Two pilots safely ejected from a US Air Force T-38 Talon II jet during a training session as detailed in an official announcement from Columbus Air Force Base. The aircraft went down in a wooded area near the Mississippi border in Lamar County, Alabama. ABC correspondent Austin Pratt, present at the site, verified that both pilots were transported to a medical facility for evaluation by medical staff.
According to the base’s official statement, the cause of the incident remains unknown and will be scrutinized by a Safety Investigation Board. Columbus Air Force Base accommodates the 14th Flying Training Wing of Air Education and Training Command’s 19th Air Force, focusing on specialized undergraduate pilot training utilizing various aircraft such as the T-6 Texan II, T-38C Talon, and T-1A Jayhawk.
This occurrence occurred after a bold US rescue mission to retrieve the crew of “Dude 44,” an F-15E Strike Eagle that was brought down in challenging terrain in southwestern Iran. Following the aircraft being hit by a shoulder-fired missile, the pilot and weapons system officer had to eject in hostile territory, prompting the urgent mission to extract them before potential capture by Iranian forces.
A high-stakes operation unfolded where U.S. Special Operations forces and CIA agents collaborated to locate the airmen in the mountains of Isfahan province. While the pilot was swiftly rescued, the weapons system officer endured a tense 24-hour evasion in a mountain crevice before being rescued under intense enemy fire.
