REPORT CITES LAPSE IN COMMAND AS MAJOR CAUSE OF CROATIAN CRASH.Byline: The New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times A sustained breakdown in the Air Force's chain of command was a leading factor in the plane crash that killed Commerce Secretary Ron Brown and 33 other people aboard a jet in Dubrovnik, Croatia, two months ago, the service said Friday in its official report on the accident. It was as a result of this breakdown, the report said, that Air Force commanders in Europe had failed to make a safety inspection at the Dubrovnik airport Dubrovnik Airport (IATA: DBV, ICAO: LDDU) is the international airport of Dubrovnik, Croatia. The airport is located approximately 20km (12.5 mi) from Dubrovnik city center, near Čilipi. that might have prevented the crash. The report concluded, as previously published news accounts had suggested it would, that pilot error, insufficient on-board navigational equipment and poor airport design had also contributed to the accident. The chain of causes began with erroneous Croatian landing guidelines and ended with a harried air crew, rushing fatally through its landing procedures, flying off course and almost 90 mph too fast. In between, the Air Force said in its 21-volume crash report, top commanders of the jet's squadron had ignored Air Force orders that forbade for·bade v. A past tense of forbid. forbade or forbad Verb the past tense of forbid forbade forbid landings at airports like Dubrovnik's in poor visibility. ``Safety is not compromised if we continue to fly . . .'' one commander wrote in rejecting the Air Force directives, the report said. The report also said that while the jet, a military version of the Boeing 737, lacked on-board navigational aids needed to land in bad visibility at Dubrovnik, the crew was unaware of that. It condemned Air Force training procedures for not having its pilots properly schooled on the difficulties of landing at poorly equipped airports of the former Soviet Bloc. And, in wrenching detail, it described how Air Force Sgt. Shelly A. Kelly, 36, a flight attendant from Zanesville, Ohio Zanesville is a city in Muskingum County, Ohio, United States. The population was 25,586 at the 2000 census. It is the county seat of Muskingum CountyGR6. , survived with a broken back for almost seven hours in the rain and wreckage before dying when rescue crews finally reached the site. Kelly was the only one to survive the 50 to 100 G's exerted on the victim's bodies by the impact. Brown and 33 others on the jet were probably killed instantly, the Air Force said. The report was blunt - as was a grim Air Force chief of staff Ronald Fogleman General Ronald Robert Fogleman (born January 1942) was Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force. As chief, he served as the senior uniformed Air Force officer responsible for the organization, training and equipage of 750,000 active duty, Guard, Reserve and civilian forces at an afternoon Pentagon briefing. ``The United States Air Force United States Air Force (USAF) Major component of the U.S. military organization, with primary responsibility for air warfare, air defense, and military space research. It also provides air services in coordination with the other military branches. U.S. was given the mission to provide operational support airlift Operational support airlift (OSA) missions are movements of high-priority passengers and cargo with time, place, or mission-sensitive requirements. OSA aircraft are those fixed-wing aircraft acquired and/or retained exclusively for OSA missions, as well as any other Department of for Secretary of Commerce Ron Brown,'' Fogleman said. ``We failed to execute that mission.'' Three Air Force officers - including a veteran brigadier general - already have been relieved of duty because of the crash, and Fogleman said an investigation is under way to see if they or others will be court martialed COURT MARTIAL. A court authorized by the articles of war, for the trial of all offenders in the army or navy, for military offences. Article 64, directs that general courts martial may consist of any number of commissioned officers, from five to thirteen, inclusively; but they shall not . |
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