NAVY TO GROUND ALL AIRCRAFT FOR SAFETY REVIEW
Plagued by a series of helicopter and jet crashes in recent months, the Navy said Friday it will ground all its aircraft for half a day next week for an internal safety review.
Ref. https://www.cnn.com/2006/US/03/03/navy.airc… d.ap/index.html
US Military Aircraft Crashes (Hover)
Quote---"Since October 1, there have been nine major crashes that resulted in loss or life or of the aircraft. Nine aircraft were destroyed and 10 naval aviators were killed"
I would say, that the Navy are being cautious, rightly so, in 'grounding' their aircraft, whilst they check for problems.
If taking their aircraft out of use for one day, whilst they review the safety saves just one life of military personnel, then it is worth it in my opinion.
It is tragic enough when military personnel lose their lives in warfare, but it is such a tragic waste of life, when the fault has been caused by the Navy's own aircraft having a fault.
International Level: Activist / Political Participation: 29 2.9%
Okay, I agree it's probably a good idea to check your aircraft. However, how smart is it to announce it to the world that every aircraft will be down for a day? Are we not engaged on several fronts? I just don't understand all the things I know.
International Level: Ambassador / Political Participation: 595 59.5%
The announcment of our Naval aircraft being offline was, to say the least, a boneheaded move on whichever diplo-dweeb at the Pentagon decided to let that little tidbit of data slip at a cocktail party. I can only imagine that our troops, who are standing once more in harms way, would be in shock to find out that their senior officers are almost as adept at disregarding their security as they are at not getting them the supplies they need when they need them.
(shades of the humvee drivers having to scrounge up scrap steel to line their doors with because the diplo-dweebs could not, or would not pull their collective heads out of their collective buttocks and see that lack of armored humvees was killing troops.)
U.S. Navy aircraft with 11 people aboard crashes into the Philippine Sea. The U.S, military said the aircraft was on the way to the USS Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier when it crashed into the Pacific Ocean southeast of the Japanese island of Okinawa. Ref. USAToday.