Normal view

B-52 Bomber Crashes At Edwards Air Force Base In California (Updated)

16 June 2026 at 00:42

Details are still coming in, but a B-52 bomber has crashed at Edwards Air Force Base in California.

The base’s official Facebook and X pages have posted the following statement:

“A United States Air Force B-52 Stratofortress crashed shortly after takeoff on the Edwards airfield at 11:20 a.m. Emergency crews immediately responded to the scene and the situation is ongoing. More information will be provided as it becomes available.”

ALERT: A United States Air Force B-52 Stratofortress crashed shortly after takeoff on the Edwards airfield at 11:20 a.m.

Emergency crews immediately responded to the scene and the situation is ongoing. More information will be provided as it becomes available. pic.twitter.com/x932d3HXHz

— Edwards Air Force Base (@EdwardsAFB) June 15, 2026

From what we can see, the B-52 appears to have crashed on or at least very near the base’s main runway. Still images and video emerging now show a large fire with black smoke that can be seen from miles away.

News of the crash first emerged in a post on the unofficial Air Force amn/nco/snco Facebook group. That post said the aircraft in question was tail number 061, but this is currently unconfirmed. While its status is unclear, this particular B-52 was the first to receive a new AN/APQ-188 active electronically-scanned array (AESA) radar, which is one part of a much larger modernization effort for the entire fleet of these bombers.

Did something just happen at Edwards Air Force Base? Currently seeing a large column coming from the base, cams are aligned with one of the runways.

Seems like these two are holding off as well. pic.twitter.com/3vec75KPH0

— DanielFireCopter (@DanielFireTruck) June 15, 2026

How many individuals were on board the B-52 when it went down, and their fate, are currently unknown. However, the bomber ejection seat configuration could have presented complications for escape depending on how soon after takeoff the incident occurred. The B-52 has crew positions that eject downward.

Prior to this crash, the Air Force had 76 B-52s in service.

A stock picture of a B-52 bomber at Edwards. USAF

Though the two incidents are unrelated, this is also the second crash of a U.S. military aircraft in three days. A U.S. Marine Corps F/A-18D Hornet assigned to Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 323 (VMFA-323) went down near Mount Rainier in Washington State on June 13. The two individuals in that jet were able to eject safely. The Hornet did start a wildfire after hitting the ground.

BREAKING – 🇺🇸 Footage showing a U.S. Marine Corps F/A-18 crashing into a hillside near Rimrock Lake, Wash., on Saturday. pic.twitter.com/yQ4O6UFZOl

— Technopolitik (@Technopolitik_) June 15, 2026

A US Navy F/A-18 crashed near Rimrock Lake, pilot ejected and walked out with medics according to reports. This is along the famous VR-1355 low level route in Washington State.

🎥509Media pic.twitter.com/UhKZyUCRF9

— Thenewarea51 (@thenewarea51) June 14, 2026

Update: 4:00 PM ET –

Fox News has now shared a video it says is of the aftermath of the crash, which shows a very large scorched area along the side of one of the runways at Edwards. There is no readily discernible wreckage, pointing to a total loss of the aircraft.

Aftermath of U.S. Air Force B-52 Stratofortress crash at Edwards Air Force Base. https://t.co/eSljMYUSal pic.twitter.com/l5O3sc5vjs

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 15, 2026

Update: 4:18 PM ET –

Edwards Air Force Base has shared a new update as of 12:48 PM PDT via its social media accounts. The full statement reads:

“The airfield has been closed, and all inbound aircraft are being diverted. All non-commercial visitor passes have been suspended until further notice to allow the installation to focus entirely on emergency response operations.”

Update- 12:48 PDT: The airfield has been closed, and all inbound aircraft are being diverted.

All non-commercial visitor passes have been suspended until further notice to allow the installation to focus entirely on emergency response operations.

— Edwards Air Force Base (@EdwardsAFB) June 15, 2026

Update: 6:43 PM ET –

The 412th Test Wing Public Affairs Office has now issued a brief press release, which is as follows:

 “An Air Force B-52 Stratofortress carrying eight people on a routine test mission crashed today shortly after take-off at 11:20 a.m. (PDT). Initial indications are that the crash was not survivable. Emergency response personnel are on scene, and officials are working to account for all personnel.”

“The crash is currently under investigation.”

Ten is the maximum number of people that can ride about a B-52 at one time, with four jump seats in addition to the available crew stations. Eight died in the crash. This makes it the biggest loss we know of at Edwards since a fatal crash of a B-50D bomber with eight individuals on board near the base in 1951.

UPDATE: 7:41 PM EDT –

Speaking at a press conference after the crash, Air Force Col. James Hayes, Deputy Commander at 412th Test Wing, Edwards Air Force Base, offered some additional details.

  • “After reviewing the footage of the crash, it was deemed that this was an unrecoverable crash and unsurvivable. At that point, we went into the notification process.”
  • “At this point, we don’t have any indication as to what the cause was of this.” The answers might not be known for upwards of six months after several investigations. 
  • The B-52 had “a mixed crew of military, government civilians, and government contractors supporting this test mission.”
  • The base is terminating operations tomorrow “mainly because of the runway itself, and we’ll eventually get back to full operations and execute…but at this point, yes, we are standing down operations tomorrow.”

UPDATE: 4AM EDT—

Boeing has put out a statement mourning the loss of the crew, two of which were its employees.

pic.twitter.com/wvLlMz7slK

— The Boeing Company (@Boeing) June 16, 2026

*Author’s note: We changed the maximum crew to ten after a past bomber pilot informed us that the B-52 can hold this many people, not eight as we understood it to be.

Contact the author: joe@twz.com

The post B-52 Bomber Crashes At Edwards Air Force Base In California (Updated) appeared first on The War Zone.

Russian Tu-22M3 Swing-Wing Bomber Seen Plunging Into The Ground

15 June 2026 at 17:25

Multiple videos circulating on social media show the crash of a Russian Tupolev Tu-22M3 Backfire-C bomber today. Footage shows the swing-wing bomber entering a steep nose-down dive before slamming into the ground, producing a large plume of black smoke. The footage has not been independently verified, but Russian authorities have confirmed the loss of the aircraft.

A Russian Air Force Tu-22M3 bomber crashed during landing this evening in Irkutsk. pic.twitter.com/shNwTrjLlk

— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) June 15, 2026

#Склянка, Иркутская обл., 15/06/26: медленно и печальноhttps://t.co/Sq4kpPRPSg #вксрф #потерьнет pic.twitter.com/ywljodbPPB

— Necro Mancer (@666_mancer) June 15, 2026

The Russian Ministry of Defense said the Tu-22M3 crashed while making an approach to land in the Irkutsk region, in southeastern Siberia, during what it described as a routine training flight. According to the ministry, the bomber was not carrying a combat load, all crew members ejected safely, and there were no casualties or damage on the ground. The cause of the crash has not been disclosed, and an investigation is underway.

Footage from the crash site of the Russian Tu-22M3 bomber. https://t.co/4lnFDUp0pZ pic.twitter.com/agQxbqVPy2

— Special Kherson Cat 🐈🇺🇦 (@bayraktar_1love) June 15, 2026

The governor of the Irkutsk region, Igor Kobzev, said that the aircraft crashed in the Bokhansky district, near the village of Kamenka. Kobzev added that the crew had been found by local people after ejecting and were already getting medical treatment.

Belaya, near Irkutsk, is an important Backfire base, accommodating the 200th Heavy Bomber Aviation Regiment. 

The Tu-22M3 remains a key component of Russia’s Long-Range Aviation fleet and has been used extensively in the war against Ukraine to launch cruise missile strikes in standoff attacks. This makes any loss of the type noteworthy even when it occurs outside of combat operations, as was the case today.

In the Ukraine war, the Tu-22M3 has primarily been associated with attacks using Kh-22 (AS-4 Kitchen) and Kh-32 supersonic anti-ship missiles repurposed for use against ground targets. This weapon has proven to be very destructive, although not highly precise, for land attack applications and has resulted in significant numbers of civilian deaths.

A video from May 2022 that purports to show the launch of Kh-22 cruise missiles, as seen from the cockpit of a Tu-22M3:

The launch of two supersonic cruise missiles kh-22 from a long-range supersonic missile-carrying bomber Tu-22.
📹fighter_bomber pic.twitter.com/kAXU9pP5KW

— Massimo Frantarelli (@MrFrantarelli) May 11, 2022

During the conflict, Ukraine claims to have used a Soviet-era S-200 (SA-5 Gammon) long-range surface-to-air missile to bring down the Tu-22M3 that crashed in the Stavropol region of southern Russia on April 19, 2024, an incident you can read more about here.

One down, the rest to go.
The first downed Russian strategic bomber Tu-22m3.@KpsZSU@DI_Ukraine pic.twitter.com/6keqNZeyAt

— Ukraine Territorial Defense Forces (@TDF_UA) April 19, 2024

Other examples of the Tu-22M3 have been destroyed on the ground by Ukrainian drone strikes during the conflict.

In August 2023, a Backfire was destroyed by a drone strike while on the ground at the airbase of Soltsy-2 in the Novgorod region.

First pictures have emerged regarding the Ukrainian drone attack in the Soltsy-2 airbase. The Russian MoD initially claimed that one plane was only “damaged”, but pictures of this Tupolev Tu-22M3 speak a different language.

Source: https://t.co/Tlec0Df7TY#Russia #Ukrainehttps://t.co/fL2E1aGW7a pic.twitter.com/ip4sOE69eT

— (((Tendar))) (@Tendar) August 20, 2023

Subsequently, in Operation Spiderweb, in June 2025, four more Tu-22M3s were confirmed destroyed on the ground, while another two were confirmed damaged. At least four more Backfires were targeted in the same attacks and may also have received some degree of damage. On this occasion, Ukraine employed short-range explosive-laden drones that targeted Russia’s missile-carrying bomber fleet in an unprecedented attack on at least four airbases, including Belaya.

Russian films the burning remains of Russian Tu-95s and Tu-22s at the Belaya military airfield in the Irkutsk region pic.twitter.com/GXuWfkIg9c

— Special Kherson Cat 🐈🇺🇦 (@bayraktar_1love) June 2, 2025

Today’s incident also adds to a growing list of recent non-combat accidents involving the aging bomber fleet. Previous such losses, all in the Irkutsk region, occurred in August 2024, April 2025, and June 2026.

After all of these incidents, the Russian Tu-22M3 fleet today numbers around 50 active aircraft, although there are additional non-serviceable aircraft that could be brought back into service after extensive overhaul.

Since the Tu-22M3 has been out of production for decades, every airframe is especially precious. Any loss reduces Russia’s Long-Range Aviation capabilities and readiness. This has an impact not only on the war in Ukraine but also on Russia’s broader Long-Range Aviation force, a key element of the country’s strategic military posture.

We will update this post as we find out more about today’s incident.

Contact the author: thomas@thewarzone.com

The post Russian Tu-22M3 Swing-Wing Bomber Seen Plunging Into The Ground appeared first on The War Zone.

❌