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    Home » Blog » ‘Was missing for 20 seconds’: US Army on Black Hawk which lost contact with air traffic near Pentagon

    ‘Was missing for 20 seconds’: US Army on Black Hawk which lost contact with air traffic near Pentagon

    May 25, 2025Updated:May 25, 2025 World No Comments
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    'Went missing for 20 seconds': US Army on Black Hawk which lost contact with air traffic controllers near Pentagon
    a Black Hawk US Army helicopter ( File )

    An military aircraft that lost contact with martial air traffic controllers near the Pentagon earlier this month was off-radar for about 20 seconds, according to the United States Army. Two corporate jets were forced to kill the landings as a result of their imminent arrival at Washington’s Ronald Reagan aircraft. The incident took place on May 1. Because a momentary power tower antenna was never installed where the Black Hawk could stay in contact with the aircraft as it flew low and round the Pentagon to land, the handlers lost contact with the aircraft. The transmitter was installed while a new power tower was being constructed, and it has since been moved to the Pentagon’s roof, according to Brigadier General Matthew Braman, the mind of Army aviation, in an interview with AP. National air traffic controllers inside the Washington aircraft also had a poor idea of where the plane was located. The location of the Black Hawk was being transmitted by the aircraft, which should have been where it was. According to Braman, FAA ( Federal Aviation Administration ) officers, the data the devices were receiving from a variety of sensors and feeds was inconclusive.

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    An FAA official initially stated that the Black Hawk was going to be on a “scenic route,” but the US Army’s data indicates that the crew hewed closely to its approved flight path, which is directly up the I-395 highway corridor, also known as” Route 5.” The US Department of Defense was located at the Pentagon in Washington, DC, before the helicopter circled it. The getting of a Delta Air Lines Airbus A319 and a Republic Airways Embraer E170 was later aborted by FA air traffic controllers at the Ronald Reagan airport. Following a dangerous mid-air collision in January between a passenger jet and an Army helicopter, which resulted in 67 fatal fatalities, the abandoned landings add to public unease about ongoing near calls between government helicopters and professional airplanes near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. The aircraft jurisdiction completely forbade helicopters from flying on the collision’s course in March. As part of its work with the FAA to address health concerns, the US Army halted all planes into and out of the Pentagon after the May 1 affair.

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