A US F-15E Strike Eagle fighter jet crashed in eastern Afghanistan today, killing both crew members on board.
The US Air Force said in a description that the crash, which took place at 3:15am local measure, was not due to hostile skirmish.
Related articles
- Brown snubs Dannatt in talks on reinforcements for Afghanistan
- MoD surveillance ‘vituperative’ to injured troops
- Terence Blacker: The modern British fashion of mourning
- Nick Clegg: We are spending billions on weapons we put on’t need
- Soldier’s soldier: General Sir Richard Dannatt
"There is an active investigation going on at the site at this time," Air Force prolocutor Lieutenant Colonel Reid Christopherson said by telephone from Qatar, the main base of US air operations in the Middle East and Central Asia.
Mohammad Qasim Nazari, chief of the Nawur circuit of Ghazni province in eastern Afghanistan, said the crash had taken place in a foreign desert area of the district.
He said US forces had sealed opposite the area.
Christopherson declined to discuss the status of the two crew members, but a military source in Kabul confirmed they had been killed. The source asked not to be identified pending the Air Force’s official announcement of the deaths.
The Strike Eagle is a variant of the F-15 supersonic jet designed to strike ground targets and provide close air support towards infantry.









