Friday, March 25, 2011

How Downed U.S. Pilots Were Rescued In Libya

In this October 2009 photo, an MV-22 Osprey lands on the amphibious transport dock ship Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) New York (LPD 21). Two MV-22s helped in the rescue of a downed US pilot in Libya. Corey Lewis/U.S. Navy/Reuters/File

How An MV-22 Osprey Rescued A Downed US Pilot In Libya -- Christian Science Monitor

Two MV-22s launched from the USS Kearsarge at 1:33 a.m. local time Tuesday morning. By 3 a.m., one of the Osprey had brought the downed pilot to the ship’s deck.

It took 90 minutes, from takeoff to landing back on the deck of the USS Kearsarge, for the US Marine Corps to rescue a downed F-15 pilot in Libya early Tuesday morning.

In the course of the rescue, which included Osprey aircraft and took place some 130 nautical miles from the amphibious assault ship, US military aircraft dropped two 500-pound bombs in the area surrounding the pilot.

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More News On The Rescue Of Downed American Pilots In Libya

Details of Marines’ pilot rescue released -- Navy Times
Details of Pilot Rescue in F-15 Crash in Libya Released -- U.S. Navy Seals
Exclusive: Marines Who Rescued Downed Pilots in Libya Feared Hostile Fire -- ABC news
Libya: US warplanes 'carried out strafing runs' to rescue downed pilot -- The Telegraph
Teams Sped to U.S. Crash Site -- Wall Street Journal
Marines Face Questions About Rescue of Officers in Libya -- New York Times
US planes 'dropped two bombs' to protect downed pilot -- The Telegraph
Libya: Six injured as US team botches rescue of downed airmen -- The Guardian
Libya: US fighter pilot rescued by transformer aircraft -- The Telegraph
Marines: F-15 pilot rescue demonstrates value of Osprey -- Sky Talk
Marine Rescue Mission In Libya Shows Value Of V-22, And Raises A Question For Policymakers -- Defpro

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