Two More Bodies Found from Wreckage of Crashed Japanese Military Helicopter

This is a very unfortunate accident that cost the life of a Japanese Army Division Commander who was doing his first battlefield circulation around Japan’s southwest islands:

An X marks the spot where a section of the crashed Japanese army helicopter's fuselage and five bodies were discovered north of Irabu Island on Thursday, April 13, 2023.

An X marks the spot where a section of the crashed Japanese army helicopter’s fuselage and five bodies were discovered north of Irabu Island on Thursday, April 13, 2023. (Japan Ground Self-Defense Force)

Search parties recovered two more bodies Monday from the submerged wreckage of a Japanese military helicopter that crashed in the East China Sea nearly two weeks ago with 10 aboard, including a lieutenant general.

Four victims’ remains have been brought up since Sunday from the site in 350 feet of water just offshore of Irabu Island, southwest of Okinawa. The UH-60JA Black Hawk of the Japan Air Self-Defense Force disappeared from radar at 3:56 p.m. April 6 during a reconnaissance flight 11 miles northwest of Miyako Airport.

Japanese divers recovered one body Monday morning and the other several hours later, a Japan Ground Self-Defense Force spokesman told Stars and Stripes by phone Tuesday. Japanese authorities have yet to identify any of the recovered bodies. 

Just one body remains in a section of the Black Hawk’s fuselage discovered Sunday morning, the spokesman said. The remaining five individuals aboard the helicopter are unaccounted for.

The Black Hawk was on a reconnaissance flight 11 miles northwest of Miyako Airport when it went down with a mixed crew aboard, including Lt. Gen. Yuichi Sakamoto, commander of the Ground Self-Defense Force’s 8th Division; five members of the division’s headquarters staff; four members of the Air Self-Defense Force’s 8th Wing; and a member of Camp Miyako’s security force.

Sakamoto, 55, was appointed division commander March 31. He previously served as commander of the 12th Brigade.

Stars & Stripes

You can read more at the link.

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setnaffa
setnaffa
1 year ago

John Q Public, and his relatives around the world, mostly don’t realize or care that military members die in regular training exercises, even when the edges of the envelipe are not being pushed.

There was about one B-52 crew per year that died from crashes meaning almost 71). Only about 6 were from direct enemy fire (missiles). Parts wear out or just fail, weather gets rough, tired crews make mistakes, and so on.

Sincere condolences to the familes and friends of those lost.

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