Eight French and two Greek military personnel died on Monday when a Greek fighter jet crashed on takeoff at a military base in Spain housing a NATO training center for elite pilots.
The two-seater F-16 jet “lost power” as it took off from the base near the southeastern city of Albacete and crashed into an area where other planes were parked, damaging five other aircraft, the Spanish Ministry of Defense said in a statement.
Television footage showed flames and thick black smoke billowing from the crash site, as sirens wailed in the background.
“It appears that there are two people who died and who have Greek nationality and eight French,” Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said in an interview with private television channel Telecinco.
The two Greek pilots of the crashed plane, both of them captains, are among the dead, the ministry of defense said.
The French victims included three captains and a lieutenant.
A further 21 people were injured in the accident — 11 Italian nationals and 10 French, the ministry added.
Five of the injured suffered major burns and were taken to a specialist unit at a Madrid hospital. The others suffered different bodily injuries. Three have already been released with the rest under observation.
The Spanish ministry said it took firefighters an hour to put out the fire caused by the jet crash.
The French presidency confirmed the eight deaths and said another six French mechanics had suffered serious burns.
French President Francois Hollande “expressed his deep respect for the commitment” of the airmen who were preparing for air force missions to fight “against terrorist groups” in Iraq and the African Sahel region.
France’s ministry of defense said one of those injured was in a “very serious condition,” while another two had been placed in a medically induced coma.
Spanish Minister of Defense Pedro Morenes and Spanish Air Force Chief of Staff Francisco Javier Garcia Arnaiz arrived at the air base late on Monday, located about 250km southeast of Madrid.
French Minister of Defense Jean-Yves Le Drian was expected to visit the site of the accident yesterday.
The Spanish ministry of defense said an investigation had been opened to determine the cause of the accident.
The Greek F-16 hit two Italian AMX planes and three French jets — a Mirage 2000 and two Alfa Jets — when it crashed.
The jet that crashed was taking part in a NATO training exercise called the Tactical Leadership Programme, which seeks to improve multinational cooperation in air operations.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said he was “deeply saddened” by the disaster.
“This is a tragedy which affects the whole NATO family. I express my heartfelt condolences to the loved ones and the nations of those who lost their lives, and I wish a speedy recovery to the injured,” he said in a statement.
Britain, Germany, the US and Spain were also taking part in the exercises at the base, but none of their citizens were injured.
The Tactical Leadership Programme was formed in 1978 by NATO’s Central Region air forces to advance their tactical capabilities and produce tactics, techniques and procedures that improve multinational air operations.
The 10 NATO nations that take part in the program are Belgium, Britain, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and the US.
According to the French ministry of defense Web site, it is “the most renowned and most demanding” program for fighter pilots.
Rajoy expressed his condolences in a Twitter message, saying he was “moved” by the accident.
The base has housed the training center for NATO pilots since 2010, according to its Web site.
“It’s a school for pilots, which is home to 10 nationalities,” the Spanish ministry of defense said.
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