Two South Carolina Air National Guard F-16 fighter pilots ejected safely after an apparent midair collision in eastern Georgia, the Guard said.
The collision happened about 9:15 p.m. Tuesday during night training operations over a remote military operating area in Jefferson County, Georgia, a National Guard spokeswoman said.
The jets were assigned to the South Carolina Air National Guard’s 169th Fighter Wing, which operates out of McEntire Joint National Guard Base in Eastover, South Carolina.
The base commander, Col. Nicholas Gentile, said the two pilots are among the most experienced in the unit.
Gentile said he could not yet release their names, but said they are back in South Carolina being debriefed as part of the investigation.
He said the two jets were part of a group of six that was conducting night training operations in preparation for an upcoming deployment that he could not discuss.
The pilots were wearing night-vision goggles when the collision occurred, Gentile said.
“We had lanes spread out across the Southeast last night,” Gentile said, adding that the bombing range is only about a 15-minute flight from the South Carolina base.
The F-16C models practice maneuvering against opponents and were involved in some of the earliest deployments in the Persian Gulf War in the 1990s.
It has been decades since South Carolina F-16s have been involved in a collision, he said, though he did not know the date of the last time it occurred. The 169th Fighter Wing has 28 of the aircraft.
U.S. F/A 18 jet fighters from Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort were also flying nighttime operations and contacted officials to help locate the pilots, Gentile said.
The National Guard, Marines and Air Force all use the area, called the Townsend Bombing Range, for training, he said.
There were no immediate reports of injuries on the ground.
Gentile was heading to the crash scene Wednesday, McEntire spokeswoman Lt. Col. Cindi King said. The South Carolina Army National Guard was flying Gentile to Georgia aboard a UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter, King said.
“With the sun out, they will be able to see the area,” she said, adding that the Blackhawk helicopters will help in their ability to fly over and assess potential damage.
King said South Carolina National Guard commander Maj. Gen. Robert Livingston Jr. was in Washington on Tuesday night when he got news of the crashes and was returning to Columbia to be updated.
The South Carolina Air National Guard and the U.S. Air Force are dispatching teams to investigate the collision.
The collision comes after both of the military’s precision flying teams suffered crashes last week.
A Blue Angels F/A-18 crashed last Thursday near Nashville, Tennessee, while taking off for a practice session. The pilot, Marine Capt. Jeff Kuss, was killed.
Also Thursday, a Thunderbirds F-16 crashed outside Colorado Springs, Colorado, but that pilot, Maj. Alex Turner, ejected safely. The Thunderbirds had just performed over the open-air graduation ceremony at the nearby Air Force Academy, where President Barack Obama spoke.
In May, two Navy jet fighters collided off the North Carolina coast. The four people on board the jets were pulled from the Atlantic Ocean by a commercial fishing ship.
(AP)