Watch a Russian Fighter Jet Collide With a U.S. Drone Near Ukraine
The United States Pentagon released dramatic footage this morning recovered from an unmanned U.S. Air Force drone that was knocked out of the sky in international airspace over the Black Sea, just off the coast of Crimea, by a Russian fighter jet this week. The video from Tuesday’s incident, which you can watch below, shows two Russian Su-27 fighter jets passing over the American drone — first dumping fuel on the unmanned aircraft, and then striking it. The drone crashed into the Black Sea, and the U.S. Air Force is now working to recover the wreckage.
According to CBS, the U.S. characterized the Russian pilots’ maneuvers as “unsafe and unprofessional.” Now, the race is on to recover the wreckage: On Wednesday, a Russian official vowed that the Russian government would attempt to salvage the remains of the drone, which crashed into the Black Sea and is now likely several thousand feet underwater. At a Pentagon news briefing on Wednesday, U.S. Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, indicates that American forces will also try to recover the downed drone. “That’s U.S. property,” Milley said, according to CBS. “There’s probably not a lot to recover, frankly.”
CBS further reports that Russian forces have already reached the site of the crash, and may even be able to recover some small pieces of the downed drone. But at the Pentagon briefing yesterday, Milley assured reporters that any sensitive information stored on the drone was remotely wiped in the moments after the crash with Russian aircraft.
“We are quite confident that whatever was of value is no longer of value,” Milley said to reporters.
The onboard video released this morning shows two close-range passes by Russian fighter jets. On the first pass, the Su-27 comes close to the drone but does not contact it, dumping fuel on the Predator drone. On the second pass, the Russian jet allegedly strikes the U.S. drone’s propeller, disabling the unmanned vehicle.
US Air Force MQ-9 Camera Footage: Russian Su-27 Black Sea Collision | VOANews