- Chipmaker Intel beats revenue expectations amidst Q4 loss
- Key nominees for the Grammy Awards
- Beyonce leads Grammys pack at gala backdropped by fires
- Samsung Electronics posts 129.85% jump in Q4 operating profit
- French luxury billionaire sparks tax debate with threat to leave
- Apple profit climbs but sales miss expectations
- Washington midair crash: What we know so far
- Marianne Faithfull: from muse to master
- Trump blames 'diversity' for deadly Washington airliner collision
- Merkel slams successor over far-right support on immigration bill
- Stock markets firm on ECB rate cut, corporate results
- Mexican economy shrinks for first time in three years
- Nostalgia and escapism: highlights from Paris Couture Week
- UK prosecutors defend jail terms of environmental activists
- Qatari emir tells Syria leader 'urgent need' for inclusive government
- Dubai airport clocks record 92.3m passengers, extending hot streak
- US economic growth steady in 2024 as Trump takes office
- ECB cuts rate again as eurozone falters, with eye on Trump
- No survivors from plane, helicopter collision in Washington
- Richard Gere to be honoured at Spain's top film awards
- France, Germany stall eurozone growth in fourth quarter
- DR Congo leader vows 'vigorous' response as Rwanda-backed fighters advance
- European stock markets rise before ECB rate call
- Dubai airport sees record 92.3 million passengers in 2024
- Shell annual profit drops to $16 bn as oil prices fall
- UK car sector fears for Trump tariffs as output falls
- French economy shrinks as political crisis eclipses Olympic boost
- Plane carrying 64 collides with helicopter, crashes in Washington
- DR Congo leader says troops mounting 'vigorous' response to M23
- EU holds auto talks to revive embattled car sector
- Plane carrying more than 60 collides with helicopter, crashes in Washington
- ECB to look past Trump risk and push on with rate cuts
- Life's 'basic building blocks' found in asteroid samples
- Passenger plane collides with helicopter near Washington airport
- Tesla results miss estimates as company projects 2025 auto volume growth
- Meta posts big profit, aims to take AI lead
- Brazil central bank hikes interest rate as Lula's woes mount
- Global stocks mixed as market awaits ECB decision
- Tesla results miss estimates, citing lower vehicle prices
- US Fed pauses rate cuts, will 'wait and see' on Trump policies
- Rwanda-backed fighters advance into DR Congo after mostly seizing city
- US Fed pauses rate cuts, resisting Trump pressure
- Germany's far-right 'firewall' crumbles as migration debate flares
- With China's DeepSeek, US tech fears red threat
- Immigration 'flooding' remark row piles pressure on French PM
- Frenchman on trial for killing ex-partner after years of alleged abuse
- 'Less snow': warm January weather breaks records in Moscow
- Eurovision 2025 first tickets wave sells out in minutes
- Maison Margiela names new director during Paris Haute Couture Week
- German industry sounds alarm as government cuts growth forecast
Washington midair crash: What we know so far
A US commercial airliner with 64 people aboard and a military helicopter collided over Washington on Wednesday before crashing into the Potomac River.
A rescue mission had turned into a recovery operation by Thursday, with no survivors expected.
Here's what we know so far:
- What happened? -
Just before 9:00 pm (0200 GMT Thursday) a Bombardier jet operated by American Airlines subsidiary PSA was approaching Reagan National Airport when it collided with a US Army Black Hawk helicopter.
American Eagle Flight 5342 was flying to the US capital from Wichita, Kansas -- typically a journey time of just under three hours.
Air traffic controllers asked the jet to switch its landing route from one runway to another shortly before the crash, according to The New York Times, which added this was a routine request for regional flights.
Ahead of the crash, controllers warned the helicopter it was on course to collide with the passenger jet.
Footage from the nearby Kennedy Center captured a small aircraft heading towards a well-lit descending plane before a fireball can be seen.
Both plunged into the Potomac River, with the plane fuselage splitting into three separate pieces.
- No survivors -
Authorities say they do not expect any survivors from the crash, and were on Thursday working to recover 67 bodies from the river.
American Airlines reported 60 passengers and four crew members were aboard the flight, while three US Army personnel were on the helicopter, according to a military official.
The plane was carrying athletes and coaches from the elite figure skating world, including former Russian world pairs champions Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov.
US Figure Skating said "several" members of its community were aboard the flight.
The plane pilot was identified by US media as Sam Lilley, a 28-year-old with six years experience at American Airlines, and who was engaged to be married.
- Complex recovery operation -
Washington fire chief John Donnelly said a large-scale and "highly complex" recovery operation was launched Wednesday night. Boats were still on the water Thursday looking for victims and wreckage.
Water conditions were cold enough for hypothermia to set in within 30 minutes, according to experts, and some debris had spread downriver into Maryland.
None of the so-called black box flight recorders had been located as of Thursday afternoon, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said, adding they were believed to be underwater.
- Was it avoidable? -
Both aircraft were on standard flight patterns on a clear night with good visibility, albeit in an airspace that is extremely busy with military and commercial craft.
US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said those aboard the helicopter -- a captain, staff sergeant and chief warrant officer -- were a "fairly experienced crew."
Authorities said the weather Wednesday night was clear, with Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy adding that the crash was "absolutely" preventable.
President Donald Trump told a news conference that the American Airlines plane was "doing everything right" before the collision.
"You had a pilot problem from the standpoint of the helicopter," Trump said. "You could have done a million different maneuvers. For some reason, it just kept going."
- Investigation underway -
The New York Times reported that staffing in Reagan National's air traffic control tower was "not normal," citing an internal preliminary Federal Aviation Administration report.
A controller was monitoring both planes and helicopters -- jobs that "typically are assigned to two controllers, rather than one," the newspaper reported.
The NTSB, the federal agency that probes civilian transportation accidents, said it will leave "no stone unturned" in its investigation into the incident.
After the crash Trump blamed so-called diversity, equity and inclusion policies under presidents Barack Obama and Joe Biden for poor safety standards, building on the Republican's wider attacks on DEI practices since he took office last week.
Asked about the president's claims, NTSB chair Jennifer Homendy told reporters: "As part of any investigation, we look at the human, the machine and the environment."
X.Wong--CPN