Michelle Obama's plane in close call—reports | Inquirer News

Michelle Obama’s plane in close call—reports

/ 03:15 PM April 20, 2011

WASHINGTON—An official plane carrying US First Lady Michelle Obama had to abort a landing at an air force base near Washington on Monday due to an air traffic controller’s error, US media reported Tuesday.

The aircraft carrying her was too close to a 200-ton military cargo jet and had to scrap its final approach to Andrews Air Force Base, a key hub for top US government officials including President Barack Obama, the reports said.

“The aircraft were never in any danger,” the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said in a statement that confirmed an incident at Andrews but did not explicitly say the first lady was aboard the aircraft directed to veer off.

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The Washington Post and ABC television each cited anonymous federal officials familiar with the events.

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Controllers at Andrews worried that, as a result of other air traffic officials’ mistake, the massive C-17 would not clear the runway at the facility swiftly enough for the first lady’s Boeing 737 to land safely.

The Andrews controllers ordered Michelle Obama’s flight – bearing the EXEC1F designation as an aircraft carrying members of the president’s family – to execute a series of turns to put more distance between it and the cargo.

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“FAA controllers at Andrews Air Force Base instructed an incoming Boeing 737 on approach to Runway 19 to perform a ‘go around’ on Monday, April 18, 2011 just after 5 p.m. because the plane did not have the required amount of separation behind a military C17,” the FAA said in its statement.

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“The FAA is investigating the incident. The Boeing 737 landed safely after executing the go around,” the agency said, without mentioning Michelle Obama.

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The FAA has strict standards on how much distance controllers must maintain between planes, because an aircraft’s wake causes severe turbulence.

The FAA requires five miles (eight kilometers) between a C-17 and the next airplane, but the first lady’s jet was just 3.08 miles (4.8 kilometers) miles away, the Post said.

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US air traffic controllers have faced heavy scrutiny recently after a series of incidents in which some fell asleep while on duty, leading officials to announce a new “zero tolerance” approach for such activities.

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TAGS: Celebrities, Politics

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