Japan finds parts of crashed F35 fighter jet

AFP  |  Tokyo 

said Tuesday it had recovered some debris from a fighter jet that crashed in April, but was still looking for the "all-important" memory that could offer clues into the accident.

Nearly a month after the high-tech plummeted into the sea off the coast of northeastern Japan, neither the pilot's body, nor the plane's fuselage have been found, said

Experts say and the US are keen to prevent debris from the plane being recovered by or China, with Iwaya admitting last month there were "a significant amount of secrets that need to be protected" on board.

Some debris, including a part of the flight data recorder, were recovered "on or after May 3", Iwaya said, adding: "The is studying (the parts), but at this point, the all-important memory (of the flight data recorder) has not been recovered."

The fighter jet went missing on April 9 while flying 135 kilometres east of Misawa, northeastern Japan, on a training mission.

The plane lost contact about 30 minutes after taking off from with three other aircraft.

It was the first reported case of a crash by an F35-A, according to

Japanese and US have already found the jet's tail.

US and Japanese troops have used data from a Japanese seabed research ship along with a US-chartered special "diving support" vessel for deep-sea operations to pull up the newly discovered parts, Iwaya said.

is deploying F35-As, each of which costs more than 10 billion yen (USD90 million), to replace its ageing fighters.

They are a key part of Shinzo Abe's efforts to upgrade the nation's military capacity to meet changing power dynamics in East Asia, with rapidly modernising its military.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, May 07 2019. 13:05 IST