TOKYO (AP) — A deadly pile-up of a U.S. Marine Corps aircraft in Hawaii has renewed reserve concerns in Japan, where some-more of a Ospreys will be deployed.
Gov. Takeshi Onaga on a southern island of Okinawa says flights of a hybrid aircraft should be dangling until a means of a pile-up is found.
A tilt-rotor MV-22 Osprey held glow after a tough alighting on Sunday, murdering one Marine and injuring 21 others during Bellows Air Force Station on Hawaii’s categorical island of Oahu.
The U.S. operates 24 Ospreys on Okinawa and announced a week ago that 10 some-more would be deployed to a bottom nearby Tokyo commencement in 2017.
The U.S. troops says a Osprey is protected though Okinawans have disturbed a aircraft might be disposed to crashes.
Article source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/05/18/japanese-osprey-hawaii-crash_n_7304744.html?utm_hp_ref=hawaii&ir=Hawaii