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- 16-Oct-87 12:05 MST
- Sb: APnv 10/15 2240 Stealth Missing
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- LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -- An Air Force plane that Pentagon sources said was a
- top-secret Stealth fighter crashed in a rugged desert area, killing the pilot.
- A Pentagon official in Washington who asked not to be named described the
- missing plane as a Stealth fighter, similar to the plane that crashed in 1986 in
- California.
- The source refused to discuss the conditions under which the plane crashed
- and it could not be learned immediately whether the plane was on a training
- exercise or a flight test.
- Nellis Air Force Major Victor Andrijauskas said the pilot was killed when the
- plane crashed on the Nellis Air Force Gunnery range about 8:45 p.m. Wednesday.
- The crash was about 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas and 50 miles south of a
- secret air base where the Air Force is known to test the Stealth fighter.
- A dispatcher for the Bureau of Land Management said the BLM was notified of a
- fire in the area Wednesday night, and called the Air Force, which operates the
- sprawling range facility. The dispatcher, who refused to give her name, said Air
- Force officials asked the BLM not to say where the fire was or how big it was.
- Andrijauskas refused to say what kind of plane crashed, but said the pilot
- was the only crew member aboard. He said emergency crews responded and secured
- the area.
- "We have personnel on the scene," said Andrijauskas.
- The spokesman said the pilot was assigned to Nellis, but refused to say what
- fighter wing he was attached to. Nellis is the largest fighter wing training
- facility in the United States.
- A plane believed to be a Stealth fighter crashed in July 1986 in the western
- Sierra Nevada, touching off a 150-acre brushfire in Sequoia National Park. The
- crash occurred about 12 miles northeast of Bakersfield, Calif. Air Force guards
- carrying rifles and pistols barred people from that crash site.
- The F-19 fighter known as the Stealth has been described as an experimental
- aircraft using the latest electronic technology, materials and aerodynamic
- design to foil radar and infared sensors.
- The Air Force has said it will buy 750 of the proposed advanced tactical
- fighters, which will be high-technology planes slated to become the mainstay of
- the U.S. air defense system through the mid-21st century.
- Reports have long circulated that the Air Force tests a squadron of 50
- Stealth fighter jets under Nellis auspices at the Tonopah air field about 200
- miles northwest of the base.
- Recently, a two-mile air strip was lengthened at the small base, and small,
- individual hardened hangars were built along the base's flight line.
- Residents in the Tonopah area said previously that the flight line remains
- quiet during the day. But at night, the desert erupts with an almost constant
- thunder of takeoffs and landings at the base.
- The Tonopah base is on the northern tip of the Nellis range, which covers
- about 3 million acres of desert and mountain areas, and borders on three sides
- the Nevada Test Site, where nuclear weapons tests are conducted.
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- Copyright 1987 by the Associated Press. All rights reserved.