I completly agree with Larrythechieflarrythechief wrote:Damn Syrians!!! There should be no shooting at Phantoms!! They're an endangered species GD :-/
It's not only the "Televaag" now...nilsko wrote:Things escalate? http://www.telegraaf.nl/buitenland/1242 ... ten__.html Okay, it's "De Telegraaf" so maybe we should take it with a grain of salt, but still..
Syria shot at second plane, Turkey says Nato will discuss the downed F-4 jet on Tuesday
Turkey says Syria fired on one of its planes that was taking part in a rescue operation for a warplane shot down by Syrian forces last Friday.
Turkey's deputy PM said the CASA search and rescue plane, looking for the F-4 Phantom jet, was not brought down.
04 July 2012 - 15H02
Turkey recovers bodies of downed jet's pilots: army
AFP - The bodies of the two pilots of a Turkish jet that was downed by Syria on June 22 have been recovered at the bottom of the eastern Mediterranean sea, the Turkish army said Wednesday.
"The bodies (of the two pilots) have been recovered in seabed and work is underway to bring them to surface," the army command said on a statement posted on its website.
The statement maintained that the two-seater F-4 Phantom was shot in international airspace by Syrian fire, but that the wreckage of the downed fighter has not yet been spotted.
Syria's President Bashar al-Assad said Tuesday he regretted that his country's defence forces shot down the jet, but insisted the plane was in Syrian airspace at the time of the shooting.
Turkish Armed Forces releases images of the downed jet wreckage
Turkey says no traces of explosives on downed fighter
(AFP) – 1 day ago
ANKARA — Turkey said it has found no traces of explosives on the wreckage of a fighter jet it has claimed was downed by Syria, raising new questions about the incident that inflamed cross-border tensions.
"No traces of explosives or flammable products were found on the debris recovered from the sea," a statement from Turkey's general staff said on Wednesday,
adding that other material was still being examined.
For the first time, the army also declined to use the term "shot down by Syria" instead referring to "our plane that Syria claimed to have destroyed".
Turkey has previously maintained that the F-4 Phantom was shot down in international airspace over the eastern Mediterranean by Syrian fire on June 22, f
urther souring relations between the one-time allies.
Two weeks after the incident, a Turkish rescue team, fortified by the US deep-sea explorer Nautilus,
recovered the bodies of the two pilots from the seabed, but most of the wreckage,
believed to be in pieces, remained at the bottom of the Mediterranean.
"A technical investigation is ongoing on the parts we have salvaged, and on the video footage of other parts still lying at the bottom of the sea," the statement added.
Turkish experts, however, say establishing what happened to the plane on June 22 would only be possible once all the wreckage was recovered.
"Syria thinks they opened fire and shot down the plane, Turkey thinks the plane was shot down.
But now we have the third option that the plane might have just crashed trying to dodge fire," the Haberturk daily quoted security analyst Nihat Ali Ozcan as saying.
The information shared by the general staff does not support either argument, retired vice-admiral Atilla Kiyat told the same daily.
"The announcement from the army command does not confirm or refute Turkey's or Syria's explanation for that matter."
Syria maintains that the the fighter was flying low in Syrian airspace when it was shot down by shore-based anti-aircraft guns.
Turkish media speculated that the plane might have crashed due to pilot error or technical failure.
"I think we are increasingly witnessing politics enter into the scene here," former air force general Erdogan Karakus told Hurriyet daily.
"I am feeling Turkey might be gradually giving up on its missile claims," he noted.
Turkish jet shot down by Syrian missile blast: Military prosecutor
ISTANBUL - Hürriyet
A Turkish F-4 Phantom warplane which crashed into the Mediterranean on June 22 was shot down by a Syrian air defense missile even though the missile did not directly hit the plane,
a report by a military prosecutor said today.
The report said radar data obtained from the plane's computer indicated that the plane received a signal from a missile.
Syrian authorities have insistently said they shot down the Turkish plane within Syrian air space with anti-aircraft guns as the plane flew at an altitude of 100 meters.
The military prosecutor's report said even though there were no indications to show that a missile impacted the plane,
the plane's remains carried traces of material found in surface-to-air missiles.
The report added there was no damage to the plane that might have been caused by fire from an anti-aircraft gun, as Syrian authorities suggested.
"Parts of the retrieved plane wreck were taken through metallurgic examination,
and traces of potassium chlorate,
which is used as an oxidizing agent in missile fuels and as the main substance in missile warheads,
were found splashed on the plane's fuselage," the report said.
The report concluded that a surface-to-air missile was fired toward the Turkish plane as it flew in international air space in the eastern Mediterranean.
"The missile detonated just behind and to the left of the plane.
The blast from the explosion caused the plane and the pilots to lose the capability to continue a stable flight.
The plane continuously lost altitude as it banked left, until it crashed into water in a position slightly tipped to the left with the plane's nose pointing up."
The report said there were no indications of a technical malfunction that might have caused the plane to crash.
September/19/2012
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