Aircraft from Nimitz crashed in the South China Sea


Two military aircraft from the US Nimitz-class aircraft carrier crashed successively in the South China Sea. What could be the reasons? What other noteworthy information is there?

Answer 1:
The Nimitz is about to be decommissioned, and this seems to be its last deployment, making a big splash. Recently, military personnel are almost not getting paid, but the good news is they can report combat losses again!

Answer 2:
Two aircraft crashed within 30 minutes, and the crash site is in the South China Sea, which makes people speculate wildly. If it was due to mechanical reasons, it indicates problems with US aircraft maintenance and support. If it wasn’t mechanical reasons, then it’s a big joke. Regardless of the reason, it proves one thing: the US is no longer the US of the past, and the US is following in Russia’s footsteps.

Answer 3:
US military pilots discovered that the aircraft was under strong electronic interference, instruments failed, and they had to operate manually. Depending on the different identities of the US pilots, the following actions are taken: A. Anti-fascist WWII US pilots: Find the enemy causing the interference and eliminate them. B. Peak fully-paid US pilots from the 1990s: Bold and careful, manually pilot the aircraft and return safely. C. US pilots who joined the military with loans, on unpaid leave, and their families are receiving relief food: Life is precious, eject immediately. D. Politically correct LGBT US pilots: Panic and accidentally eject.

Answer 4:
Is this meant to embarrass the President? He just arrived in Malaysia, and you crash two aircraft in a row, what does that mean! Although the US is declining, crashing two in such a short time, right when the President just arrived in Malaysia and during US-China negotiations, it doesn’t look like an accident no matter how you look at it. It seems more like some group is indirectly demanding pay or appealing to the emperor?

Answer 5:
The US military only has an advantage in existing assets, so we should encourage the US military to cross the Pacific to China’s South China Sea and East China Sea. On one hand, it can deplete the US military’s assets, and on the other hand, it can increase our military’s training experience and integration. We wish the US mobile fleets would come every week. If US ground forces could be stationed in Taiwan, that would be even better, delivering hostages directly to us.

Answer 6:
Insufficient training. In 2023, the average annual flight hours for USAF pilots were only 110 hours. During the Cold War until around 2000, annual training flight hours were over 200 hours, peaking at about 270 hours. I haven’t found data for USN, but the frequent collisions, fires, and the natural aged appearance of in-service ships in recent years can all reveal the current incompetence of the US military. By the way, PLAAF is the one with average annual training flight hours exceeding 200 hours.

Answer 7:
Investigate strictly. It must be Chinese students who placed high-power magnets in the South China Sea, causing US aircraft to fall. PLA: I haven’t even fired a shot, how did you fall? Nimitz: Oh, this just shows your marksmanship is accurate! Isn’t it, buddy, isn’t Trump still in Malaysia negotiating with China? After negotiating, he still has to personally extort money from South Korea and Japan, with a $38 trillion US debt hole waiting to be filled. This round of negotiations is about carrot and stick, combining kindness and severity. Who would have thought your stick would first hit yourself? You, Nimitz, came up and dropped a big one, so how can Trump negotiate? The old lady was broken by Li Chenggang, Trump was made by the Chinese to only talk about tariffs and nothing else, at his wit’s end. Maybe the US should just surrender, really tired.

Answer 8:
I am a military novice, completely ignorant about the performance characteristics of these aircraft, and I don’t know why they crashed into the sea. I just want to ask, it feels like I often hear news about this Super Hornet this year, and every time it’s crashing into the sea. Is this the only function of this aircraft?

1 thought on “Aircraft from Nimitz crashed in the South China Sea”

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