Russia’s war in Ukraine, authoritie­s said Saturday.

Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere tweeted that they died in the crash on Friday night. The cause is under investigat­ion, but Norwegian police reported bad weather in the area.

The Marines, assigned to 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing, II Marine Expedition­ary Force, were taking part in a NATO exercise called Cold Response.

The U.S. says the identities of the Marines wouldn’t be immediatel­y provided in keeping with U.S. Defense Department policy of notifying relatives.

The aircraft was a tilt-rotor MV-22B Osprey. It “had a crew of four and was out on a training mission in Nordland County” in northern Norway, the country’s armed forces said in a statement.

It was on its way north to Bodo, where it was scheduled to land just before 6 p.m. Friday. The Osprey crashed in Graetaedal­en in Beiarn, south of Bodo. Police said a search and rescue mission was launched immediatel­y. At 1:30 a.m. Saturday, officers arrived at the scene and confirmed that the crew of four had died.

The Cold Response drill includes around 30,000 troops, 220 aircraft and 50 vessels from 27 countries. Non-NATO members Finland and Sweden are also participat­ing. The exercises began on March 14 and end on April 1. The Norwegian armed forces said that Cold Response “will carry on as planned, with the measures we have to take due to the weather.” Norwegian newspaper VG said Red Cross members drove close to the crash site and marked the trail with GPS for police in what they described as extremely difficult weather conditions early Saturday.

“It was a special night, it was a real storm. There were five of us driving towards the scene of the accident. There was one meter of visibility, snow and storm in the mountains, ” Red Cross team leader Oerjan Kristensen told VG.

Kristensen added that the rescue operation was hampered by the risk of landslides in the mountains and the remoteness of the crash site.

Police opened an investigat­ion into the crash.

“The weather is very bad in the area to complete work at the scene, but police will take it up again as soon as the weather conditions allow it,” operations manager Ivar Bo Nilsson from the Norland police district told reporters.

The first Cold Response exercise was held in 2006, and the drills are conducted every two years.

 ?? Geir Olsen / NTB ?? Soldiers take part in drills Thursday in Rena, Norway, as part a NATO military exercise. A tiltrotor MV-22B Osprey plane with four U.S. Marines crashed Friday night during the exercise.
Geir Olsen / NTB Soldiers take part in drills Thursday in Rena, Norway, as part a NATO military exercise. A tiltrotor MV-22B Osprey plane with four U.S. Marines crashed Friday night during the exercise.

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