Trump blames 'obsolete' US air traffic control system for the plane and
chopper collision near DC
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[February 07, 2025]
By JOSH FUNK
President Donald Trump on Thursday blamed the deadly collision of a
passenger jet and Army helicopter last week on what he called an
“obsolete” computer system used by U.S. air traffic controllers.
He vowed to replace it after NTSB officials told members of Congress
that advanced surveillance technology available on the helicopter was
turned off.
Trump said during an event that “a lot of mistakes happened” on Jan. 29
when an American Airlines flight out of Wichita, Kansas, collided with
an Army helicopter as the plane was about to land at Ronald Reagan
National Airport near Washington, killing all 67 people on board the two
aircraft.
Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz said Thursday that NTSB officials in a
briefing told senators that the helicopter's Automatic Dependent
Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) — an aviation surveillance technology
that transmits aircraft location and other data to air traffic control
and other aircraft — was off.
“The reason for turning it off does not seem justified," Cruz said. "And
in this instance, this was a training mission, so there was no
compelling national security reason for ADS-B to be turned off.”
NTSB officials also told media outlets that the helicopter crew was
likely wearing night vision goggles.
In the immediate aftermath of the tragedy, Trump blamed it on diversity
hiring programs. But on Thursday, he blamed the computer system used by
the country's air traffic controllers.
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During a speech at the National Prayer Breakfast at the U.S. Capitol,
Trump said the U.S. spent billions of dollars trying to “renovate an
old, broken system” instead of investing in a new one. He said in his
private jet, he uses a system from another country when he lands because
his pilot says the existing system in the U.S. is obsolete.
“I think what is going to happen is we’re all going to sit down and do a
great computerized system for our control towers,” he said.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and Elon Musk said in posts on X
that Musk's team at the Department of Government Efficiency is going to
help rapidly upgrade the nation’s aviation safety system.
The Federal Aviation Administration has been working since the mid-2000s
to upgrade the air traffic control system through its NextGen program.
Federal officials have been raising concerns about an overtaxed and
understaffed air traffic control system for years, especially after a
series of close calls between planes at U.S. airports. Among the reasons
they have cited for staffing shortages are uncompetitive pay, long
shifts, intensive training and mandatory retirements.
Trump said that if the nation had a newer system, alarms would have
sounded when the Black Hawk helicopter, which was on a training
exercise, reached the same altitude as the plane.
But an FAA report after the crash said that the controller did get an
alert that the plane and helicopter were converging when they were still
more than a mile (1.6 kilometers) apart. The controller responded by
asking the helicopter if it had the plane in sight and directed the
helicopter to pass behind the plane. The helicopter responded that it
did have the plane in sight.
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Rescue and salvage crews pull up a part of a Army Black Hawk
helicopter that collided midair with an American Airlines jet, at a
wreckage site in the Potomac River from Ronald Reagan Washington
National Airport, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2025, in Arlington, Va. (AP
Photo/Jose Luis Magana)
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The FAA made it clear Thursday it is going to ensure that
helicopters and planes will no longer share the same airspace over
the Potomac River.
An early focus of the investigation has been confirming the altitude
of the plane and helicopter. The jet’s flight recorder showed its
altitude as 325 feet (99 meters), plus or minus 25 feet (7.6
meters).
Data from the airport’s air traffic control system suggests the
helicopter was above its 200-foot (61-meter) flight ceiling. The
screen the controller was looking at that night showed that based on
radar and other data, the helicopter was at 300 feet (91 meters),
the NTSB said, noting that the figure would have been rounded to the
nearest 100 feet (30 meters).
To get more precise information, investigators need to be able to
examine the wreckage of the Black Hawk. The U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers said Thursday afternoon that all major components of the
helicopter and jet have been removed from the river. Salvage crews
will work to remove smaller debris with baskets over the next 10
days before finishing work on Feb. 16.
“We will continue pushing forward in the coming days until we are
confident the river is safe for navigation and that elements of
evidentiary value are recovered and provided to the appropriate
authorities,” the Corps Baltimore District Commander Col. Francis
Pera said.
This crash was the deadliest in the U.S. since Nov. 12, 2001, when a
jet slammed into a New York City neighborhood just after takeoff,
killing all 260 people on board and five on the ground.
There was concern after the crash that Trump's efforts to slash the
size of the federal workforce could worsen the shortage of air
traffic controllers if some of them accepted the deferred
resignation offers sent to all federal employees last week. But air
traffic controllers were told by their union Thursday that certain
positions within the Federal Aviation Administration, including
theirs, were exempt.
The National Air Traffic Controllers Association said in its email
to members that additional positions might be exempt based on the
employees’ “national security or public safety responsibilities.”
The union had already recommended to its members that they reject
the offers, which were extended the day before the midair collision.
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Associated Press writers Aamer Madhani, Adriana Gomez Licon and
Thomas Beaumont contributed to this report.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
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