are the "special duties" aircraft of 47 Sqn based at Lyneham.
A "special duties" aircraft would normally carry a crew of
five
or six. It could carry up to 128 passengers but in a special
forces role, a maximum of 70 is more
likely.
President George W Bush added his own tribute, saying:
"We also mourn the American and British military
personnel who lost their lives
today."
That appeared to suggest that there could have been US
special forces on board the aircraft as well. The SAS operates
in northern Iraq alongside its American
counterparts.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/01/31/wcrash31.xml&sSheet=/news/2005/01/31/ixhome.htmlWhat's so important that it has to be flown instead of
driven.
it is more likely that it was a troop carrying mission - a
mission with a plane that normaly transports up to 128
troops. The plane was loaded with some british SAS
special forces as well as some 20 -45 US soldiers
and ammunition. It was refuelled in Baghdad and had the
order to deliver some troops and equipment from Baghdad
to Balad and to fly direcly back to basra then. The Sa-7/18
hit
the aircraft in the air - blowing up its fuel tank. The
plane explodes partly in the air and came down in pieces !
Killed where some 20 british personall as well as some 40-
50 americans. Since having lost some 31 troops only 4
days ago, the us military does not what us to known
anything about there newly high losses, especially not since
the election euphory propaganda, trys to implant to the
world how well everything goes in iraq. Also Tony Blair
isn t interested in bad news, but he takes "the black jack" for
the americans, for he and his forces haven t had to take
such remarkeble losses for a long period, whereas
the americans had to.
Any way the Resistance did this. And they can do it
again.