By KONSTANTIN TOROPIN
WASHINGTON (AP) — After a spate of lethal accidents which have claimed the lives of 20 service members previously 4 years, a Navy report acknowledges that the army failed to handle a rising sequence of points with the V-22 Osprey plane because it took flight nearly 20 years in the past.
“The cumulative threat posture of the V-22 platform has been rising since preliminary fielding,” in keeping with the report by Naval Air Programs Command launched Friday. It added that the workplace answerable for the plane “has not promptly applied … fixes to mitigate current dangers.”
“Because of this, dangers proceed to build up,” the report stated.
The Related Press reported final 12 months that essentially the most severe varieties of accidents for the Osprey, which is the one plane to fly like a aircraft however convert to land like a helicopter, spiked between 2019 and 2023 and that, not like different plane, the issues didn’t stage off because the years handed.
“As the primary and solely army tiltrotor plane, it stays essentially the most aero-mechanically advanced plane in service and continues to face unresolved legacy materials, security, and technical challenges,” the report stated.
Commissioned in 2023 by NAVAIR, the Navy command chargeable for the acquisition and upkeep of plane, the investigation reveals that the Osprey not solely has the “second highest variety of catastrophic dangers throughout all Naval Aviation platforms” however that these dangers have gone unresolved for a mean of greater than 10 years.
Against this, the typical throughout different plane within the Navy’s stock is six years.
The Navy’s response
Vice Adm. John Dougherty, commander of NAVAIR, stated the service is “dedicated to enhancing the V-22’s efficiency and safeguarding the warfighters who depend on this platform.” He provided no particulars on any actions taken for years of failing to handle the Osprey’s dangers.
The command didn’t reply to questions on what, if any, accountability measures have been taken in response to the findings.
The shortage of particulars on accountability for missteps additionally got here up when the Navy lately launched investigations into 4 accidents throughout a U.S.-led marketing campaign towards Yemen’s Houthi rebels. A senior Navy official, who spoke to reporters on the situation of anonymity to supply extra candid particulars, stated that he didn’t consider the service had an obligation to make accountability actions public.
Dangers have been allowed to construct up, the report says
The investigation lays a lot of the accountability for the issues on the Osprey’s Joint Program Workplace. A part of the mission for this workplace, which operates inside NAVAIR, is ensuring the plane may be safely flown by the Marine Corps, the Navy and the Air Power, all of which use completely different variations of the plane for various missions.
The report discovered that this workplace “didn’t successfully handle or tackle recognized dangers in a well timed method, permitting them to build up,” and it confronted “challenges” in implementing security fixes throughout all three companies.
Two main points contain the Osprey’s sophisticated transmission. The plane has a number of gearboxes and clutches that, like a automotive’s transmission, are essential to powering every propeller behind the Osprey’s distinctive tilting functionality. The system additionally helps join the 2 sides of the plane to maintain it flying within the occasion of engine failure.
One drawback is a matter during which the transmission system basically shreds itself from the within as a result of an influence imbalance within the engines. That introduced down a Marine Corps Osprey, killing 5 Marines in California in 2022.
The opposite subject is a producing defect within the gears inside the transmission that renders them extra brittle and vulnerable to failure. That was behind the crash of an Air Power Osprey off the coast of Japan in November 2023 that killed eight service members.
The report reveals that this manufacturing subject went again to 2006 however the Osprey’s Joint Program Workplace didn’t formally assess or settle for this threat till March 2024.
Apart from these mechanical points, the report discovered that this system workplace failed to make sure uniform upkeep requirements for the plane, whereas figuring out that 81% of all of the accidents that the Ospreys have had on the bottom have been as a result of human error.
Suggestions for the problems revealed
The report gives a sequence of suggestions for every of the problems it uncovered. They vary from rudimentary strategies like consolidating finest upkeep practices throughout all of the companies to extra systemic fixes like growing a brand new, midlife improve program for the Osprey.
Whereas fixes for each mechanical points are additionally within the report, it appears that it’s going to take till 2034 and 2033 for the army to totally take care of each, respectively.
Naval Air Programs Command didn’t reply when requested if it had a message for troops who will fly within the plane within the meantime.
Watchdog additionally releases Osprey report
The Authorities Accountability Workplace, an unbiased watchdog serving Congress, made related conclusions and proposals in a separate report launched Friday.
The GAO blamed most Osprey accidents on half failures and human error whereas service members flew or maintained the plane. It decided that the army hasn’t absolutely “recognized, analyzed, or responded” to all the Osprey’s security dangers.
The GAO stated the Pentagon ought to enhance its course of for addressing these dangers, whereas including extra oversight to make sure they’re resolved. One other advice is for the Navy, Air Power and Marines to routinely share info on hazards and accidents to assist forestall mishaps.
Related Press author Ben Finley contributed to this report.
