Russian strategic bomber plane crashes in Siberia on training exercise

Russian strategic bomber plane crashes in Siberia on training exercise
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Summary The Tu-22, which can carry hypersonic "Kinzhal" missiles and is codenamed "Backfire" by NATO, is a Soviet-era supersonic bomber

MOSCOW (Reuters) – A Russian Tu-22M3 strategic bomber plane crashed on Monday in Siberia's Irkutsk region during a training flight, the Russian Defence Ministry said, but the aircraft's four-person crew had managed to safely eject.

The Tu-22, which can carry hypersonic "Kinzhal" missiles and is codenamed "Backfire" by NATO, is a Soviet-era supersonic bomber that Russia has since used for ⁠combat missions in Syria and Ukraine.

Unverified footage of the crash on social media showed a plane nose-diving into a thickly wooded area not far from the banks of the Angara river, producing a huge column of smoke.

"The crew ejected. There is no threat to the pilots' lives or health," the Interfax news agency cited the Defence ⁠Ministry as saying. "There is no damage on the ground. The aircraft was flying without a combat load."

Irkutsk's governor, Igor Kobzev, said in a statement that the plane had crashed near ⁠the village of Kamenka, that firefighters were working to extinguish a blaze, and that the plane's four crew members had ⁠been taken to hospital.

The Tu-22M3, a modernised version of the original Tu-22 plane, can deliver Kh-22 (AS-4 Kitchen) air-launched ⁠cruise missiles as well as the air-launched hypersonic Kinzhal "Dagger" missiles, according to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.

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