Pohang: Crew members aboard a maritime patrol aircraft that fatally crashed earlier this week had no communication, suggesting an emergency situation with the ground control tower, the Navy said Friday. A Navy P-3CK patrol plane crashed on a mountain in Pohang, about 270 kilometers southeast of Seoul, at 1:49 p.m. Thursday, six minutes after taking off for routine training from a nearby air base, killing all four Navy officers aboard. No civilian casualties were reported.
According to Yonhap News Agency, "The last communication between the control tower and the aircraft occurred at 1:48 p.m., and there were no details indicating an emergency situation," the Navy stated. The aircraft, usually based on the southern island of Jeju, had flown to Pohang for touch-and-go training due to heavy civilian air traffic at the Jeju airport. The accident occurred when the aircraft was circling to the right after completing its first round of training. The aircraft remained on a pre-arranged flight route, and the weather conditions in Pohang were favorable at the time of the accident, officials noted.
The armed service plans to determine the cause of the accident by comprehensively analyzing the aircraft's track data, sound clips recorded on a cockpit voice recorder retrieved earlier in the day, and debris of the aircraft. Following an on-site probe, the Navy plans to transfer the wreckage of the aircraft to the Naval Air Command and conduct a joint investigation with civilian experts. A Navy official mentioned that authorities will carry out the investigation without ruling out any possible causes, including a bird strike, turbulence, or a sudden change in the weather.
As part of response measures, the Navy also plans to conduct a special safety inspection of all P-3 maritime patrol aircraft, which have been grounded following the accident. The P-3CK aircraft that crashed Thursday was deployed to the Navy in 2010 and was set to retire in 2030. Initially manufactured by U.S. defense firm Lockheed Martin, it was supplied to the U.S. Navy in 1966.
"With the exception of the aircraft frame, it was renovated akin to the level of a new aircraft and went through intense safety inspections," a Navy official said. South Korea operates 16 P-3 aircraft, dubbed the "submarine killer" for their anti-submarine capabilities. The first eight of these aircraft, labeled the P-3C, were deployed in 1995, and another eight, renovated by the defense firm Korea Aerospace Industries Ltd. and named the P-3CK, were subsequently deployed.
When asked about the possibility of the pilots intentionally veering the aircraft to prevent civilian damage, a Navy official said they likely made their "utmost efforts" to minimize such damage. The two pilots who operated the aircraft had a track record of 1,700 and 900 hours, respectively, of flight time. A funeral process for the four Navy officers, whose ranks were promoted by one notch following the accident, will begin later Friday. They will be laid to rest at Daejeon National Cemetery on Sunday.