Air Force orders all Boeing F-15 fighter jets grounded less than a week after returning to fly

By: DONNA BORAK - Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- The Air Force grounded more than 450 Boeing F-15 fighter jets on Wednesday after investigating a crash earlier this month and finding defects in the aircraft's fuselage.

It was the second time this month that F-15s were grounded. The entire fleet was grounded following a Nov. 2 Missouri Air National Guard training exercise in which a pilot safely ejected before the aircraft crashed. The Air Force subsequently returned the F-15s to flight status on Nov. 21.

The Air Force investigation, which took less than the allotted 30 days to complete, found there were "possible fleet-wide airworthiness problems" because of defects in metal rails that hold the F-15's fuselage together.


The Air Force said Wednesday that 452 of its oldest F-15s, or more than 60 percent of the fleet, will remain grounded until each one is inspected, and possibly repaired.

A Boeing representative could not be immediately reached for comment.

The Air Force seeks to replace aging F-15s, some more than 30 years old, with Lockheed Martin Corp.'s F-22 Raptor. The latest version of the F-15 is being used in operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. Non-combat but critical-mission flights were flown on Lockheed's F-16s while the F-15 fleet was grounded.

The F-15 was first manufactured by St. Louis-based McDonnell-Douglas, which was purchased by Chicago-based Boeing some 10 years ago. Boeing delivered its last military F-15 to the Air Force in late 2004, but still manufactures the aircraft for nonmilitary customers, the company said.

Shares of Boeing added $1.76 to $93.49.

Ellie