Turkey: too early to say what caused deadly military plane crash


Members of emergency services inspect the area at the site of the Turkish C-130 military cargo plane crash near the Azerbaijani border, in Sighnaghi municipality, Georgia, November 12, 2025. REUTERS/Irakli Gedenidze

ANKARA (Reuters) -Turkey's defence ministry said on Thursday it was too early to say what caused the crash this week of a military cargo plane in Georgia in which 20 soldiers died, and inspections continue.

The C-130 cargo aircraft had left Azerbaijan for Turkey and crashed on Tuesday in an incident marking the NATO member's highest military death toll since 2020.

At a briefing, the ministry said the expected official crash report would uncover the cause, and added that the aircraft was not carrying ammunitions on its last flight.

It was carrying a 10-person maintenance team for Turkish F-16s that had earlier taken part in Victory Day celebrations in Azerbaijan, as well as the flight crew and maintenance equipment, the ministry said.

Its last radio call was some 40 minutes before its crash. The black box - containing the Flight Data Recorder (FDR) and Cockpit Voice Data Recorder (CVDR) - was now in Ankara for analysis, it said.

Some analysts have said Turkey's fleet of Lockheed Martin C-130s is old and needs renewing, despite the aircraft's general reliability, and that the likely cause of the crash was a technical failure.

The ministry - which last month announced a deal with Britain to procure 12 C-130J aircraft that need to undergo modernisation and maintenance - said the crashed plane was bought from Saudi Arabia in 2012 and started flights in 2022 after undergoing modernisation.

Since then it was regularly used and serviced, the ministry said. Its last maintenance was one month ago.

All planned flights by Turkey's 18 C-130 planes had been suspended pending inspections after the incident, the ministry added.

(Reporting by Tuvan Gumrukcu; Editing by Jonathan Spicer)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Trump says U.S. strongly considering NATO exit, Telegraph newspaper says
Hungary election polls show opposition Tisza widening lead over Orban's Fidesz
Romania, Ukraine advance talks on EU-funded joint drone production
Australia PM Albanese to address nation over Iran crisis
Airline Emirates says Iranian nationals barred from entering or transiting UAE
South Korea and Indonesia discuss energy security, sign agreements on minerals and tech
Trump: US forces to leave Iran within ‘two to three weeks’
Haiti gangs keep up attacks in breadbasket region after massacre
U.S. F-35 fighter jet crashes in Nevada, pilot safe
Russian military transport plane crashes in Crimea, killing 29, defence ministry says

Others Also Read