2016 in aviation

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Years in aviation: 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Centuries: 20th century · 21st century · 22nd century
Decades: 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s 2030s 2040s
Years: 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019

This is a list of aviation-related events from 2016:

Events

January

2 January
  • Indian aerial surveillance platforms detect a group of gunmen entering an Indian Air Force base at Pathankot, India, and Indian Air Force security forces exchange fire with them in a housing area. Four of the gunmen and two Indian Air Force security personnel are killed. Gunfire erupts again two hours later, and Indian helicopters fire on gunmen in the base later in the day. Indian security forces finally declare the base secure in the late afternoon, 14 hours after the intrusion began.[2][3][4]
3 January
4 January
  • Saudi Arabia's civil aviation authority suspends all civilian flights between Saudi Arabia and Iran. The move, which comes a day after Saudi Arabia severed diplomatic relations with Iran, raises doubts about the future ability of Islamic pilgrims from Iran to visit Mecca and of Shiite pilgrims from Saudi Arabia to visit religious sites in Iran.[7]
  • John Boggs files suit against William Merideth for shooting down his unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) in Bullitt County, Kentucky, with a shotgun as the UAV hovered over Merideth's property, asserting that the drone was in public airspace when it was shot down and requesting $1,800 in damages and clarification as to how high above private property public airspace begins. Merideth had claimed the UAV was spying on his family and violating his privacy. The case promises to spur the U.S. judicial system to clarify where private property rights end and federal jurisdiction begins in U.S. airspace, with a significant potential impact on future private and commercial UAV operations.[8][9]
5 January
  • When two United States Air Force Sikorsky HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopters attempt to evacuate wounded Afghan military personnel near Marjah, Afghanistan, one strikes a wall and is disabled and the other is ordered to abort the mission under heavy ground fire. One American is killed and two wounded in the incident; they are the first U.S. casualties in Afghanistan in 2016.[10]
7 January
8 January
9 January
10 January
12 January
  • An unarmed Iranian unmanned aerial vehicle flies near the French Navy aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle and directly over the United States Navy aircraft carrier USS Harry S Truman (CVN-75) as they operate in international waters in the Persian Gulf. Iran will announce the flight and release purported video from it on 29 January – implying that the video had been taken earlier that day rather than on 12 January – and a United States Fifth Fleet spokesman will respond by calling the flight "abnormal and unprofessional."[19]
  • An air-and-bus bridge begins operating as a pilot program to help 8,000 Cuban immigrants stranded in Costa Rica since Nicaragua closed its border to them on 13 November 2015 by allowing them to fly out of Costa Rica and reach Mexico, from which they can emigrate to the United States. The first flight of the air-and-bus bridge departs Liberia, Costa Rica, during the evening as part of regional agreement to help the Cubans bypass Nicaragua.[20]
13 January
14 January
15 January
  • A late-evening U.S. unmanned aerial vehicle-launched air-to-ground missile strike kills three suspected al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula members as they drive in a car in Yemen's Shabwa Governorate.[28]
  • SpaceX successfully fires the engines of the first stage of Falcon 9 rocket it had used to launch a satellite into orbit and then landed successfully on land in December 2015, the first time in a history a rocket stage had made a soft, controlled landing. The firing of the engines demonstrates the feasibility of reusing the rocket stage, an important step in the development of reusable rockets that make space launches less expensive.[29]
16 January
17 January
  • After successfully launching the Jason-3 satellite into orbit from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, the first stage of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket touches down on a landing platform in the Pacific Ocean 200 miles (322 km) off California softly enough to land successfully, but topples over when of its landing legs fails to lock in place and collapses. It is SpaceX's third attempt to land a Falcon 9 first stage at sea; the two previous attempts, both in 2015, also had been unsuccessful, although SpaceX had made history's first successful landing of a reusable rocket stage – also of a Falcon 9 – on land in December 2015.[29]
  • Just before midnight, aircraft of the Saudi-led coalition strike a police facility in Sana'a, Yemen, used by both security forces and the Houthi rebels as an assembly point, killing 26 people and injuring 15. The dead and wounded are all policemen and Houthi rebels.[31]
21 January
  • An air strike by the Saudi-led coalition against a rebel-held facility at Ras Isa on Yemen's Red Sea coast used to load tanker trucks with refined petroleum products for distribution in rebel-held areas of Yemen destroys trucks and starts a large fire, killing at least nine and perhaps as many as 16 people and injuring at least 30.[32]
22 January
23 January
26 January
  • A month-long Syrian government military campaign results in the seizure of the crossroads at Sheikh Miskeen, Syria, from rebel forces. Russian airstrikes have played a conspicuous role in the success of the campaign.[36]
  • The United States Department of the Treasury announces the lifting of major U.S. trade and travel restrictions on Cuba. The new regulations allow code sharing between U.S. and Cuban airlines, airplane-leasing deals in the United States for Cuba, and permission for U.S. airline crews to travel to Cuba.[37]
28 January
  • Iran agrees to buy 118 airliners – 73 wide-body and 45 narrow-body – from Airbus in a deal worth $27,000,000,000. The purchase consists of 12 A380, 16 A350-1000, 45 A330, and 45 A320-family aircraft. The deal is contingent on Airbus receiving export licenses from the United States, where 10 percent of parts for Airbus aircraft are manufactured. Iran, which first plans to focus on expansion of its airports and more urgent civil aviation needs, does not plan to take delivery of the airliners until ca. 2020.[38]
29 January
  • Turkey claims a Russian Federation Air Force Sukhoi Su-34 (NATO reporting name "Fullback") has violated its airspace near the border with Syria during the day, warning Russia of consequences if any further violations take place. A Russian Ministry of Defense spokesman denies any Russian intrusion into Turkey's airspace;[39] he asserts that Turkish radar installations are incapable of identifying a particular aircraft's type or nationality and that no Russian pilot had received a verbal warning in either English or Russian, and he dismisses the Turkish claim as "pure propaganda."[40]

February

1 February
2 February
  • Daallo Airlines Flight 159, an Airbus A321-100 (registration SX-BHS) with 81 people on board flying from Mogadishu, Somalia, to Djibouti City, Djibouti, experiences an explosion which sets one passenger on fire and blows a hole in the fuselage, through which the burning passenger is sucked from the plane at an altitude of 14,000 feet (4,267 meters). The airliner returns to Mogadishu and lands safely. The burned body of the man sucked from the plane is found near Balad, Somalia; two other people on board the plane suffer minor injuries.
4 February
  • Russian aircraft support a Syrian government ground offensive which cuts a key rebel supply route to Aleppo. In what Syrian rebel fighters describe as one of the most intense periods of Russian airstrikes since the Russian air campaign in Syria began, Russian aircraft conduct 200 strikes over a 24-hour period.[43]
7 February
  • A strike by unidentified aircraft hits a medical technology college in Derna, Libya, killing four people. The area is held by a coalition of Islamic militant groups who have been defending it from the Islamic State.[44]
8 February
9 February
10 February
11 February
  • At meetings in Munich, Germany, a group of 17 countries including Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and the United States agree to a "cessation of hostilities" in the Syrian Civil War that is to take effect by 18 February. Under the agreement, Russia projects that it will cease airstrikes in Syria on 18 February except for strikes against the Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra, which it will continue, although it also ambiguously reserves to right strike any groups it deems "terrorists;" the agreement also includes humanitarian air drops of supplies in Syria that are expected to begin as early as 13–14 February, with Russia planning to use its aircraft to drop supplies in seven locations in Syria. After the agreement takes effect, a task force of countries headed by Russia and the United States is to establish geographic and other limits on airstrikes in Syria, adjudicate differences of opinion about which targets remain legitimate for airstrikes, and select targets for airstrikes, the first time the United States has agreed o do more than "deconflict" its air operations over Syria with those of Russia. Neither the Government of Syria or any of the rebel groups fighting against it take part in the meetings or are parties to the agreement.[49][52][53]
12 February
  • Syrian government and Russian aircraft strike targets in rebel areas in many locations across Syria, including targets north of Aleppo in support of a 10-day-old Syrian government ground offensive seeking to surround and cut off rebel-held Aleppo.[53]
15 February
  • Aircraft hit at least two schools and four hospitals in northern Syria with air-to-ground missiles, killing nearly 50 people. Russia responds to reports that its aircraft were responsible by blaming the United States for the strikes, as does the Government of Syria. The United States responds that no aircraft of the U.S.-led coalition was operating in the area at the time.[54][55]
  • Villagers and rebel forces in southwestern Somalia claim that a U.S. unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) has crashed in a village there. The United States responds that all of its UAVs have returned safely from their missions and are accounted for.[56]
17–18 February
18 February
  • The United States Government grants Boeing a license allowing the company to enter into talks with airlines in Iran about sales of airliners. Iran's aging airliner fleet and lack of Boeing 777s raises the possibility of significant sales for Boeing, although the company will require additional approval from the United States Government ensuring the legitimacy of any transactions before actually selling Iran any aircraft.[58]
19 February
  • Flying from bases in the United Kingdom, United States Air Force F-15 Eagles strike an Islamic State camp on the outskirts of Sabratha, Libya, killing Islamic State leader Noureddine Chouchane and 48 other Islamic State personnel.[59][60]
  • A deadline established on 12 February for a "cessation of hostilities" in Syria except for strikes against those targets mutually agreed to by Russia and the U.S.-led coalition passes without the ceasefire going into effect. Russia and the U.S.-led coalition have been unable to agree on what constitutes a "terrorist" target, with Russia taking the view that all groups opposing the Syrian government are terrorists and the U.S.-led coalition limiting the definition of terrorists in Syria to the Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra, leading to problems in determining which areas of Syria will be subject to Russian and U.S.-led coalition airstrikes after the "cessation of hostilities" begins; Turkey's insistence on targeting Kurdish forces in Syria adds to the disagreement over legitimate targets.[61]
  • In a ceremony in a hangar in Mojave, California, Sir Richard Branson unveils Virgin Galactic's new VSS Unity, a SpaceShipTwo-class rocket-powered suborbital spaceplane.[62]
20 February
21 February
22 February
  • The United States and Russia announce that they have agreed on a partial ceasefire in Syria under which they will establish a "hotline" which they will use to share informnation allowing them to delineate the boundaries of areas controlled by specific groups in Syria. They also agree to limit airstrikes to areas controlled by the Islamic State, Jabhat al-Nusra, or any other group that the United Nations designates as a terrorist group. Other rebel groups in Syria and the Government of Syria have until 26 February to inform the United States or Russia that they agree to the terms of the ceasefire; if they do not, they run the risk of coming under renewed air attack by Russia or the U.S.-led coalition.[68]
  • Russia requests permission to fly surveillance flights over the United States under the Treaty on Open Skies using Tupolev Tu-154 (NATO reporting name "Careless") aircraft equipped with new, high-powered digital cameras. The request prompts a debate within the United States Government over whether it is a small concession worth making in order to keep the treaty viable or a violation of the spirit of the treaty that would allow surveillance unintended when the treaty was signed in 1992. The treaty, signed by 34 countries, has been in force since 2002.[69]
24 February
25 February
26 February
  • An Air Kasthamandap PAC 750XL (registration 9N-AJB) with 11 people on board crash-lands at Chilkhaya, Nepal, killing both crew members and injuring all nine passengers.
  • An Azur Air Boeing 767-300 makes a safe emergency landing in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, during a flight from Moscow to Phuket, Thailand, after an indicator shows low engine oil pressure.[72]
  • A few minutes after a final Russian airstrike hits Kafr Hamrah, a ceasefire goes into effect in the Syrian Civil War. Under its terms, the U.S.-led coalition is to continue airstrikes against the Islamic State and the Russian Federation Air Force is to continue to hit both Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra targets, with the United States and Russia coordinating their understanding of the boundaries of territories held by the two groups so that strikes do not occur against any of the other groups in Syria unless they have been declared terrorist groups by the United Nations.[73]
  • Solar Impulse 2, grounded at Kalaeloa Airport in Kalealoa, Hawaii, since 3 July 2015 due to battery damage caused by overheating during its attempt to become the first manned solar-powered aircraft to circumnavigate the Earth, makes it first test flight after repairs. Taking off from Kalealoa Airport, Solar Impulse 2 flies over the Pacific Ocean for 90 minutes, reaching an altitude of 8,000 feet (2,438 meters) before returning. The Solar Impulse team plans to resume the circumnavigation in late April 2016 with a flight from Hawaii to Phoenix, Arizona.[74][75]
27 February
  • Airstrikes attributed to the Saudi-led coalition targeting advancing rebel forces hit a market area in the Nehm region outside Sana'a, Yemen, killing at least 30 people and injuring at least 30 more.[76]
  • Russia announces a 24-hour cessation of all Russian airstrikes in Syria, reserving the right to continue airstrikes targeting the Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra.[77]
28 February
  • On the second day of a planned two-week cessation of airstrikes in Syria, Russian aircraft based in northwestern Syria resume strikes in Syria, hitting six towns and villages in Aleppo, Hama, and Idib Governorates.[77]
29 February

March

3 March
4 March
5 March
  • A series of U.S. airstrikes by manned aircraft and unmanned aerial vehicles against an Al-Shabaab training camp in Raso, Somalia, kills over 150 Al-Shabaab personnel.[60]
7 March
  • Unidentified aircraft strike a rebel-held fuel depot in Syria's Idlib Governorate, killing at least 12 and perhaps as many as 15 people.[91]
  • African Parks Network announces that the remains of its employee, American anti-poaching pilot Bill Fitzpatrick, have been recovered from a crash site in Cameroon. Fiztpatrick had disappeared on 22 June 2014 during a flight to a job in Odzala-Kokoua National Park in the Republic of the Congo. Local residents had discovered the wreckage of Fitzpatrick's plane in April 2015, but the remote site and dense vegetation in the area had made it difficult for helicopters to land there and bureaucratic procedures of the Government of Cameroon also had delayed the recovery of Fitzpatrick's remains.[92]
  • Boeing announces that it has filed a patent for a self-cleaning airplane lavatory which can sanitize itself in three seconds using far-ultraviolet light. The lavatory also features a hands-free faucet, soap dispenser, trash flap, toilet lid, toilet seat, and hand dryer, and Boeing reports that it also is designing a hands-free door latch and is studying the design of a hands-free system to lift and close the toilet seat so that all surfaces are exposed to the far-ultraviolet light during the cleaning cycle. Once Boeing offers the new lavatories to customers, it is expected to take years for airlines to update their fleets with them.[93]
8 March
  • U.S. Special Operations Forces conduct a joint U.S.-Somali helicopter raid against al-Shabaab in Somalia. The United States Department of Defense announces that U.S. forces play only an advisory role and do not accompany the Somali forces on the raid, although the helicopters employed are U.S military helicopters flown by U.S. crews.[94]
9 March
12 March
  • A South African family announces that it contacted aviation authorities in South Africa during the previous week to report a piece of debris their teenaged son had found on a beach in Mozambique on 30 December 2015 which they had taken home to South Africa. Aviation officials plan to examine it to see if it is from Malaysian Airlines Flight 370.[96]
  • In response to a rocket attack on Israel from the Gaza Strip the previous evening, the Israeli Air Force conducts airstrikes against four Hamas sites in the Gaza Strip. In one of the aistrikes, an air-to-ground missile strikes a family home on the perimeter of one of the sites, killing two Palestinian children.[97]
13 March
  • As a result of the accident investigation into the 25 March 2015 crash of Germanwings Flight 9525, French aviation authorities call for stricter international monitoring of the mental health of pilots as well as guidelines under which doctors would be required to report pilots whose psychological condition might put flight safety at risk. In their report, the French also urge German authorities to limit the legal penalties imposed on doctors who breach patient confidentiality in good faith in order to report psychological problems among pilots and to clearly define the types of health issues in airline pilots that can represent an "imminent danger" to flight safety.[98]
14 March
  • In response to a suicide car bomb explosion in Ankara, Turkey, that killed at least 37 people the previous day, Turkish Air Force jets strike at least 18 Kurdistan Workers Party positions in northern Iraq, including ammunition depots, bunkers, and shelters.[99]
  • President of Russia Vladimir Putin makes a surprise, unilateral announcement that Russia will withdraw the "main part" of its military forces from Syria beginning on 15 March. However, Russia is to keep its air and naval bases in Syria open after the withdrawal, and it is not clear that the withdrawal will mean an end to Russian airstrikes in Syria.[100]
15 March
16 March
  • New United States Department of the Treasury regulations go into effect that among other things allow increased travel to Cuba by American citizens and allow U.S. airlines to open offices in Cuba. The changes are expected to improve the market for commercial air travel between the United States and Cuba.[109]
17 March
  • Saudi Arabia announces that its military coalition will scale back its operations against Houthi rebels in Yemen – maintaining only "small" teams of coalition forces on the ground to advise, train, and equip Yemeni forces – but will continue to provide air support to Yemeni forces battling the rebels.[102]
  • Boasting that Russia's 167-day intervention in Syria saved the regime of Syrian President Basher al-Assad from defeat at a coast of only $480 million, Russian President Vladimir Putin says that Russia could restore its military presence in Syria in a metter of hours if necessary and will maintain a powerful surface-to-air missile force there. He warns that Russia will respond with force if any rebel group breaks the Syrian ceasefire and or any attacks against Russian forces still in Syria occur, and suggests that Russia will intervene militarily in Syria again if it believes the Assad regime is in danger of losing power.[110]

19 March

  • A Flydubai aircraft from Dubai to Rostov-on-don crashed on landing, killing all 55 passengers on board.[111]
18 March
  • A Russian Armed Forces General Staff spokesman announces that Russia continues airstrikes in Syria, targeting Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra positions in support of an offensive by the Syrian Arab Army to retake Palmyra. Russia's 20 to 25 airstrikes per day are well below the 100 per day prior to the announced Russian withdrawal of its aircraft from Syria on 15 March, suggesting that Russia actually still maintains a substantial number of combat aircraft at Khmeimim Airbase in Latakia Governorate, its airbase in Syria.[104]
19 March
  • Flydubai Flight 981, a Boeing 737-8KN (registration A6-FDN), aborts two landing attempts in poor visibility at Rostov-on-Don Airport in Rostov-on-Don in southern Russia, making a go-around after each attempt. During its second go-around, it suddenly goes into a rapid descent from an altitude of 4,050 feet (1,234 meters) and crashes, killing all 62 people on board. It is the first fatal accident in Flydubai's seven-year history.
  • Unidentified aircraft strike Islamic State-held ar-Raqqa, Syria, killing at least 39 – and perhaps as many as 43 – people and reportedly injuring at least 50 others. Different observers report the attacking aircraft as either Russian Federation Air Force or Syrian Air Force jets.[112]
  • Unidentified aircraft strike Islamic State targets in Palmyra, Syria, killing seven Islamic State personnel during a Syrian Arab Army offensive to retake Palmyra.[112]
21 March
  • The Russian Ministry of Defense warns that it will act unilaterally against rebel groups it believes are breaking the ceasefire in Syria, with airstrikes beginning as soon as 22 March if the United States does not address Russian proposals for dealing with ceasefire violations.[113]
  • A South African archaeologist finds a piece of debris on a beach in southern South Africa. The following day, Malaysia's Minister of Transport, Liow Tiong Lai, will announce the discovery and that the debris bears an aircraft engine manufacturer's and logo and will be examined to determine whether it is from the missing Malaysian Airlines Flight 370.[114]
22 March
27 March
  • Suspected U.S. unmanned aerial vehicle strikes hit courtyards in two villages in Yemen with air-to-ground missiles, killing eight al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula members. Later in the day, a U.S. aircraft bombs a former Yemeni government intelligence building in Yemen's Abyan Governorate that al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is using as a base, killing 14 members of the group.[118]
  • Russian airstrikes support Syrian government troops as they retake Palmyra, Syria, from the Islamic State.[119]
  • The Russian Ministry of Defense announces that Russian forces have conducted 500 sorties in Syria since 7 March, hitting 2,000 Islamic State targets.[120]
27–28 March (overnight)
  • Aircraft of the Saudi-led coalition strike rebel targets in the suburbs of Aden, Yemen.[121]
28 March
  • Unidentified aircraft thought to belong to the Saudi-led coalition strike rebel targets in Yemen's Hadhramaut region southeast of Al Mukalla.[121]
29 March
30 March
31 March
  • Heavy airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition support the beginning of an offensive by Iraqi military forces to take the city of Hīt, Iraq, from the Islamic State. Over the previous week, the coalition has conducted 17 airstrikes against Islamic State targets in the Hīt area in preparation for the offensive.[124]
  • An airstrike by a U.S. unmanned aerial vehicle 20 miles (32 km) from Jilib, Somalia, hits a ground vehicle carrying senior Al-Shabaab leader and al-Qaeda member Hassan Ali Dhoore and two other Al-Shabaab members.[125]
  • The Russian Ministry of Defense releases videos that reveal that Russian Mil Mi-28N (NATO reporting name "Havoc") attack helicopters are operating in Syria. The videos show the helicopters destroying Islamic State armored vehicles near Palmyra.[120][126][127]

April

2 April
3 April
4 April
5 April
6 April
7 April
8 April
  • After several unsuccessful attempts, SpaceX successfully lands the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket on a platform – which SpaceX refers to as an "autonomous spaceport drone ship" – floating in the Atlantic Ocean off Florida after a launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The landing occurs nine minutes after liftoff.[140]
  • Jetpack International vice president Nick Macomber crashes headfirst into the ground during a routine test flight of a jet pack he is flying in Denver, Colorado, falling 20 feet (6.1 meters) to the ground after the jet pack malfunctions. He is injured, but is released from a hospital the following day.[141][142]
10 April
  • Unidentified aircraft conduct airstrikes around Ar-Raqqa, Syria, killing dozens of Islamic State personnel and civilians.[143]
11 April
12 April
  • A Russian Mil Mi-28N (NATO reporting name "Havoc") attack helicopter crashes in Syria, killing its two-man crew. The Russian Ministry of Defense announces that the helicopter was not shot down and blames the crash on bad weather. The increasing number of reports of Russian helicopter operations in Syria since late March have led Western military analysts to conclude that Russia′s supposed withdrawal of its military aviation forces from Syria in mid-March was in reality merely the replacement of some Russian Federation Air Force jets there with attack helicopters more suitable to the support of Syrian Arab Army ground operations against rebel forces.[127]
  • Russian aircraft fly in close proximity to the U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyer USS Donald Cook (DDG-75) in the Baltic Sea for a second straight day. First, a Kamov Ka-27 (NATO reporting name "Helix") helicopter makes seven low circles around Donald Cook (DDG-75) in what the ship′s commanding officer criticizes as an "unprofessional" manner. Forty minutes later, two Sukhoi Su-24 (NATO reporting name "Fencer") jets make 11 close-range, low-level passes which Donald Cook′s crew assesses as fitting a simulated attack profile.[144]
13 April
14 April
17 April
18 April
19 April
  • Four United States Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt II (nicknamed "Warthog") close air support aircraft of the 51st Fighter Wing fly a patrol over the South China Sea west of Luzon from Clark Air Base in the Philippines. The maritime patrol mission is an unusual one for the A-10, but the U.S. Department of Defense announces that it is only the first of a planned series of joint South China Sea air patrols by U.S. and Philippine forces with goals of "air- and maritime-domain awareness, personnel recovery, combating piracy, and [the] assurance [that] all nations have access to the regional air and maritime domains in accordance with international law." The People's Republic of China, which claims the areas to be patrolled as its internal waters, condemns the planned patrols as reflecting a "Cold War mentality."[150]
  • A pro-Syrian-government aircraft strikes the main market in Maarat al-Nu'man, Syria, with two air-to-ground rockets while it is crowded with people shopping for fruits and vegetables, killing at least 37 people. It is unclear whether the attacking jet belonged to the Syrian Arab Air Force or the Russian Federation Air Force.[151]
20 April
  • United States Central Command reveals that the authority to order airstrikes that might endanger civilians, originally given only to its top commander, has been delegated to its commander in Baghdad and his deputies.[152]
21 April
22 April
  • Syrian Arab Air Force raids on rebel-held parts of Aleppo kill at least 19 people. Additional government airstrikes in Idlib Governorate also kill people in areas under rebel control.[157]
  • U.S. Central Command announces that between 10 September 2015 and 2 February 2016 its airstrikes in Iraq and Syria killed 20 civilians and injured 11 more. The airstrikes killed two civilians in Kabisa, Iraq, on 10 September 2015; eight in Atshanah, Iraq, while hitting an Islamic State mortar position on 5 October 2015; one in Ramadi, Iraq, during a strike against Islamic State combat personnel on 12 November 2015; one near ar-Raqqa, Syria, on 10 December 2015; five in Ramadi while hitting an Islamic State checkpoint on 12 December 2015; one in Tishreen, Syria, on 24 December 2015; one in Mosul, Iraq, on 11 January 2016; and one in Al Ghazli, Syria, on 2 February 2016. In a previous announcement, the United States Department of Defense had acknowledged killing 15 civilians and wounding 15 more during earlier airstrikes in Iraq and Syria.[152]
23 April
  • Syrian Arab Air Force planes strike rebel-held areas of Aleppo for a second straight day. They hit a residential area and a market in the city′s Tareeq al-Bab district, killing at least 12 people.[158]
  • Piloted by Bertrand Piccard, Solar Impulse 2 completes the ninth leg of its around-the-world flight attempt, landing at Moffatt Field in Mountain View, California, after a nonstop flight from Kalaeloa, Hawaii, of 62 hours 29 minutes, covering 2,206 nautical miles (2,537 miles; 4,086 km) at an average speed of 35.31 knots (40.61 mph; 65.39 km/h) and reaching a maximum altitude of 28,327 feet (8,634 meters).[159][160]
24 April
  • Syrian Arab Air Force planes strike rebel-held areas in Aleppo for the third straight day, killing 16 people.[161]
  • Ground forces of the Saudi-led coalition begin a ground offensive against al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula forces in southern Yemen, advancing toward Mukalla and surrounding areas. Coalition aircraft supporting the offensive strike targets in Mukalla, hitting the city′s cultural center and Riyan Airport.[162]
25–26 April (overnight)
  • An air-to-gound missile strike suspected to have been made by a U.S. unmanned aerial vehicle kills three prominent al-Qaeda leaders in Zinjibar, Yemen.
26 April
  • The Yemeni government announces that Yemeni ground troops have retaken Mukalla from al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) forces, adding that heavy airstrikes by the Saudi-led coalition combined with artillery fire had driven many AQAP members out of the city.
27 April
28 April
  • The Russian Ministry of Defense denies Russian involvement in the 27 April airstrike against a hospital in Aleppo, Syria.[163]
29 April
  • Airstrikes against rebel-held areas in Aleppo, Syria, by unidentified aircraft destroy a medical clinic and hit other targets. Airstrikes against rebel-held areas and rebel mortar barrages have combined to kill more than 200 people in Aleppo during the preceding week.[164]
  • Russia and the United States announce a renewed ceasefire in two parts of Syria where fighting in violation of the 27 February ceasefire has escalated during April and that it is scheduled to begin at midnight on 29–30 April. The Russian Ministry of Defense announces that the ceasefire applies to Latakia Governorate and will last 72 hours, while the United States Department of State later announces that it also includes East Ghouta outside Damascus and has no expiration date. The agreement excludes Aleppo, where the heaviest fighting since the 27 February ceasefire has broken out.[165]
  • A Eurocopter EC225 Super Puma helicopter (registration LN-OJF) operated by CHC Helikopter Service loses its main rotor in flight while carrying oil workers from the Gullfaks B oil field in the North Sea to Bergen Airport, Flesland, in Bergen, Norway, and crashes on Norway′s Skitholmen islet between the islands of Turøy and Toftøy, killing all 13 people on board.
  • The commander of United States Central Command, United States Army General Joseph Votel, announces that a U.S. Department of Defense investigation into a United States Air Force airstrike against a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, on 3 October 2015 did not amount to a war crime because American military personnel responsible for the strike attacked the hospital by mistake while attempting to support Afghan troops and U.S. Army Special Forces in combat against Taliban forces. The incident resulted in 16 American military personnel facing disciplinary action for their role in it, but the investigation found that their misjudgments did not involve any criminal intent.[164]
30 April
  • Nearly 30 airstrikes hit rebel-held areas of Aleppo, Syria. It is the ninth day of lethal bombardments in the city, and they have killed nearly 250 people since beginning on 22 April.[166]

May

3 May
  • With André Borschberg at the controls, Solar Impulse 2 (registration HB-SIB) arrives at Phoenix Goodyear Airport outside Goodyear, Arizona, completing the tenth leg of its attempt to become the first solar-powered aircraft to fly around the world and the first aircraft to do so without using a drop of fossil fuel. The flight, begun on 2 May at Mountain View, California, covers 691 miles (1,113 km) in 15 hours 52 minutes at an average speed of 43.56 mph (70.15 km/hr), reaching a maximum altitude of 22,001 feet (6,706 meters).[167][168]
5 May
  • Amazon.com and Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings announce a deal in which Amazon.com will acquire up to 30 percent of Atlas′s stock and Atlas will acquire 20 Boeing 767-300 cargo aircraft, lease them to Amazon.com for ten years, and operate them for Amazon.com for seven years via its Atlas Air subsidiary. Operations are expected to begin during the latter half of 2016 and grow to their maximum planned size by 2018. It is Amazon.com′s second investment in an air cargo carrier – its first was announced on 5 March – and it doubles the size of Amazon.com′s air cargo fleet from 20 to 40 aircraft, all Boeing 767-300s.[169]
6 May
7 May
9 May
  • Airstrikes by the Saudi-led coalition against a rebel military camp in Yemen′s Amran Governorate kill at least 10 Yemeni rebels and wound more than 15 others.[173]
11 May
12 May
  • Malaysia′s Minister of Transport, Liow Tiong Lai, announces that two pieces of debris found in March – an engine cowling piece with a partial Rolls-Royce logo discovered on the southern coast of South Africa and an interior panel piece from an aircraft cabin found on Rodrigues – "almost certainly" are from Malaysian Airlines Flight 370, a Boeing 777 missing since March 2014.[176]
  • After a Ugandan assault team comes under fire while attempting to secure an Al-Shabaab checkpoint west of Mogadishu, Somalia, suspected of being used by the group to extort money from travelers, a U.S. special operations team assisting the Ugandans calls in a U.S. airstrike against the checkpoint. The strike kills five Al-Shabaab personnel.[177]
  • Flown by Bertrand Piccard, Solar Impulse 2 (registration HB-SIB) arrives at Tulsa International Airport outside Tulsa, Oklahoma, completing the eleventh leg of its attempt to become the first solar-powered aircraft to fly around the world and the first aircraft to do so without using a drop of fossil fuel. The flight, begun on 11 May at Phoenix Goodyear Airport in Phoenix, Arizona, covers 975 miles (1,570 km) in 18 hours 10 minutes at an average speed of 53.67 mph (86.42 km/hr), reaching a maximum altitude of 22,001 feet (6,706 meters).[178]
13 May
15 May
  • According to Turkish military sources, airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition and a Turkish Army artillery bombardment combine to kill 27 Islamic State personnel in northern Syria about 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) from the Turkish border as they prepare to fire rockets into Turkey. The strikes and bombardment destroy five "fortified defence posts" and two "gun posts".[181]
17 May
18 May
19 May
20 May
  • Russian Miinister of Defense Sergei Shoigu proposes that Russia and the U.S.-led coalition conduct joint airstrikes in Syria against Jabhat al-Nusra and against ground convoys carrying weapons and reinforcements into Syria from Turkey. The U.S. Department of State responds that no agreement to conduct joint airstrikes exists, and the U.S. Department of Defense informs the press that it has no plans to expand cooperation with Russia in Syria beyond existing flight-safety communications intended only to deconflict coalition and Russian air operations.[185]
21 May
  • A U.S. airstrike involving several unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) hits a ground vehicle driving on a road near Ahmad Wal in Pakistan′s Balochistan province, reportedly killing Taliban leader Akhtar Mansour and the driver of the vehicle. It is the first U.S. UAV strike in that part of Pakistan.[186]
  • An airstrike allegedly conducted by aircraft of the U.S.-led coalition flying into Syria from Turkey hits the Islamic State-held town of Arshaf, Syria, near Mare', killing seven members of one family and perhaps as many as 10 people in total.[187]
  • Flown by André Borschberg, Solar Impulse 2 (registration HB-SIB) arrives at Dayton International Airport in Dayton, Ohio,[188] completing the twelfth leg of its attempt to become the first solar-powered aircraft to fly around the world and the first aircraft to do so without using a drop of fossil fuel. The flight, begun early in the day at Tulsa International Airport in Tulsa, Oklahoma,[188] covers 691 miles (1,113 km) in 16 hours 34 minutes at an average speed of 41.72 mph (67.18 km/hr), reaching a maximum altitude of 21,000 feet (6,401 meters).[188][189]
22 May
23 May
  • U.S. airstrikes support Iraqi military and security forces and militias allied with them moving into Fallujah, Iraq. A U.S. spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition announces that coalition aircraft have struck 21 Islamic State targets in and around Fallujah since 17 May.[191]
  • An Iraqi Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcon destroys an Islamic State bomb-making factory in Fallujah, Iraq, and hits Islamic State rocket launchers in the city.[191]
  • The first two Dutch Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II aircraft – both Royal Netherlands Air Force F-35A models – arrive in the Netherlands, landing at Leeuwarden Air Base. They are the first examples of the F-35 to arrive in Europe.[192]
24 May
  • Iraqi Air Force and U.S. aircraft strike Islamic State targets in and around Fallujah, Iraq.[193]
25 May
  • The brother of a taxi driver killed in the 21 May U.S. unmanned aerial vehicle strike that also killed Taliban leader Akhtar Mansour files a police report in Balochistan, Pakistan, requesting that his brother′s death be investigated and noting that the United States claimed responsibility for the attack.[194]
  • Russia announces that is suspending airstrikes in Syria against Jabhat al-Nusra to allow rebels not affiliated with the group to distance themselves from it.[195]
  • With Bertrand Piccard at the controls, Solar Impulse 2 (registration HB-SIB) flies from Dayton International Airport in Dayton, Ohio, to Lehigh Valley International Airport in Hanover Township, Pennsylvania, completing the thirteenth leg of its attempt to become the first solar-powered aircraft to fly around the world and the first aircraft to do so without using a drop of fossil fuel. The flight covers 649 miles (1,045 km) in 16 hours 49 minutes at an average speed of 38.63 mph (62.20 km/hr), reaching a maximum altitude of 15,000 feet (4,572 meters).[196]
  • U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA) Administrator Peter V. Neffenger says in testimony before the United States Congress that a projected 740 million people will pass through TSA security checkpoints at U.S. airports during the 2016 summer travel season, 97 million more than the 643 million who did in 2013, that the 45,000-strong TSA workforce is not large enough to prevent excessively long lines at the checkpoints, and that the recent cancellation of plans to lay off 1,600 TSA employees and hire 768 more will be insufficient to reduce lines. He reports that he plans to convert part-time TSA employees into full-time ones and to increase the number of enrollees in trusted traveler programs from 9.5 million to 25 million as ways of reducing airport security waits.[197]
26 May
  • An airstrike by the U.S.-led coalition in Fallujah, Iraq, kills Maher al-Bilawi, the commander of Islamic State forces in the city.[198]
  • An American Airlines vice president, Kerry Philipovitch, and executives from the airport authorities of Chicago, Illinois, Syracuse, New York, and Tucson, Arizona, testify before the U.S. Congress asking it to take action to reduce security lines at Transportation Security Administration (TSA) checkpoints at U.S. airports. Philipovitch says, "We have never seen TSA wait times that affect airlines and passengers throughout the United States like we’ve seen in recent months...More needs to be done, and fast. Programs that had been in place to drive efficiency and increase security throughout were eliminated without adding commensurate resources required to support longer passenger processing times."[199]
27 May
  • Korean Air Flight 2708, a Boeing 777-300 (registration HL7534), suffers an engine failure during its takeoff roll at Haneda Airport in Tokyo, Japan, that results in a fire. The flight crew aborts the takeoff, and the 319 people aboard evacuate the aircraft. Twelve of them are injured in the incident.
  • The U.S.-led coalition has conducted 20 airstrikes against Islamic State targets in Fallujah, Iraq, since 24 May, killing 70 Islamic State personnel.[198]
  • Russia warns that it will escalate its air campaign in Syria if the United States does not respond positively to its long-standing proposal to conduct joint airstrikes in Syria with the Russian Federation Air Force.[200]
  • A U.S. airstrike kills Abdullahi Haji Da’ud, Al-Shabaab′s top commander, as he travels in southern Somalia.[201]
  • A Vietnamese man, Minh Quang Pham, is sentenced in New York City to 40 years in prison for providing material support to al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula in a 2011 plot to bomb Heathrow Airport in London.[202]
  • A World War II-era P-47 Thunderbolt crashes into the Hudson River off Edgewater, New Jersey, killing its pilot.[203]
  • SpaceX successfully lands the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket on a platform at sea, the fourth time it has made such a landing. The landing, made aboard a platform in the Atlantic Ocean 422 miles (680 km) off the coast of Florida after launching a communications satellite into orbit, is particularly challenging because of the distance the rocket travels to deliver its payload and the large amount of energy required, subjecting the first stage to extreme speeds and re-entry heating.[204]
29 May
  • Lufthansa announces that it will suspend service to Venezuela beginning on 18 June, saying that Venezuela owes it millions of United States dollars in ticket revenues and that Venezuela′s currency controls make it difficult to convert ticket sales revenue to dollars that can be sent abroad. Lufthansa adds that it hopes to restore service to Venezuela in the near future.[205]
30 May
  • Intense late-evening strikes by three unidentified aircraft – reported by some observers to be Russian – against buildings around the National Hospital in Idlib, Syria, kill at least 23 and perhaps as many as 50 people and injure about 250 others. Over the preceding weekend, Russian Federation Air Force and Syrian Arab Air Force aircraft had conducted hundreds of strikes against rebel-held areas in Aleppo, Syria.[200]
  • LATAM Airlines Group announces that its subsidiary airlines will suspend service to Venezuela, making it the second airline company to do so. Venezuela′s currency controls make it difficult for airlines to convert ticket sales revenue to United States dollars to cover their costs of operating in Venezuela. LATAM plans for its subsidiary airlines to cease service between Caracas, Venezuela, and São Paulo, Brazil, first, with suspension of service between Caracas and Lima, Peru, and between Caracas and Santiago, Chile, to halt by 31 July.[206]
31 May
  • The U.S. Transportation Security Administration reports that the major delays expected at its security checkpoints at U.S. airports over the 2016 Memorial Day weekend did not materialize. From 26 May through 30 May, wait times in security lines averaged less than 10 minutes in regular security lines nationwide, with the majority of the 10.3 million passengers having a wait time of less than 30 minutes. The longest wait was at Kansas City, Missouri, where passengers waited 75 minutes on 26 May.[207]

June

  • With international sanctions having largely prevented Iran from purchasing new airliners or spare parts for its commercial aircraft since the Iranian Revolution of 1979, 88 of Iran′s 250 commercial aircraft are grounded due to a lack of spare parts.[208]
1 June
2 June
3 June
4 June
5 June
6 June
7 June
8 June
  • Airstrikes against rebel-held areas of Aleppo, Syria, kill 15 civilians.[218]
9 June
  • According to the Al Sumaria television network, an airstrike by the U.S.-led coalition on this date against an Islamic State headquarters in Nineveh Governorate in northern Iraq near the border with Syria wounds the Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and several other Islamic State personnel. The following day, a spokesman for the coalition announces that the coalition cannot confirm the strike or any injury to al-Baghdadi.[219]
10 June
  • Over eastern Long Island, New York, Luminati Aerospace′s solar-powered VO-Substrata aircraft makes its first test flight open to the public, flying from an airfield at Calverton, New York, for about 20 minutes with a pilot at the controls, although it is also configured for unmanned flight. It is the prototype for a fleet of solar-powered unmanned aerial vehicles Luminati Aerospace hopes to build starting in late 2016 that will fly at altitudes of more than 60,000 feet (18,288 meters) and provide Internet service to over 4,000,000,000 people worldwide.[220]
  • United States Department of Defense officials announce that in late May 2016 President Barack Obama granted U.S. military commanders in Afghanistan expanded powers to assist Afghan military and security forces in combat against the Taliban. Among them is the authority to order U.S. airstrikes in support of Afghan offensive operations against the Taliban in limited circumstances in which the strikes are expected to have "strategic effect." Previously, U.S. airstrikes in Afghanistan had been authorized only to defend U.S. personnel, protect Afghan forces facing serious danger, or conduct counterterrorism operations against al-Qaeda or the Islamic State.[221]
  • The Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II makes its international airshow debut when two Royal Netherlands Air Force F-35A aircraft perform during the Luchtmachtdagen 2016 airshow at Leeuwarden Air Base in the Netherlands.[192]
  • The United States Department of Transportation grants permission to six U.S. airlines – American Airlines, Frontier Airlines, JetBlue, Silver Airways, Southwest Airlines, and Sun Country Airlines – to provide the first scheduled airline service between the United States and Cuba in over 50 years, joining 46 non-U.S. airlines that already serve Cuba. The airlines are to provide 155 round-trip flights per week between five U.S. cities (Chicago, Illinois; Fort Lauderdale, Florida; Miami, Florida; Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) and nine Cuban destinations (Camagüey, Cayo Coco, Cayo Largo del Sur, Cienfuegos, Holguín, Manzanillo, Matanzas, Santa Clara, and Santiago de Cuba). Flights are expected to begin in the autumn of 2016 and early in the winter of 2016-2017. A decision on flights by U.S. airlines to Havana is expected later in the summer of 2016. Although U.S. law still prohibits tourist travel to Cuba, it permits a dozen other categories of travel, including family visits, official business, journalist visits, professional meetings and educational and religious activities, and the United States Government has relaxed oversight of travel to the point that U.S. travelers are allowed to design their own "people-to-people" cultural exchanges in Cuba that in essence permit leisure travel under the guise of a cultural exchange.[222]
11 June
12 June
12–13 June (overnight)
13 June
  • The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) charges Amazon.com with shipping a hazardous material as air cargo, alleging that the company shipped a caustic drain cleaner without properly declaring, packaging, or labeling it, including emergency response information with it, or training employees in how to handle it, and that a package of the drain cleaner leaked at a United Parcel Service facility and came in contact with nine workers. The FAA asks that Amazon.com be fined $350,000 for the incident. The FAA alleges that Amazon.com violated hazardous materials regulations on 24 other occasions between February 2013 and September 2015.[229]
14 June
  • The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) asks pilots in to avoid flying too low over walrus haul-out sites along the Chukchi Sea coast of northern Alaska because of the danger of frightening the walruses into stampeding and injuring and killing one another and nearby humans. Although the FAA says it does not plan to establish formal flight path and altitude restrictions on flights near walrus haul-out sites, it reminds pilots that harassing walruses is illegal under the U.S. Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972. Earlier in 2016, the FAA had instructed airplane pilots to fly no closer than 0.5 miles (0.8 km) to walrus haul-outs and no lower than an altitude over 2,000 feet (610 meters) and helicopter pilots to fly no closer than one mile (1.6 km) and no lower than 3,000 feet (914 km).[230][231]
15 June
  • The Government of Egypt announces that it has found and made images of the wreckage of Egyptair Flight 804 on the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea. The Airbus A320-232 had crashed on 19 May 2016, killing all 66 people on board.[232]
  • After it successfully launches a satellite into Earth orbit, the first stage of SpaceX′s Falcon 9 rocket fails to make what would have been the fifth successful landing of a reusable booster rocket when one of its booster engines fails, causing it to descend far too quickly toward the floating platform in the Atlantic Ocean off Florida on which SpaceX intended it to land. The rapid descent causes it to make what SpaceX founder Elon Musk deems the "hardest impact" ever by a Falcon 9 first stage and results in its destruction – what Musk terms its "rapid unscheduled disassembly." Musk adds that upgrades to correct the problem could be in service by the end of 2016.[233]
16 June
  • The cockpit voice recorder from Egyptair Flight 804 is recovered from a depth of about 9,800 feet (2,987 meters) in the Mediterranean Sea.[234]
17 June
18 June
  • Touring Fallujah, Iraq, the day after the Government of Iraq declared victory in its operation to retake Fallujah from the Islamic State, Lieutenant General Abdelwahab al-Saedi, the Iraqi Army commander of the operation, tells the press that an estimated 300 to 700 Islamic State personnel had been in the city when the operation began and that most had been killed by airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition.[241]
  • A U.S. Department of Defense spokesman announces that during a video teleconference the Department of Defense had "expressed strong concerns" to the Russian Miniistry of Defense about the Russian Federation Air Force′s use of cluster bombs in a raid in Syria earlier in the week.[237]
19 June
  • Aircraft supporting a Syrian government ground offensive against Islamic State forces holding Tabqa air base strike the nearby city of Al-Thawrah, Syria, with cluster munitions, reportedly killed 10 people.[242]
  • During a parachute failure test, Blue Origin lands its New Shepard reusable space launch system in West Texas, the fourth time the same Blue Origin rocket has made a suborbital flight into space and landed intact. During the unmanned flight, New Shepard′s capsule and rocket separate and controllers deliberately induce a parachute failure to test the capsule′s ability to land safely after the failure of one of its three parachutes. The rocket, using wings and firing of its engine to make its descent, lands about seven minutes before the capsule, and both landings are successful.[243]
  • The Terrafugia Transition roadable airplane receives exemptions from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration as a "light sport aircraft." The administrative action puts the United States on track to legalize a flying car for consumer use for the first time. Provided that their roadable aircraft overcome various regulatory barriers, manufacturers of such aircraft expect them to enter the consumer market over the next decade.[244]
20 June
  • With Bertrand Piccard at the controls, Solar Impulse 2 (registration HB-SIB) departs John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City to begin the 15th leg of its attempt to become the first solar-powered aircraft to fly around the world and the first aircraft to do so without using any fossil fuel. Plans call for the nonstop transatlantic flight to Seville Airport in Seville, Spain, to cover 3,564 miles (5,739 km) and take at least 90 hours.[245]
21 June
  • After a 10-hour flight from Rothera Research Station on the Antarctic Peninsula, a Canadian Kenn Borek Air de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter lands at Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station at the Geographic South Pole in Antarctica to evacuate two workers there who have fallen ill. It is only the third flight to the station to take place during the Antarctic winter during the 60 years since the station opened in 1956; generally, no flights to the station occur from February to October each year. After a layover at the Amundsen-Scott station, the plane makes a 10-hour return flight to the Rothera station the following day with the patients on board. It is only the third time that anyone has been evacuated from the South Pole during the Antarctic winter.[246][247]
  • The Obama administration releases U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) regulations for the use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs, or "drones") by hobbyists in the United States. They require drone pilots to keep their UAVs in sight, to operate them only in daylight, and to fly them no higher than an altitude of 400 feet (122 meters), and prohibit their operation over strangers. The regulations also require that hobbyists′ UAVs weigh no more than 55 pounds (25 kg) and prohibit them from flying over the District of Columbia. The FAA reports that 2.5 million UAVs will be sold to hobbyists in the United States during 2016 and that 7 million will be sold in 2020. The new regulations require U.S. commercial UAV operators to be vetted by the U.S. Transportation Security Administration and to pass an aeronautical knowledge examination administered at an FAA-approved test center, but do not address over-the-horizon operations by commercial UAVs; the FAA reports that there are 10,602 registered commercial UAVs in the United States and projects that 600,000 UAVs intended for commercial use will be sold in the United States during 2016 and that 2.7 million will be sold for commercial use in 2020.[248]
  • The Boeing Company announces a tentative deal in which Iran Air, which is seeking to upgrade its aging fleet of pre-1979 Boeing aircraft with new Boeing 737s and Boeing 777s, has signed an agreement expressing its "intent" to buy airliners from Boeing in the first major U.S. trade deal with Iran following a 2015 nuclear accord between Iran and the United States. The deal is expected to face political and regulatory hurdles, but if it proceeds on schedule the first new Boeing airliners are expected to arrive in Iran in October 2016. Depending on the number of new aircraft purchased and the number of leased and older aircraft ultimately included in the transaction, the deal could be worth up to $25,000,000,000.[249]
22 June
23 June
  • Airstrikes combine with mortar attacks to kill eight people in Aleppo, Syria.[251]
  • Flown by Bertrand Piccard, Solar Impulse 2 (registration HB-SIB) lands at Seville Airport in Seville, Spain, completing the 15th leg of its attempt to become the first solar-powered aircraft to fly around the world and the first aircraft to do so without using any fossil fuel. The nonstop transatlantic flight from John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City, begun on 20 June, covers 3,890.5 miles (6,265 km) in 71 hours 8 minutes at an average speed of 54.7 mph (88.1 km/hr), reaching a maximum altitude of 27,999 feet (8,534 meters).[252]
  • An Air Serbia Airbus A330 lands at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City after a nonstop flight from Belgrade, Serbia, inaugurating the airline′s first transatlantic route and Serbia′s first nonstop airline service to the United States by a local airline since Jat Airways, the national airline of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, discontinued the route in 1992.[253]
  • Aeroméxico announces that it is suspending service to Caracas, Venezuela, due to the complicated economic situation in Venezuela. It is the third airline to halt service to Venezuela. Venezuela′s currency controls make it difficult for airlines to convert ticket sales revenue to United States dollars to cover their costs of operating in Venezuela.[254]
24 June
  • A U.S. Department of Defense spokesman announces that U.S. forces have conducted airstrikes against the Taliban in southern Afghanistan during the pervious week. The strikes follow a decision by President Barack Obama earlier in June to expand U.S. airstrikes in Afghanistan to assist Afghan forces in offensive operations against the Taliban.[255][256]
25 June
  • Airstrikes reportedly made by Russian planes kill at least 30 people in the Islamic State-held town of Qourieh in Syria′s Deir ez-Zor Governorate. One report puts the death toll a 46.[257]
26 June
27 June
28 June
  • A three-person suicide team armed with Kalashnikov rifles and suicide bombs attacks the international terminal at Istanbul Atatürk Airport in Istanbul, Turkey, blowing themselves up in the terminal′s arrival and departure areas and in a nearby parking lot. The attack kills at least 44 people and injures more than 230 others. All flights into and out of the airport are temporarily suspended after the attack, and the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration temporarily grounds all flights to and from Istanbul.[259][260][261][262][263]
29 June
29–30 June (overnight)
  • U.S. and British planes and Iraqi planes and attack helicopters attack two large convoys of ground vehicles carrying Islamic State combatant personnel and their families attempting to flee Fallujah, Iraq. The strikes destroy at least 150 vehicles and kill about 250 people; the Iraqi armed forces claim that the strikes destroy 798 vehicles including eight car bombs and kill hundreds of Islamic State combat personnel, with the U.S.-led coalition responsible for 117 of the vehicles and three of the car bombs and Iraqi aircraft destroying the rest. A spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition says that coalition aircraft attempted to avoid striking portions of the convoys it thought included civilians. The U.S. aircraft participating in the attack had been called away from supporting Syrian rebel forces attempting to capture Bukamal, Syria, from the Islamic State and, lacking air support, the Syrian rebels are defeated.[265][266]
30 June
  • United States Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter announces that earlier in the week the United States offered to share intelligence with Russia to improve Russian targeting of terrorist groups in Syria if Russia agrees to cease airstrikes against civilians and against rebel groups that have agreed to a ceasefire and to use its influence with the Government of Syria to force the regime of Bashar al-Assad to sign on to the ceasefire. The United States offer does not include joint military planning, joint targeting, or coordination of Russian airstrikes with U.S. airstrikes or other U.S. operations in Syria.[267]
  • U.S. Air Force F-35 Lightning II aircraft deploy outside the United States for the first time when three F-35A aircraft of the 56th Fighter Wing land at RAF Fairford in the United Kingdom after a nonstop transatlantic flight supported by a U.S. Air Force KC-10A Extender tanker.[264]

July

1 July
2 July
  • Israeli aircraft strike four Hamas training sites in the Gaza Strip, damaging buildings but harming no one. The strike is in response to a rocket attack against Israel from the Gaza Strip the previous day that damaged an empty kindergarten building without killing or injuring anyone.[271]
  • Airstrikes against rebel-held Jeiroud, Syria – suspected of being Syrian government strikes conducted in retaliation for the kiliing of a captured Syrian Arab Air Force pilot by rebels in the area the previous day – kill at least 25 people. One report puts the overall death toll at 31, and another report claims that seven medical personnel are among those killed in at least 40 air attacks against the town during the day.[269]
3 July
  • Airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition support an offensive by U.S.-backed Syrian rebel forces against Islamic State positions near Manbij, Syria, but the Islamic State succeeds in repelling the rebel attack.[272]
4 July
  • China protests the "provocative actions" of two Japan Air Self-Defense Force fighter aircraft on 17 June when they intercepted two Chinese fighters over the East China Sea near the Japanese-controlled Senkaku Islands (called the Diaoyu Islands in China), claiming that the Chinese fighters were on a routine patrol when the Japanese aircraft locked onto them with fire control radar and adding that the Chinese planes took "tactical measures" before the Japanese aircraft left the area.[235][273]
  • A U.S. airstrike in Yemen′s Shabwa Governorate kills two members of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.[268]
5 July
  • Japan denies that its aircraft engaged in any provocative or dangerous activities while intercepting two Chinese fighters over the East China Sea on 17 June, adding that its aircraft scrambled to intercept Chinese military aircraft about 200 times between 1 April and 30 June 2016, up from about 80 times during the same period in 2015.[235][273]
7 July
8 July
  • On the last day of a three-day ceasefire declared by the Syrian Arab Army but widely violated, unidentified jets belonging to either the Syrian Arab Air Force or the Russian Federation Air Force strike rebel-held Darkush, Syria – a vacation spot for Syrians – during the Eid al-Fitr holiday weekend, killing at least 23 people.[275]
  • Islamic State forces shoot down a helicopter near Palmyra, Syria, killing two Russian pilots on board. Russia claims the helicopter was a Syrian Mil Mi-25 helicopter the Russians were flying on a training mission when they were diverted to take action against an Islamic State ground attack, which they thwarted before they were shot down by a U.S.-made BGM-71 TOW missile. News reports and independent experts, however, claim that the downed helicopter actually was a Mil Mi-35M attack helicopter belonging to the Russian armed forces and operating on a combat mission, and that whatever shot it down was very unlikely to have been a BGM-71 TOW.[276]
9 July
  • A U.S. air-to-ground missile strike by an unmanned aerial vehicle in Afghanistan targeting members of the Islamic State-Khorasan Province group kills five Islamist militants including Umar Narai, also known as Khalifa Umar Mansoor, a leader of the Tariq Gidar Group who masterminded a 2014 attack by the Pakistani Taliban on a school in Peshawar, Pakistan, that killed 148 people and injured 114.[277]
  • Supported by airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition, Iraqi ground forces recapture Qayyarah Air Base in the Qayyarah subdistrict of Mosul District in Nineveh Governorate, Iraq, from the Islamic State. The commander of Iraqi counterterrorism forces credits the coalition airstrikes with destroying 60 Islamic State car bombs. With a runway capable of handling heavy cargo planes and room for many helicopters, the newly captyured air base promises to allow the support of further Iraqi advances into Islamic State-held territory.[278]
  • Using a plane chartered by the World Food Programme, the United Nations begins an airlift of humanitarian aid to an estimated 275,000 people in Syria′s Al-Hasakah Governorate who have been cut off from food and other supplies for six months. The first flight delivers 40 metric tons of food, arriving during the evening at Kamishly Airport in Al-Qamishli.[279] Plans call for the plane to make at least 25 flights between Damascus, Syria, and Al-Qamishli over the course of a month, delivering over 1,000 metric tons of food, medicine, and other relief supplies to Kamishly Airport.[280]
10 July
  • Syrian government air raids strike a rebel-held neighborhood in Aleppo and a diesel fuel market in Turmanin. The Aleppo strike reportedly kills 10 people, while the air raids on Turmanin set several tanker trucks on fire and kill at least eight and perhaps as many as 14 people.[281]
  • In a briefing ahead of the opening of the Farnborough International Airshow, the chief executive officer of Boeing′s commercial aircraft unit, Ray Conner, says that his company is seeing strong interest among airlines in a new mid-range airliner that could seat between 200 and 270 passengers and have a range of between 4,500 and 5,100 nautical miles (8,330 kilometers to 9,450 kilometers), creating a new, larger market beyond that of the Boeing 757 and Airbus A321neo. The first all-new Boeing aircraft since the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, the new airliner would cost $10,000,000,000 to $15,000,000,000 to develop and be the company′s biggest potential product development over the next 10 years.[282]
11 July
12 July
13 July
  • The day after the Permanent Court of Arbitration ruled against the People's Republic of China in Philippines vs. China regarding a territorial dispute with the Philippines in the South China Sea, two Chinese civilian aircraft fly to Chinese-claimed islands in the South China Sea, one each landing at Mischief Reef and Subi Reef. Both return to China later in the day.[287]
  • An airstrike hits a market in rebel-held Ariha, Syria, killing at least nine and perhaps as many as 12 people. Another airstrike targeting a market in rebel-held Al-Rastan, Syria, kills reportedly kills 16 people and wounds dozens.[288]
  • Flown by André Borschberg, Solar Impulse 2 (registration HB-SIB) lands at Cairo International Airport in Cairo, Egypt, completing the 16th leg of its attempt to become the first solar-powered aircraft to fly around the world and the first aircraft to do so without using any fossil fuel. The nonstop flight from Seville Airport in Seville, Spain, began on 11 July and passes over the Mediterranean Sea and portions of southern Europe and North Africa, covering 2,326 miles (3,745 km) in 48 hours 50 minutes at an average speed of 45.8 mph (73.7 km/hr) and reaching a maximum altitude of 27,999 feet (8,534 meters). Solar Impulse 2 passes over the Giza pyramid complex before landing at Cairo International.[283]
  • At a meeting of the NATO-Russia Council, Russian diplomats propose to the representatives of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) member countries that all aircraft flying over the Baltic Sea do so with their transponders on as a way of improving air safety. Although NATO requires all aircraft flown under its command to fly with their transponders on, the aircraft of NATO member countries do not always turn them on when flying separately from NATO control, and Russian aircraft also have flown with them off. The NATO representatives welcome the proposal and promise to study it.[289]
  • Citing a need to strike back against those responsible for terrorist attacks in France in January 2015 and November 2015, President of France François Hollande announces that the French Navy aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle will deploy to the Middle East to participate in operations against the Islamic State.[290]
14 July
  • A series of airstrikes on rebel-held districts of Aleppo, Syria, reportedly kill 12 people.[291]
  • The Islamic State reportedly shoots down a Syrian Arab Air Force jet near the military airport at Deir ez-Zor, Syria, killing its pilot. The Islamic State releases a video purportedly showing the pilot′s body strung up on a pole, and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reports that his body had been crucifed.[291]
  • United States Secretary of State John Kerry meets in Moscow with President of Russia Vladimir Putin to discuss a U.S. proposal supported by senior United Nations officials to "integrate" U.S. and Russian air operations against Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra targets in Syria and halt Syrian government and Russian air attacks against civilians and moderate Syrian rebel forces that are parties to a widely violated February 2016 ceasefire agreement. The proposal calls for Russia to pressure the Syrian government to ground all Syrian military aircraft and restrict Russian airstrikes to Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra targets, and for U.S. airstrikes against Jabhat al-Nusra – previously conducted only rarely to avoid direct U.S. involvement in the Syrian Civil War – to expand alongside strikes against Islamic State targets in Syria. Under the proposal, Russia and the United States – via a Joint Implementation Group headquartered in Amman, Jordan – would share intelligence and strike planning for Jabhat al-Nusra leadership targets, headquarters, training camps, logistical depots, and supply lines, with other areas off-limits to airstrikes by either country, and a "liaison body" would ensure that Russia and the United States inform one another at least a day in advance of planned strikes against agreed-upon targets. The proposal calls for implementation of an agreement by 31 July.[292] The following day, Kerry and Foreign Minister of Russia Sergei Lavrov announce after day-long talks that the two countries have reached an agreement that could reduce civilian casualties and improve targeting of terrorist groups, but they reveal no details to the public.[293]
  • Airbus and Boeing experience their lowest airliner sales totals at the Farnborough Air Show in six years, securing deals for about 400 aircraft worth about $50,000,000,000, only half their sales at the previous year′s show. American, European, and Persian Gulf carriers make almost no deals, and only carriers in Asia make large orders. No orders materialize for the Boeing 777, Airbus A330neo, or Bombardier C-Series, and Airbus A380 production rates are greatly reduced. Industry analysts blame the reduced sales on uncertainty over the future of the global economy and on the United Kingdom′s 23 June 2016 vote to leave the European Union, popularly known as the "Brexit."[294]
15–16 July (overnight)
17 July
18 July
19 July
  • The U.S.-led coalition strikes Islamic State-held territory in northern Syria to help counter an Islamic State ground offensive against the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, 56 civilians die in the strikes, while other reports put the death toll as high as 212; for example, the Islamic State claims that U.S. strikes kill 160 civilians in Tokhar, and the Syrian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates claims a strike by French aircraft against Tokhar kills 120 civilians. An SDF spokesman disputes the claims of civilian deaths, saying that the strikes have killed large numbers of Islamic State personnel, and that the Islamic State has simply buried them quickly and falsely claimed that civilian deaths have occurred.[299] The U.S. military announces that U.S. aircraft have conducted 18 strikes in the Manbij area over the previous 24 hours – out of 450 in the area since May – and that it is launching an investigation to determine whether the allegations of civilian casualties are true.[304][305] By late August, United States Central Command will report that it has concluded that the Tokhar strike – conducted by U.S. Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt II and B-52H Stratofortress aircraft using 500-pound (227-kg) GBU-31 and GBU-54 laser-guided bombs to knock out a mortar position – killed 85 Islamic militants and 10 civilians, while Syrian activists claim that all or most of the 95 dead were civilians.[306]
  • Since the U.S.-led coalition′s air campaign in Iraq and Syria against the Islamic State began in August 2014, U.S. aircraft have carried out over 10,500 strikes and the rest of the coalition combined has conducted 3,200.[307]
20 July
  • A network router fails in Southwest Airlines′ computer system and back-up systems fail to activate, causing a 12-hour outage that cripples the airline′s flight operations throughout the United States. Normal operations will not resume fully until 24 July, by which time Southwest will have cancelled about 2,300 of the approximately 19,500 flights scheduled during the period.[308]
22 July
23 July
23–24 July (overnight)
24 July
25 July
26 July
  • A U.S. unmanned aerial vehicle-launched air-to-ground missile strike in Afghanistan′s Nangarhar Province kills the Islamic State leader Hafiz Saeed Khan. The United States Department of Defense will announce his death on 12 August.[314]
  • Solar Impulse 2 (registration HB-SIB) becomes the first solar-powered aircraft to fly around the world and the first aircraft to do so without using any fossil fuel. Flown by Bertrand Piccard, it completes the final leg of its journey, flying nonstop from Cairo International Airport in Cairo, Egypt, to Al Bateen Executive Airport in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates – where its round-the-world flight had begun on 9 March 2015 – covering 1,673 miles (2,694 km) in 48 hours 37 minutes at an average speed of 34.4 mph (55.4 km/hr) and reaching a maximum altitude of 27,999 feet (8,534 meters).[315] Flown alternately by Piccard and André Borschberg, Solar Impulse 2 has made the 26,354-mile (42,428-km) trip in 17 legs over 505 days, spending 558 hours 7 minutes in the air at an average speed of 47.2 mph (76.0 km/hr) and reaching a maximum altitude of 29,114 feet (8,874 meters).
28 July
  • Syrian Arab Air Force aircraft drop leaflets over Aleppo, Syria, informing residents that the Government of Syria will allow them to escape the surrounded city via three safe corridors and that rebel soldiers wishing to lay down their arms would be granted safe passage through a fourth corridor.[316]
29 July
30 July
31 July
  • In response to a rebel offensive attempting to break the Syrian government′s siege of Aleppo, Syria, that begins during the day, helicopters drop barrel bombs on the city′s rebel-held neighborhood of Bustan al-Basha. Later in the day, jets – presumably of the Russian Federation Air Force or Syrian Arab Air Force – bomb rebel-held areas in the eastern part of the city. During the day, people in rebel-held areas of the city burn tires to create plumes of black smoke in an attempt to interfere with visibility for attacking aircraft.[320]

August

  • During the month, Delta Air Lines sends a letter of protest to the U.S. General Services Administration, complaining that GSA′s award to JetBlue Airways of the U.S. government contract routes from New York City to Dubai and from New York City to Milan, Italy, in 2015 violates the 1981 Fly America Act – which requires U.S. federal government employees, their families, and federal consultants and contractors to travel aboard U.S. carriers when on official business paid for by the U.S. government – because JetBlue has no aircraft that can fly that far and will book its passengers to those destination on its codeshare partner Emirates, a United Arab Emirates (UAE) airline based in Dubai. Delta joins American Airlines and United Airlines in arguing that they should be selected for such routes to reduce the disadvantage they face when competing with Emirates, the UAE′s Abu Dhabi-based Etihad Airways, and Qatar′s Qatar Airways, all of which receive substantial subsidies from their governments. The GSA responds that JetBlue offers cheaper prices that Delta, American, and United and that its selection does not violate the Fly America Act, regardless of its use of foreign codeshare partners for the routes.[321]
1 August
2 August
3 August
4 August
  • A Pakistani helicopter manned by seven Pakistani civil engineers flying from Pakistan to Russia for routine maintenance crash-lands in Afghanistan′s Logar Province. The Taliban takes either six of its occupants or all seven of them hostage, according to various reports. The Pakistan Army requests U.S. military assistance in recovering the captured Pakistanis,[328]
  • Amazon.com unveils Prime One, a Boeing 767 which is the first of the company′s 40 leased cargo planes – all Boeing 767s – branded as "Prime Air," a new air cargo service tasked with delivering goods to Amazon Prime customers. Although Prime Air already is operating 11 of the Prime Air aircraft, Prime One is the first to operate in Prime Air livery. Its tail number, N1997A, is selected as an Amazon prime marketing gimmck because 1997 is a prime number. Prime One makes its first flight in the new livery the following day at the Seafair festival in Seattle, Washington. Amazon plan to phase the remaining aircraft into service over the next several years.[329][330]
5 August
  • ASL Airlines Hungary Flight 7332, a Boeing 737-476SF cargo aircraft, slides off a runway at Il Caravaggio International Airport in Bergamo, Italy, while landing in bad weather conditions. It crashes through a perimeter fence and rolls onto a four-lane highway, narrowly avoiding collisions with cars on the highway and destroying several cars in an adjacent parking lot. Both people aboard the aircraft are uninjured. The airport is closed for three hours after the crash, with incoming flights diverted to Milan–Malpensa Airport in Milan, Italy.
  • Black Lives Matter protesters block a roadway into Heathrow Airport outside London, temporarily bringing ground traffic into the airport to a halt.[331]
  • In response to a July 2016 court order to release to the American Civil Liberties Union a May 2013 Presidential Policy Guidance (PPG) document laying out the Obama administration′s guidelines for airstrikes by unmanned aerial vehicles (popularly called "drones"), the United States Government releases a declassified, redacted version of the PPG. It requires "near certainty" that the terrorist target is at the targeted location, that no civilians be injured or killed in the strike, that the target poses a "continuing and imminent" threat to Americans, that capture of the target is not feasible, and that all relevant domestic and international laws are obeyed.[332]
6 August
8 August
  • Delta Air Lines experiences computer problems that force it to cancel 451 of its nearly 6,000 daily flights, delaying tens of thousands of passengers.[335] Before the airline recovers, it cancels 2,300 flights over three days.[336] On 2 September, Delta will announce that the cancellations cost it $100 million in revenue, or two percent of passenger unit revenue, a metric for unit revenue as it relates to a carrier′s flight capacity and distance flown which dropped 9.5% in August.[336]
9 August
  • The Saudi-led coalition conducts its first airstrikes in Yemen since a much-violated ceasefire in the Yemeni Civil War began on 11 April 2016. The coalition′s aircraft strike a potato processing factory inside a Yemeni Army maintenance camp in Sana'a, killing at least 14 people working there. One estimate puts the death toll at 16. At least 10 other people are injured.[337] The strikes begin a stepped-up effort by the coalition after five months of relatve calm in the air campaign in Yemen.[338]
10 August
11 August
  • Airstrikes on Islamic State-held ar-Raqqa, Syria, kill at least 20 civilians and perhaps as many as 24 civilians and six other people whose military or civilian status could not immediately be determined. According to Syrian activists, Russian Federation Air Force jets are responsible for the strikes.[339]
  • Turkish Minister of Foreign Affairs Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu announces that the Turkish Air Force will resume airstrikes against Islamic State targets in Syria as par of the U.S.-led coalition and offers to carry out joint operations against the Islamic State with Russia. Turkey had discontinued airstrikes against the Islamic State in Syria after shooting down a Russian Federation Air Force aircraft in November 2015 and subsequently experiencing tension in its relationship with Russia.
  • JetBlue Flight 429, an Airbus A320 bound from Boston, Massachusetts, to Sacramento, California, encounters severe turbulence over South Dakota. It diverts to Rapid City, South Dakota, where 20 passengers and two crew members are hospitalized with injuries.[342]
12 August
  • Airstrikes against rebel-held areas in and around Aleppo, Syria, kill at least 18 people. The strikes – suspected of having been conducted by the Syrian Arab Air Force or Russian Federation Air Force.[340] – hit the only hospital for women and children in Kafr Hamrah, killing at least four people and burying at least 10 others who are pulled alive from the rubble; a market in Urum al-Kubra, killing at least six people; and the village of Hayan, killing at least 10 people. Prayers are cancelled for the day in Idlib because of the intensity of the airstrikes.
  • Mohammad Hassan Chaudhary, a 20- or 21-year-old (sources dffer) schizophrenic man who allegedly has no flight training, steals a privately owned Piper PA-38 Tomahawk at Markham Airport in Markham, Ontario, Canada, and crashes it near Landsdowne Place mall in Peterborough, Ontario. The incident sparks concerns about security at private airports in Canada, as Chaudhary, wbo dies in the crash, stole the aircraft with relative ease, and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police investigate the matter as a "national security issue."[343][344][345]
13 August
  • A member of the provincial council of Afghanistan′s Helmand Province claims that an ongoing Taliban offensive to capture Lashkar Gah would have surrounded the city if not for the recent addition of U.S. airstrikes in support of Afghan forces defending the area.[346]
  • A Royal Saudi Air Force airstrike in northern Yemen hits a school in Sa'dah, killing 10 children and injuring 28 others. Local reports state that the children were students taking exams at the time of the strike, while a spokesman for the Saudi-led coalition claims that the strike hit a rebel training camp and the children were rebel recruits.[338]
14 August
  • Aircraft of the U.S.-led coalition conduct airstrikes in support of an offensive by Kurdish peshmerga troops against Islamic State forces in Iraq east of Mosul that captures five villages. One of the strikes destroys a car bomb.[347]
  • Aircraft of the Saudi-led coalition conduct airstrikes in support an offensive by pro-government troops in Yemen against al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula forces that captures Zinjibar and Jaʿār. The strikes kill more than 40 Islamic militants and destroy several of their ground vehicles.[348]
  • Boko Haram releases a video in which one of the girls the group kidnapped in 2014 from a school in Chibok, Nigeria, claims that Nigerian Air Force strikes against Boko Haram have killed some of the girls. The video also shows what purportedly are the bodies of kidnapped schoolgirls allegedly killed in an air raid.[349]
  • Reports 45 minutes apart of shots fired in two different terminals at John F. Kennedy International Airport in Queens, New York, lead to a panic in which thousands of people are evacuated from the terminals and all air traffic at the airport is grounded. After police find no signs of any shiots having been fired, a senior law enforcement official announces that it appears that loud cheering, clapping, and banging by people watching television coverage of Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt competing in the 100-meter dash during the 2016 Summer Olympics had been misinterpreted as the sounds of a fight and gunfire.[350]
15 August
  • An airstrike by the Saudi-led coalition hits a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Yemen′s Hajjah Governorate, killing 19 people injuring 24. It is at least the fourth airstrike by the coalition against a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Yemen since the Yemeni Civil War began in March 2015.[351][352]
  • Six people were killed in a small plane crash in Alabama, United States.[353]
16 August
  • Russian Federation Air Force Tupolev Tu-22M (NATO reporting name "Backfire") bombers fly from a base near Hamadan, Iran, to hit Islamic State and Jabhat Fateh al-Sham targets in northern and eastern Syria. It is the first time that Russian aircraft conduct strikes against targets in Syria from bases in Iran. Russian fighters based in Syria join the bombers over Syria. The Russians inform U.S. military forces of the bombers′ flight over Iraqi and Syrian territory in advance in accordance with an agreement to deconflict air operations over Syria with the United States. The bombers previously had made 1,200-mile (1,932-km) flights from bases in Russia to strike Syrian targets, but the use of Iranian bases reduces the distance to 400 miles (644 km), allowing them to carry larger payloads and use less fuel and allowing Russia to intensify its air campaign against rebel forces in Syria.[354] The following day, an Iranian lawmaker will confirm that Russian aircraft are using Iran′s Shahed Nojah Air Basem adding that Russian fighter aircraft are using the base only to refuel.[355]
  • Syrian activists report an airstrike against a field hospital in rebel-held Daret Azzeh in Syria′s Aleppo Governorate just after the hopsital′s staff and patients had evacuated it. Reportedly scoring a direct hit on the hospital, the strike injures one person.[355]
17 August
  • Unidentified aircraft conduct airstrikes against rebel-held Idlib, Syria, killing 17 people and injuring at least 30 others.[355]
  • Syrian Arab Air Force Sukhoi Su-24 (NATO reporting name "Fencer") aircraft conduct the Syrian government's first airstrikes against forces of the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) in Syria′s Hasakah Governorate near Hasakah, killing several Kurds. The bombs fall near U.S. and coalition special operations forces working on the ground with the YPG but inflict no casualties on them. As the strike begins, the U.S. military contacts Russian forces in Syria to inform them that U.S. aircraft would respond if forces of the U.S.-led coalition were under attack; the Russians reply that the Syrians are conducting the strike. Coalition forces on the ground are unable to contact the Syrian jets, and U.S. fighter aircraft scrambled to intercept the Syrians arrive as the Syrian jets leave the area. The incident prompts the U.S.-led coalition to maintain increased combat air patrols over the area and to warn the Syrian government not to interfere with coalition ground forces in the future.[356][357][358]
  • The Russian Ministry of Defense announces that Russian aircraft have conducted airstrikes against rebel targets in eastern Syria from bases in Iran for the second straight day, flying from a base southwest of Tehran.[355]
  • The Hybrid Air Vehicles Airlander 10 hybrid airship makes its first flight, a 30-minute flight at Cardington Airfield in Bedfordshire, England. Although larger airships existed in the early 20th century, the 302-foot-long (92-meter-long) Airlander 10 is the world′s largest existing operational aircraft at the time of the flight.[359]
18 August
  • Doctors Without Borders announces that it is evacuating its staff from six hospitals in northern Yemen, saying that the Saudi-led coalition′s bombing of the area is "indiscriminate" and the coalition′s assurances of protection for health workers are "unreliable." The group explains that airstrikes have continue to target its hospitals despite its provision of the GPS coordinates of its hospitals to the coalition and two meetings with high-ranking military officials of the coalition over the last previous eight months in which the officials promised that aerial bombing of hospitals would end.[352]
19 August
  • Two Syrian Arab Air Force Sukhoi Su-24 (NATO reporting name "Fencer") aircraft attempt to transit the area near Hasakah, Syria, where Syrian aircraft had come close to bombing U.S. and coalition special operations forces on the ground while attacking Kurdiish forces the previous day. Fighter aircraft of the U.S-led coalition intercept them and, according to a U.S. Department of Defense spokesman, "encouraged" the Syrian aircraft to leave the area "without further incident."[358]
21 August
22 August
  • A U.S. military spokesman in Kabul, Afghanistan, announces that Embraer A-29 Super Tucano light attack aircraft flown by U.S.-trained Afghan pilots have deployed to Kunduz, Afghanistan, to operate against Taliban forces conducting an offensive to capture the city.[362]
  • A spokesman for the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs announces that Iran no longer will permit Russian aircraft to use bases in Iran, apparently because of Iran′s displeasure with the publicity given the Russian deployment of aircraft to Iran by Russia′s public announcement of it. The spokesman says that the Russian use of Hamadan Airbase outside Hamadan, Iran, was "temporary, based on a Russian request" and was "finished for now," adding that "Russia has no base in Iran." Since beginning strikes against rebel targets in Syria on 16 August, Russia had operated Tupolev Tu-22M (NATO reporting name "Backfire") bombers, Sukhoi Su-34 (NATO reporting name "Fullback") strike aircraft, Sukhoi Su-30SM (NATO reporting name "Flanker C") fighters, and Sukhoi Su-35S (NATO reporting name "Flanker E") fighters from Hamadan, launching at least three strikes into Syrian territory.[363]
23 August
  • The Nigerian Army claims that "the most unprecedented and spectacular air raid" by the Nigerian Air Force against a village in the Sambisa Forest in northeastern Nigeria′s Borno State on 19 August as members of Boko Haram met for morning prayers mortally wounded the group′s leader, Abubakar Shekau – the fourth time Nigerian forces have claimed to have killed him – and killed three other top Boko Haram commanders. A separate Nigerian Air Force announcement claims that the strike killed 300 Boko Haram personnel. Neither of the reports can be verified, and later in the day Nigerian forces claim merely to have seriously wounded Shekau in the strike.[364][365][366][367]
24 August
  • Turkish Army forces enter Syria to assist Free Syrian Army troops in capturing Jarabulus from the Islamic State. Turkish Air Force and U.S. aircraft conduct airstrikes in support of the offensive.[368]
  • The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) announce that they have cleared their forces of wrongdoing in two airstrikes against targets in the Gaza Strip that killed civilians during the 2014 Israel–Gaza conflict. They find that a 20 July 2014 airstrike that killed seven members of one family at the refugee camp in Bureij was justified because the house was in use as a Hamas military command-and-control center and because the strike killed a senior Hamas commander and three members of the family who were Hamas members; that a 1 August 2014 airstrike against a house in Rafah that killed 15 members of one family also was justified because the house was in use by Hamas as a military command-and-control center; that international law permits attacks on houses used for military purposes; and that one of the dead family members in the 1 August strike was a senior Hamas commander. The IDF also finds that the deaths of 12 members of a family in Rafah on 21 July 2014 were due to Palestinian mortar fire rather than an Israeli airstrike.[369]
25 August
  • A weeklong search in the Federated States of Mirconesia for a couple aboard a missing sailboat ends when a United States Navy helicopter investigating a report from the previous evening of a light seen on uninhabited Fayu Atoll discovers a large "SOS" drawn in the sand and spots the couple waving. The couple is rescued by boat on 26 August.[370]
26 August
  • Russian news media report that the Russian government has asked the Turkish government for information on Turkish air operations over Syria. A spokesman for the Russian Ministry of Defense explains that Russia wishes to use the information "to prevent air incidents because it will be the first time when Turkish warplanes will intensively bomb targets in Syria and [they] may meet Russian warplanes in midair."[371]
27 August
  • Syrian warplanes attack a funeral in Al-Nayrab, Syria, with a barrel bomb, then return to strike with another barrel bomb after rescue workers arrive. The attacks reportedly kill more than two dozen people.[372]
  • The Turkish Air Force conducts airstrikes against Kurdish targets in Al-Amarna, Syria, south of Jarabulus.[373]
  • The left engine of Southwest Airlines Flight 3472 (registration N766SW) – a Boeing 737-700 flying from New Orleans, Louisiana, to Orlando, Florida, with 104 people on board – explodes at an altitude of 30,700 feet (9,357 meters), damaging the engine nacelle and tearing a gash in the airliner′s fuselage. The aircraft makes an emergency landing at Pensacola, Florida, without injury to anyone on board.[374][375][376]
28 August
  • Russia lifts its ban on charter flights to Turkey. The ban had been in place since Turkey shot down a Russian Federation Air Force Sukhoi Su-24 (NATO reporting name "Fencer") near the Turkish border with Syria in November 2015.[377] On 29 August, the executive director of the Association of Tour Operators of Russia wioll announce that the first charter flights will take place on 4–5 September.[378]
  • Iranian state television airs video of a Russian-supplied mobile S-300 (NATO reporting name "SA-10 Grumble") surface-to-air missile system deployed around the nuclear site at Fordo, Iran. It is not clear whether the system is fully operational or that it will remain at the site.[379]
  • Just after police at Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles, California, detain a man in the terminal carrying a plastic sword and dressed as Zorro, a report of shots fired leads to a panic in which police evacuate terminals, people run onto the airfield, and flights to and from the airport are halted. The loud noises mistaken for shots turn out to be harmless, and the man dressed as Zorro, who tells police he had come to meet an arriving passenger, is released.[380]
29 August
  • Iranian state television reports that Iran has put into operation the Nazir radar system, which it claims can detect radar-evading aircraft, ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and unmanned aerial vehicles flying at altitudes of over 3,000 meters (9,842 feet).[379]
  • The first nationwide regulations governing the use of unmanned aerial vehicles (popularly known as "drones") go into effect in the United States. They apply only to commercial-purpose UAVs weighing 55 pounds (24.9 kilograms) or less including payload, and require that the UAVs fly only during daylight, remain within sight of their operators, not fly directly over people not involved in their operation, fly no higher than an altitude of 400 feet (122 meters), and fly no faster than 100 miles per hours (161 km/hr); operations outside these parameters require a waiver from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). They also require that UAV pilots pass a written test of aeronautical knowledge administered by the FAA to receive an FAA certification to operate UAVs – the FAA has received about 3,000 requests for such certifications – although UAV pilots are not required to possess a formal license. The regulations do not apply to privately owned UAVs operated by hobbyists. They also do not address the operation of UAVs over private property, although the FAA recommends that UAV operators receive the permission of property owners before operating UAVs over their property and specific permission to take photographs and videos over their property if the UAVs are to be used for those purposes.[381]
30 August
  • The Islamic State announces that its chief spokesman, Abu Mohammad al-Adnani, has been killed in an airstrike. The U.S. Department of Defense reports that it targeted Adnani in a "precision strike" in Al-Bab, Syria, with an AGM-114 Hellfire air-to-ground missile fired by an unmanned aerial vehicle but says it cannot confirm his death.[382] On 31 August, Russia will claim that a strike by a Russian Federation Air Force Sukhoi Su-34 (NATO reporting name "Fullback") killed as many as 40 Islamic State personnel on 30 August, one of whom was Adnani, but offers no evidence for its claim.[383]
  • Joe Sutter, the American engineer known as the "father of the 747" who served as chief engineer for the design and development of the Boeing 747 in the 1960s, leading a team of 4,500 people including 2,700 engineers, dies at the age of 95.[384]
31 August

September

1 September
2 September
  • The Syrian rebel group Jaish al-Izzah claims to have shot down a "Russian helicopter" with a BGM-71 TOW anti-tank missile during the day as the helicopter was landing outside Rahbat al-Khattab northwest of Hama, Syria.[393] According to one report, the helicopter was Russian- or French-made and operated by the Syrian government, and two people aboard it were killed.[394]
3 September
  • Iraqi Air Force fighter aircraft drop leaflets to residents of Shirqat and Zuwiyah, Iraq. The leaflets ask them to support and assist Iraqi forces and their allies advancing into the area during an offensive against the Islamic State.[395]
4 September
5 September
6 September
  • Visiting Laos, President Barack Obama pledges that the United States will provide $90 million in additional aid to Laos to help in cleaning up an estimated 80 million unexploded bombs remaining in that country after the U.S. air campaign there during the Vietnam War. Between 1964 and 1973, the United States conducted 580,000 bombing raids over Laos, dropping an estimated 270 million cluster bombs, in an effort to cut off supplies passing through Laos to Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army forces operating in South Vietnam.[398]
  • A Syrian government aircraft drops a barrel bomb containing chlorine gas on the rebel-held Sukkari neighborhood of Aleppo. According to Syrian Civil Defense, 120 people are hospitalized with breathing problems after the attack.[399] The following day, medical workers claim that they treated 70 people for breathing problems and that two of them had died on 7 September.[400]
  • A Mexican police helicopter crashes in Mexico′s Michoacán state, killing three police officers and the pilot, during a police operation to capture leaders of criminal groups and drug cartels in Apatzingán, including the Knights Templar Cartel. An initial report that the helicopter was shot down by a criminal group later comes into question, prompting an investigation into the cause of the crash.[401]
7 September
8 September
10 September
  • A series of airstrikes by aircraft of the Saudi-led coalition on a water well in Beit Sadaan, Yemen, kill at least 30 people and wound at least 17, according to the United Nations, although Houthi rebels claim that the strikes kill or wound 100 people. Later strikes in the sequence of air raids on the well reportedly kill first responders attempting to help the wounded from earlier strikes.[407]
  • In Geneva, Switzerland, United States Secretary of State John F. Kerry and Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov announce a ceasefire agreement between the United States and Russia intended to lead to a negotiated settlement that will end the Syrian Civil War. The ceasefire between the Syrian government and opposition groups is to begin at sundown on 12 September. If the ceasefire holds for seven days, the agreement as outlined by Kerry calls among other things for the protection of civilians in Syria from airstrikes, for the United States and Russia to make arrangements to conduct coordinated airstrikes in Syria against Jabhat Fateh al-Sham and the Islamic State, and for the Syrian Arab Air Force to resume combat missions only over yet-to-be-selected areas that contain no rebel forces.[408][409]
  • Syrian Arab Air Force jets strike a busy market in Idlib, Syria, killing at least 36 people, and various neighborhoods in Aleppo, Syria, killing at least another 45 people.[408] Airstrikes from the day resulted in the deaths of over 100 people, all civilians, and the injuring of also more than 100.[410]
11 September
12 September
  • A ceasefire in the Syrian Civil War under an agreement between Russia and the United States goes into effect at sundown, but is almost immediately violated during the evening. Among the violations is a barrel-bomb attack against a neighborhood of Aleppo by Syrian government helicopters.[412]
14 September
  • Iraqi Air Force aircraft drop 7 million leaflets over Iraq′s Nineveh Governorate – 2 million over the center of Mosul, 500,000 each over Hamdaniya, al-Ba’aaj, al-Hazar, and Talafar, and 250,000 each over Bashiqa, Hamam Alil, al-Shura, al-Mahaliya, al-Hmidat, Bartila, al-Namroud, Qahtaniyah, Til Abta, al-Ayaziya, and al-Qirwan. The leaflets inform civilians of a planned offensive to retake Mosul from the Islamic State and asks civilians in the governorate to stop fighting for the Islamic State, avoid Islamic State bases and help the anti-Islamic State coalition target the bases, and support advancing Iraqi troops and their allies.[395]
  • Based on the results of a United States Navy investigation into a fatal crash while the Blue Angels flight demonstration squadron was practicing for an air show on 2 June, the Blue Angels receive orders to eliminate the split S maneuver from their shows until further notice, put dive recovery rules with specific airspeed limitations in place, use a greater safety buffer between aircraft and the ground for the remainder of the air show season, and make positive radio confirmation with instruments that measure altitude prior to takeoff. The Navy also directs that after the conclusion of the current air show season a safety team review the Blue Angels′ training, maintenance and culture; review their aerial maneuvers in order to increase safety; and determine adjustments to future air show schedules to allow more rest for pilots and support staff.[413]
16 September
17 September
  • Believing that they are attacking Islamic State forces, aircraft of the U.S.-led coalition – which the Syrian government claims are two F-16 Fighting Falcons and two A-10 Thunderbolt IIs flying into Syria from Iraq – mistakenly strike Syrian Arab Army forces in Syria′s Deir ez-Zor Governorate. The strike destroys approximately six ground vehicles according to a United States Central Command estimate before Russia alerts Central Command that the strike is targeting Syrian Arab Army forces; the aircraft then cease fire and the United States express regret over the strike. Russia and Syria claim that the targeted forces were fighting against the Islamic State and that the strike killed 62 Syrian soldiers and wounded 100. It is the first combat engagement between the U.S.-led coalition and Syrian forces since the coalition began air raids in Syria in 2014. Arguing that the strike is a ceasefire violation that may be evidence of U.S. military support for the Islamic State in the Syrian Civil War, Russia calls an emergency Saturday-evening meeting of the United Nations Security Council to discuss the incident.[416]
18 September
  • The U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan comnducts two airstrikes against a highway in Afghanistan′s Urozgan Province on the outskirts of Tarinkot in support of Afghan forces in combat against the Taliban. Local officials claim that the strikes mistakenly kill eight Afghan police officers, with the second strike killing people who were attempting to help those injured in the first strike; the coalition does not comment on the allegation. The strikes are among several the coalition carries out during the day, including in Kabul Province.[417]
  • Warplanes – suspected of being Syrian Arab Air Force or Russian Federation Air Force aircraft – strike rebel-held neighborhoods in eastern Aleppo, Syria, killing at least one person and injuring several others. Another suspected Syrian or Russian airstrike in Syria′s Daraa Governorate kills eight people.[418]
  • Iranian state television announces that Iran is reducing the number of airliners it agreed to purchase from Airbus in January from 118 to 112.[208]
19 September
  • The Syrian government declares an end to a week-long nationwide ceasefire in the Syrian Civil War and the Syrian Arab Air Force conducts at least 35 airstrikes and barrel-bomb attacks against rebel-held areas in and around Aleppo, Syria. One air raid strikes a ground convoy as it unloads aid packages at a warehouse operated by the Syrian Arab Red Crescent west of Aleppo, Syria, hitting the warehouse, destroying at least 18 of the convoy′s 31 trucks, and killing about 20 civilians, including at least 12 humanitarian aid workers, most of them truck drivers. The United States claims that only Russian Federation Air Force or Syrian Arab Air Force aircraft could have conducted the strike.[419][420][421] The following day, the U.S. Department of Defense reveals that its analysis has led it to conclude that a Russian Federation Air Force Sukhoi Su-24 (NATO reporting name "Fencer") conducted the strike; a Russian Ministry of Defense spokesman responds with a claim that a Russian unmanned aerial vehicle had spotted a pick-up truck armed with a large mortar in the convoy, implying that the convoy had provided cover for the movement of rebel combat forces, and Russian spokespersons later claim that no Russian or Syrian aircraft were in the vicinity, that al-Qaeda-linked rebel ground forces had attacked the convoy and warehouse during operations against the Syrian Arab Army, and that the United States was blaming Russia and Syria for the strike merely to distract attention from its own mistaken airstrike against Syrian Arab Army forces on 17 September.[420][421]
  • United States Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James announces that the new bomber under development by Northrop Grumman for the U.S. Air Force′s Long-Range Strike Bomber program will be named the B-21 Raider. The B-21 is expected to reach initial operational capability in the mid-2020s.[422]
20 September
21 September
  • After the Russian Ministry of Defense claims that a U.S. unmanned aerial vehicle was in the vicinity of the 19 September airstrike on a humanitarian aid convoy and warehouse outside Aleppo, Syria, and implies that it could have conducted the attack, the U.S. Department of Defense responds that no manned or unmanned aircraft of the U.S.-led coalition were in the area at the time.[425] At the U.N. Security Council, U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry accuses Moscow of inventing its "own facts"[425] to explain the air attack, which the United States had blamed on the Russian Federation Air Force, adding that "We don’t get anywhere by ignoring facts and denying common sense;"[425] he calls for Russia and Syria to "immediately ground all aircraft" flying in areas of northwest Syria where the convoy was hit.[425]
  • The United States Department of the Treasury′s Office of Foreign Assets Control grants Airbus and Boeing licenses to sell airliners to Iran. Airbus's license covers the first 17 A320s and A330s that Iran agreed to purchase in a January; although based aboard, the company required U.S. Government permission because at least 10 percent of the airliners′ components are manufactured in the United States. Boeing′s license allows it to sell 80 airliners and lease another 29 new Boeing 737s to Iran.[208]
22 September
  • Throughout the day, suspected Syrian Arab Air Force and Russian Federation Air Force aircraft strike targets in rebel-held areas of Aleppo, Syria; twenty-one people die in evening air raids on two Aleppo neighborhoods, and scores have died in airstrikes in the city since 19 September.[426] At the U.N. Security Council, U.S. Secetary of State John F. Kerry repeats his 21 September call for Syria and Russia to ground their aircraft in northeastern Syria, saying that "the only way" for the Syrian ceasefire to succeed is "if the ones who have the air power in this part of the conflict simply stop using it. . . . Absent a major gesture like this, we don’t believe there is a point in making more promises, issuing more plans."[426] The U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, United States Marine Corps General Joseph Dunford, tells the United States Senate Committee on Armed Services that "I would not agree that coalition aircraft ought to be grounded...I do agree that Syrian regime aircraft and Russian aircraft should be grounded...There's no reason to ground our aircraft...We’re not barrel-bombing civilians; we’re not causing collateral damage."[426]
  • The World Trade Organization (WTO) rules that the European Union, France, Germany, Spain, and the United Kingdom have failed to halt illegal subsidies to Airbus that the WTO had ordered them to stop in 2011 despite reporting in late 2011 that they had done so. The WTO adds that the subsidies – which total $22,000,000,000 over ten years – have cost the economy of the United States tens of billions of dollars and cost Boeing nearly 400 potential airliner sales in 2012 and 2013 alone. The ruling is a sweeping victory for the United States and its aerospace industry, which has disputed European aircraft subsidies for 40 years and first filed a complaint with the WTO about Airbus subsidies in 2004.[427]
23 September
  • After the Syrian government announces an offensive against rebel forces in and around Aleppo, Syria, the previous evening, Syrian government aircraft pound rebel-held areas of Aleppo during the day, conducting more than 70 strikes and dropping at least 100 bombs. Observers describe the strikes during the day as the most intense of the Syrian Civil War. Targets include at least three of the four Syrian Civil Defense in the eastern part of the city; damaging fire trucks and ambulances; two of the centers are knocked out. More than 70 strikes have hit the Aleppo area since 21 September; since the collapse of the ceasefire in Syria on 19 September, airstrikes have killed scores of people, including at least 30 in Aleppo.[428][429]
24 September
25 September
26 September
  • In the first week since the collapse of the ceasefire in the Syrian Civil War, Syrian and Russian aircraft have dropped at least 1,700 bombs on the rebel-held eastern portion of Aleppo, Syria.[432]
  • The Russian government announces that it has radio location data implicating the Ukrainian armed forces in the destruction of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17 over eastern Ukraine in July 2014 and has ruled out the possibility that a surface-to-air missile fired from territory held by pro-Russian separatists in Ukraine shot the airliner down.[433]
27 September
  • The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration demonstrates its Next Generation Data Communications (also called "Nexcom" or "Data Comm") system – a component of its Next Generation Air Transportation System – to the media at Washington Dulles International Airport in Virginia. The system, already installed at air traffic control towers at 45 airports in the United States, is intended to replace the existing archaic U.S. system of communications between airline pilots and control towers – which requires printing out flight plans in towers, discussion by radio between towers and pilots, and pilots writing down flight plans by hand in the cockpit – with all-digital communications, allowing improved speed and efficiency. The FAA plans to install the system at 50 more U.S. airports before the end of 2016, and then to install it at en route air traffic control centers across the United States, with a goal of achieving voiceless, in-flight communications between air traffic controllers and airliner pilots throughout the country by mid-2019. The FAA estimates that the new system will save air carriers $10,000,000,000 over the next 30 years.[434][435]
28 September
  • An Afghan official announces that an early-morning airstrike against a residential building in the Achin District in eastern Afghanistan′s Nangarhar Province has killed 13 civilians. U.S. military forces in Afghanistan acknowledge that they carried out a "counterterrorism airstrike" in Achin and aare investigating whether any civilian casualties resulted from it.[436]
  • The United States conducts a predawn airstrike in northern Somalia in defense of troops from Somalia′s Puntland region who report that they have come under fire from al-Shabaab forces. Post-strike photographs show two burned-out armored vehicles and a number of badly burned bodies at the scene of the strike. A U.S. Department of Defense spokesman claims that the strike killed nine al-Shabaab members and a Puntland police officer says it killed more than a dozen al-Shabaab personnel, while officials of Somalia′s Galmudug autonomous region claim that Puntland had tricked the United States into attacking Galmudug soldiers and that the strike had killed 22 of them. The U.S. Department of Defense announces that it will investigate whether the strike killed anyone other than al-Shabaab personnel.[437][438]
  • During the predawn hours, airstrikes hit two hospitals and a bakery in eastern Aleppo, Syria. Both hospitals are put out of action, and two patients are killed.[432]
  • The United States Department of State announces that the United States is making preparations to suspend all bilateral cooperation with Russia over Syria – including the sharing of information between the United States and Russia to support airstrikes against terrorist targets in Syria via a "Joint Implementation Center" – unless Russia takes steps to end the ongoing Syrian and Russian ground and air assault against rebel-held eastern Aleppo and moves to restore the ceasefire agreed to on 12 September. The announcement states that in a telephone conversation earlier in the day with Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov, U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry "made clear that the United States and its partners hold Russia responsible for the situation, including the use of incendiary and 'bunker buster' bombs in an urban environment, a drastic escalation that puts civilians at great risk" and "informed [Lavrov] that the United States is making preparations to suspend U.S.-Russia bilateral engagement on Syria — including on the establishment of a Joint Implementation Center to coordinate [air]strikes on terrorist targets — unless Russia takes immediate steps to end the assault on Aleppo and restore the cessation of hostilities." [439]
  • A Dutch team investigating the crash of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17 in Ukraine in July 2014 announces that it has concluded that the airliner was shot down by a surface-to-air missile fired by a Russian-made Buk missile system (NATO reporting name "Gadfly," U.S. Department of Defense designation SA-11) smuggled from Russia into an area of eastern Ukraine held by pro-Russian separatists a few hours before it fired at the airliner and returned to Russian territory the following day. The Dutch team says that it has identified over 100 people linked to the firing of the missile and that it will continue its investigation – extended into at least 2018 – –in order to determine who ordered it fired. The U.S. Department of State notes that the Dutch team′s findings match those of American investigators, while the Russian ministries of defense and foreign affairs dismiss some of the Dutch team′s evidence and declare its investigation biased and Russian separatists in Ukraine claim they have no access to sophisticated surface-to-air missiles and blame the airliner′s destruction on the Ukrainian armed forces.[433]
  • "Unauthorized...activity" by an unmanned aerial vehicle near Dubai International Airport in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE), forces the airport to halt all arrivals and departures. Arrivals resume after about 35 minutes and full operations after about 67 minutes. The incident prompts UAE officials to announce plans to tighten the country′s regulations regarding drone operations. A similar incident had caused the airport to close on 12 June.[226]
29 September
  • United Nations officials condemn the 28 September U.S. counterterrorism airstrike in Afghanistan′s Achin District, saying it killed 15 civilians and wounded 12 others; they demand a complete investigation of the incident. Although the United States and the Afghan government claim that the strike targeted a residential compound used by Islamic State personnel, local Afghan officials claim that it killed and injured only civilians. U.S. military officials respond that they take "all allegations of civilian casualties very seriously" but add that the Islamic State continues "to put innocent lives at risk by deliberately surrounding themselves with civilians and dressing in female attire."[440]
  • The Government of Somalia accuses the United States Government of killing 13 Somali soldiers in its 28 September airstrike against al-Shabaab forces and demands an explanation from the United States.[438]
  • Russia responds to U.S. criticism of its air campaign in eastern Aleppo, Syria, by saying that the airstrikes are justified because the United States violated the ceasefire agreement of 12 September by failing to fulfill its promise to separate al-Qaeda- and Islamic State-linked forces from other rebel forces and because the ceasefire agreement had become unacceptable because it a;;owed "terrorist groups to take necessary measures to replenish supplies [and] regroup forces."[441]
30 September
  • Russian and Syrian aircraft conduct heavy airstrikes against rebel-held residential areas in eastern Aleppo, Syria, including the use of white phosphorus and cluster munitions; two more hospitals are among the targets hit during the day. The World Health Organization estimates that Russian and Syrian airstrikes have killed 338 people in Aleppo since 19 September. The Syrian Network for Human Rights estimates that Russian airstrikes have killed 3,624 civilians since they began on 30 September 2015, while the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights estimates that they have killed 3,804 civilians. A Russian government spokesman says that Russia has no intention of reducing its involvement in the Syrian Civil War and has no projected end date for its intervention.[442]
  • Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs Bert Koenders summons the Russian ambassador to the Netherlands to a meeting in The Hague to complain about Russian Government statements criticizing the Dutch team investigating the July 2014 crash of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17 in Ukraine. Koenders describes the Russian criticism as "unsubstantiated" and "unacceptable," adding, "Given the convincing nature of the evidence, Russia should respect the results that have been presented, rather than impugning the investigation and sowing doubt."[443]

October

1 October
2 October
3 October
4 October
  • U.S. military officials in Kabul, Afghanistan, announce that one U.S. Army helicopter has fired at Taliban insurgent forces in Kunduz, Afghanistan, in defense of Afghan ground forces opposing a Taliban offensive there.[456]
  • Russia announces that it has added operational S-300 (U.S. DoD designation "SA-10," NATO reporting name "Grumble") surface-to-air missile systems to its air defense forces in Syria, where they join Russian S-200 (U.S. DoD designation "SA-5," NATO reporting name "Gammon"), and Buk (U.S. DoD designation "SA-17," NATO reporting name "Grizzly") already there.[457][458] The S-300 and S-400 missiles give Russian forces the capability to shoot down aircraft at a range of up to 250 miles (403 km), covering almost all of Syria, all of Cyprus, and significant portions of Israel, Jordan, Turkey, and the eastern Mediterranean Sea.[459]
6 October
  • Russia warns that it will view any airstrikes in Syria by the U.S.-led coalition against pro-Syrian-government forces as a threat to Russian military personnel and that its surface-to-air missile systems deployed in Syria would fire immediately at any aircraft appearing to pose a threat to them.[458]
  • Finland notes what it suspects are two separate violations of its airspace by Russian Sukhoi Su-27 (NATO reporting name "Flanker") fighters over the Gulf of Finland.[460]
  • At a meeting in Montreal, Ontario, Canada, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) overwhelmingly ratifies a 15-year agreement to curb global-warming-related emissions from civil airliners on international flights (domestic flights already are covered separately by the Paris Agreement of December 2015, set to take effect in November 2016) by an estimated 2,500,000,000 tons between 2021 and 2035 ; it is the first international climate-change-related pact to govern a single industry. Under the agreement, the maximum permissible emissions level permitted for commercial airlines beginning in 2021 will be set at the level of emissions in 2020; after that, and through 2035, airlines that exceed the 2020 limit will have to buy carbon credits from other industries to compensate for exceeding the emissions limit. Participation is voluntary from 2021 through 2027, then mandatory from 2028 through 2035. The agreement is expected to cost airlines $5,300,000,000 annually and as much as $23,900,000,000 in 2035. Each of the ICAO′s 191 member countries still must act on their own to put the agreement's limits into effect; 65 countries – including China, the United States, and all 44 member countries of the European Union′s aviation conference – have agreed to participate, while Russia plans not to participate in the voluntary phase and India has expressed reservations about the agreement.[461]
7 October
  • The Government of Finland announces its suspicions that Russian Sukhoi Su-27 (NATO reporting name "Flanker") fighters violated Finnish airspace over the Gulf of Finland the previous day. Russia responds by denouncing the Finnish claim, asserting that its aircraft remained over international waters.[460]
  • Estonia announces that a Russian Sukhoi Su-27 (NATO reporting name "Flanker") fighter violated its airspace for less than a minute earlier in the day.[460]
  • Russia ratifies a treaty with Syria which among other things grants it a permanent airbase in Syria at Khmeimim, effective retroactively to 26 August 2015, the date it was signed.[462]
  • The Russian newspaper Kommersant reports that a Russian military official said that Russian forces in Syria are under orders to "shoot to kill" if they come under attack, presumably by aircraft of the U.S.-led coalition.[462] It also reports that Russia is considering deploying Sukhoi Su-25 (NATO reporting name "Frogfoot") aircraft to Syria. Russia had withdrawn all Su-25s from Syria in March.[462]
  • United States Secretary of State John F. Kerry calls for Russia and Syria to face war crimes charges for bombing civilian targets in Aleppo, Syria. Russian officials condemn the idea.[463]
  • Qatar Airways announces that it has made a deal with Boeing worth up to $18,600,000,000 to buy up to 100 airliners. The deal includes purchasing 10 Boeing 777s and 30 Boeing 787s for a combined $11,700,000,000 and up to 60 Boeing 737s for as much as $6,900,000,000. The purchase of Boeing 737s marks the first Qatar Airways purchase of single-aisle airliners from Boeing since 2001. Qatar Airways had expressed frustration with Airbus over delays in the delivery of A320neo airliners it had ordered, but says it will continue to work with Airbus for delivery of the A320neos despite its Boeing 737 order.[464]
  • Belarus′ national airline Belavia officially retires its last Tupolev Tu-154M (NATO reporting name "Careless") airliner.[465]
  • Bulgaria Air outlines Sofia Airport as its first international long-haul base, with flights to begin in March 2017 using a pair of Airbus A330-200s offering service to Beijing, China; Bangkok, Thailand; and New York City in the United States. Bulgaria Air also is contemplating service from Sofia to Mumbai, India, and Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.[466]
  • Airbus officials indicate that three unwanted SriLankan Airlines Airbus A350-900s may be delivered instead to Bulgaria Air.
  • Turkey′s regional carrier Borajet signs a long-term lease agreement with AerCap involving five Embraer E-Jet E2s, consisting of three E190 E2s and two E195-E2s.[467]
8 October
9 October
  • An Afghan Army Mil Mi-17 (NATO reporting name "Hip") helicopter crashes in Baghlan Province in northern Afghanistan, killing all eight Afghan Army soldiers on board. The Taliban claims to have shot it down, but the Afghan Ministry of Defense says the crash resulted from a technical failure.[471][472]
  • Saudi Arabia promises an investigation into the Saudi-led coalition′s deadly 8 October airstrike against a funeral in Yemen, adding that it will invite U.S. experts to take part.[469]
  • The United Nations estimates that airstrikes by the Saudi-led coalition are responsible for 60 percent of the estimated 3,800 civilian deaths in Yemen since the airstrikes began in March 2015.[469]
10 October
11 October
  • Airstrikes targeting the rebel-held Bustan al-Qasr neighborhood of Aleppo, Syria, kill at least 14 people, with one report placing the number of dead at 16. Activists report the use of "bunker buster" bombs during the strikes.[475]
  • A Piper PA-34 Seneca carrying a student pilot and his flight instructor crashes into a utility pole in East Hartford, Connecticut, and bursts into flames, killing the student and injuring the instructor, who tells investigators that the crash occurred after a physical altercation in the cockpit between the two men. The following day, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board announces that it believes that the crash was intentional and that it is transferring the crash investigation to the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation.[476][477]
12 October
  • China Southern Airlines finalizes an order with Boeing for twelve Boeing 787-9 airliners, becoming China′s first Boeing 787 customer. The deal is worth up to $3,200,000,000, and China Southern is to take delivery of the airliners between 2018 and 2020.[478][479]
  • The U.S. startup company Zipline uses an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) to deliver blood to a remote hospital in western Rwanda. Plans call for Rwanda to officially launch the world′s first nationwide UAV delivery service on 14 October, with Zipline′s UAVs operating 24 hours a day to make up to 150 deliveries a day. The 31-pound (14-kg) fixed-wing UAVs, which have an operational range of 150 km (93 miles), fly below 500 feet (152 meters) to avoid commercial aircraft and drop packages to customers using disposable parachutes. Zipline plans to expand its operations into eastern Rwanda in 2017.[480][481][482][483][484][485]
13 October
14 October
15 October
  • The Riyadh, Saudi Arabia-based Joint Incidents Assessment Team (JIAT), an investigative body created by the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, issues a statement that the coalition wrongly bombed a funeral on 8 October in Sana'a, Yemen, killing more than 100 people. The JIAT finds that the strike occurred because someone affiliated with the chief of staff of President of Yemen Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi had incorrectly assured the coalition that the funeral was a gathering of armed Houthi rebel leaders and that the coalition′s air operations center ordered the attack without the approval of the coalition command and without following precautionary procedures designed to avoid strikes against civilians.[488]
  • The Turkish Air Force conducts strikes against Islamic State targets in support of a ground offensive by Syrian opposition groups intended take Dabiq, Syria, from the Islamic State.[489]
  • Syrian Arab Air Force and Russian Federation Air Force raids hit rebel-held neighborhoods in eastern Aleppo, Syria, and an air attack probably by either Russian or Syrian aircraft in Termanin, Syria, kills at least eight people and injures dozens of others.[489]
  • A United States Department of Transportation ban announced the previous day on Galaxy Note 7 smartphones aboard any airliner flying within, to, or from the United States goes into effect throughout the country at 12:00 noon Eastern Daylight Time. Samsung Electronics already had recalled the Galaxy Note 7 because of reports of it catching fire or exploding.[490]
16 October
  • Airstrikes by the Turkish Air Force and international coalition strike Islamic State targets in Dabiq and Arshak, Syria, as Turkish-backed Syrian opposition ground forces capture Dabiq from the Islamic State.[491]
17 October
  • Aircraft and artillery of the U.S.-led coalition strike Islamic State targets around Mosul as a ground offensive to take Mosul, Iraq, from the Islamic State by Iraqi Army and police forces and Kurdish pesh merga forces begins.[492]
  • Syrian government and Russian airstrikes in eastern Aleppo, Syria, kill at least 36 people.[493]
  • The Russian government announces that Russia and the Syrian government will observe a unilateral cease fire from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on 20 October for a "humanitarian pause" to allow people to evacuate to Idlib Governorate from rebel-held areas in Aleppo.[493]
19 October
  • United States Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx announces new rules to protect airline passengers in the United States. They include an eventual requirement for airlines to refund baggage fees when baggage is "substantially" delayed, rather than only when it is lost; a requirement likely to go into effect in January 2018 for airlines to report the number of mishandled bags as a proportion of checked bags rather than in relation to the number of passengers carried; a requirement likely to go into effect by the end of 2016 for online airline booking services to disclose any bias they have toward booking on particular airlines; an eventual requirement for airlines to include regional airlines that operate as part of their networks when reporting their on-time performance; and, for the first time, a requirement likely to go into effect in 2018 for airlines to report the number of wheelchairs they mishandle. Foxx notes that the U.S. Department of Transportation expects 700 million passengers to travel on 9 million airline flights in the United States during 2016.[494]
19-20 October (overnight)
20 October
  • Iraqi Army attack helicopters support ground forces attacking Islamic State positions in Bartella, Iraq, during the offensive to retake Mosul. Islamic State gunfire damages one helicopter, but it lands safely and its crew is evacuated.[496]
  • Kurdish peshmerga forces suffer increased causalties during the day in combat against the Islamic State during the Mosul offensive. A statement by the Kurdish general command ascribes the increase to a lack of air support, saying that support and air cover by the U.S.-led coalition “were not as decisive as in the past.”[496]
  • Russia and the Syrian government begin a three-day pause in their bombardment of rebel-held eastern Aleppo, Syria, to allow the delivery of humanitarian supplies and the evacuation of around 200 critically injured people. The ceasefire is longer than the eight-hour pause Syria and Russia had announced on 17 October, but less than the five days requested by international aid officials.[497]
  • The European Union warns Russia that it could face sanctions if its bombardment of civilians in Aleppo, Syria, continues.[498]
  • American Airlines reports a drop of 56 percent in net income during the third quarter of 2016, with net income between 1 July and 30 September of $737.000,000 representing a decline from $1,700,000,000 from the same period in 2015. Planes flying less full and increased labor costs are factors in the decline, as is a large tax bill. Overall revenue for the quarter was $10,600,000,000, a decline of 1.1 percent from the same period in 2015. American is the world′s largest airline.[499]
  • The French start-up company Skylights releases the second iteration of its Bravo wearable headset device that allows airline passengers to view two-dimensional and three-dimensional movies and virtual reality entertainment content in their seats. The company has conducted trial runs of the technology over the previous year on European airlines, including Air France, KLM, and XL Airways, and hopes that rentable Bravo devices will become a mainstream form of in-flight entertainment aboard airliners around the world.[500]
21 October
  • A Skol Airlines Mil Mi-8 helicopter with at least 22 people on board crashes in Russia′s Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, killing at least 19 people.
  • Amid growing complaints by the Iraqi Army and Kurdish peshmerga forces of inadequate air support by the U.S.-led coalition for their ground offensive to retake Mosul, Iraq, from the Islamic State, the United States Department of State envoy to the coalition, Special Presidential Envoy for the Global Coalition to Counter the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant Brett H. McGurk, reports massive coalition airstrikes during the day in support of both forces. The airstrikes have involved aircraft ranging from attack helicopters to United States Air Force B-52H Stratofortress bombers. Iraqi ground forces also complain of insufficient aerial reconnaissance support by coalition unmanned aerial vehicles. The coalition′s air power reportedly has been spread thin by the size and scope of the ground offensive.[501]
  • Bulgaria Air announces that it will begin round-trip service to Turkey, with flights between Sofia Airport in Sofia, Bulgaria, and Istanbul's Atatürk International Airport in Turkey commencing in January 2017. Turkish Airlines also will provide service between the two airports, with a codeshare partnership between the two airlines expected to come in May 2017.[citation needed]
  • Turkish Airlines announces that it has suspended services to Najaf, Sulaymaniyah, and Basrah, Iraq, because of the Iraqi and Kurdish offensive to retake Mosul from the Islamic State.[citation needed]
  • The Supreme Administrative Court of Sweden rules that unmanned aerial vehicles equipped with cameras are a form of surveillance device requiring a special surveillance permit to operate. The application process in Sweden for such permits is expensive, with no guarantee that a license will be granted, and the ruling causes consternation among UAV owners and the UAV industry in Sweden.[502][503]
  • Amid border tensions between Colombia and Venezuela, at least one and possibly two Venezuelan Air Force fighter aircraft approach Avianca Flight 011, a Boeing 787 Dreamliner flying at an attitude of over 36,000 feet (10,973 meters) over western Venezuela en route from Madrid, Spain, to Bogotá, Colombia, with 250 passengers aboard. The airliner makes a sharp turn off course to the north in order to reach Colombian airspace quickly. In the wake of the incident, Colombia suspends all flights by Colombian aircraft to and from Venezuela and orders its aircraft to avoid flying over Venezuelan airspace, and President of Venezuela Nicolás Maduro orders an investigation of the incident.[504][505]
22 October
  • The humanitarian pause in the bombardment of Aleppo, Syria, that Russia and the Syrian government had declared on 20 October comes to an end during the evening as aircraft – presumably belonging to the Russian Federation Air Force or Syrian Arab Air Force – bomb rebel-held neighborhoods in eastern Aleppo.[506] A planned evacuation of injured people and of civilians from eastern Aleppo – the main purpose of the pause – did not take place during the pause.[507]
23 October
  • Following diplomatic talks between the Government of Colombia and the Government of Venezuela, Colombia lifts its suspension of flights by Colombian aircraft to, from, and over Venezuela. It had instituted the flight ban after at least one Venezelan Air Force fighter aircraft approached an Avianca Boeing 787 Dreamliner over western Venezuela on the evening of 21 October, forcing the airliner to veer off course and into Colombian airspace.[505]
  • A Morton County, North Dakota, Sheriff's Department helicopter monitoring a protest at a Dakota Access Pipeline construction site in North Dakota reports that an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) operated by the protestors has approached it in a threatening manner. Law enforcement officers in North Dakota open fire on the UAV with "less than lethal" ammunition, damaging it, after which its operator lands it. Protestors claim that police shot at the UAV because they do not want their activities filmed.[508][509]
24 October
25 October
26 October
27 October
28 October
29 October
  • An unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) operating without permission near Dubai International Airport in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE), forces the airport to close for 84 minutes and prompts UAE authorities to close nearby Sharjah International Airport for a similar amount of time. It is the third time that an unauthorized drone flight has caused Dubai International Airport to close in 2016, previous incidents having occurred on 12 June and 28 September.[522]
  • Strikes by aircraft of the Saudi-led coalition targeting a security complex in Houthi-rebel-held Hodeidah, Yemen, kill at least 43 people and injure scores more; one report puts the death total at 60. Most of the dead are inmates held in prisons in the complex. The coalition says that the complex was a legitimate target because the Houthis were using it as a command-and-control center for their military operations.[523]
30 October
31 October

November

1 November
2 November
3 November
  • Airstrikes supporting Afghan government troops fighting to push Taliban forces out Kunduz, Afghanistan, reportedly kill 30 civilians and injure 25 others in and around the city. One report puts the death toll at up to 100 civilians.[527][528] U.S. military officials will acknowledge on 5 November that the airstrikes inflicted casualties on civilians, but do not estimate the number of casualties.[528]
5 November
6 November
7 November
8 November
  • Seven airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition targeting six Islamic State tactical units near Ayn Issa, Syria, destroy three fighting positions, a ground vehicle, and a car bomb facility.[533]
9 November
  • The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights claims that a strike by the U.S.-led coalition in Heisha, Syria, kill at least 20 civilians and injure 30 others. The coalition says it will investigate the claim of civilian casualties.[534]
  • United States Central Command announces that it has reexamined its estimate of the number of civilians its airstrikes have killed in Iraq and Syria since its air campaign against the Islamic State began in 2014 based on allegations by activist groups and that has added 64 deaths to is estmate, bringing its estimate to a total of 119 civilians killed. It continues to investigate allegations of additional civilian deaths.[535]
11 November
13 November
15 November
16 November
  • Syrian government airstrikes pound eastern Aleppo, Syria, badly damaging the city′s last remaining children′s hospital; Russia denies any involvement in strikes against eastern Aleppo, claiming to have conducted none there since 18 October. At least 87 people are killed in Aleppo Governorate during the day. Russian air and cruise missile strikes continue in Idlib Governorate, where 34 sites have been hit and six people killed and dozens wounded since 15 November.[541]
19 November
  • According to officials in Afghanistan, an airstrike by an unmanned aerial vehicle in Nangahar Province in eastern Afghanistan kills eight Islamic State personnel including Mullah Bozorg, a top Islamic State commander.[542]
20 November
21 November
  • The United States grants a license to Airbus to sell 106 airliners to Iran; it will announce that it has granted the license the following day. Airbus required the license because at least 10 percent of the airliners′ parts are manufactured in the United States. Previously, Airbus had had a U.S. license to sell only 17 airliners to Iran.[543]
22 November
  • Approximately 250 pilots who fly cargo aircraft for ABX Air go on strike, claiming the airline is violating their contract by giving them too many flight assignments. ABX Air says it views the strike as illegal. The strike affects package deliveries by ABX Air′s two biggest customers, Amazon.com and DHL Express, as the 2016 Christmas shopping season begins.[544]
  • The Government of Canada announces that it will buy 18 F-18 Super Hornets from Boeing as a stopgap measure and begin a process of as long as five years to determine how to replace its aging fighter fleet, which consists of 77 McDonnell Douglas CF-18 Hornets, a decline from what once had been a force of 138 CF-18s. The announcement is a blow to Lockheed Martin, which had hoped to sell Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II fighters to Canada. Although Canada plans to remain one of the countries contributing to the development of the F-35, it has backed off its earlier plans to purchase F-35s.[545]
23 November
  • An airstrike by the U.S.-led coalition "disables" the fourth of five bridges across the Tigris in Mosul, Iraq, leaving only one bridge intact. Airstrikes had destroyed another bridge earlier in the week and two in October. The destruction of the bridges has disr×upted Islamic State supply lines.[546]
  • Spain′s national airline Iberia formally its last flight for the Airbus A340-300 from service.[547]
  • A U.S. federal judge in Cincinnati, Ohio, orders ABX Air pilots who had gone on strike the previous day to return to work. Their union says that it will obey the judge′s order.[548]
24 November
  • Turkey agrees to send a large firefighting aircraft to Israel to assist in aerial firefighting efforts against major wildfires burning there. Russia, meanwhile, agrees to send two large firefighting aircraft to Israel. Croatia, Cyprus, Greece, and Italy have sent a combined seven aircraft to Israel to assist in firefighting.[549]
  • The U.S.-led coalition has conducted over 16,000 airstrikes against Islamic State targets since beginning its air campaign against the Islamic State.[550]
25 November
  • The watchdog group Airwars announces that air and artillery strikes by the U.S.-led coalition have combined to kill between 84 and 87 civilians and wound more than 160 other civilians in and around Mosul, Iraq, since the coalition′s ground offensive to clear Islamic State forces from Mosul began on 17 October. A United States Central Command spokesman responds that "the liberation of Mosul is an operation that is an order of magnitude larger and more complex than" operations to liberate "any of the previous cities that have been liberated" from the Islamic State, adding that U.S. military forces extensively review proposed strikes, using intelligence and surveillance to verify targets before launching them and noting that coalition strikes have destroyed dozens of Islamic State car bombs and tunnels in around Mosul.[551]
  • A U.S.-based Evergreen 747 Supertanker – the world′s largest aerial firefighting aircraft, based on the Boeing 747-400 – arrives in Israel to assist in battling major wildfires that have been burning for four days. Azerbaijan also sends a firefighting plane and Egypt sends two helicopters to help battle the fires.[552]
26 November
27 November
28 November
29 November
30 November

December

1 December
2 December

First flights

Entered service

Retirements

14 January
23 November

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  167. ^ Solar Impulse 2 Leg 10 - From San Francisco to Phoenix
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  172. ^ Anonymous, "Report: Turkey attacks IS in Syria; 55 militants killed," Associated Press, May 8, 2016, 6:54 a.m. EDT.
  173. ^ al-Haj, Ahmed, "Airstrikes by Saudi-Led Coalition in Yemen Kill 10," Associated Press, May 9, 2016, 3:08 p.m. EDT.
  174. ^ Denyer, Simon, and Thomas Gibbons-Neff, "," washingtonpost.com, May 10, 2016 (EDT).
  175. ^ Roth, Andrew, "Iran announces delivery of Russian S-300 missile defense system," washiingtonpost.com, May 10, 2016.
  176. ^ Ng, Eileen, "Malaysia: 2 more pieces 'almost certainly' from Flight 370," Associated Press, May 12, 2016, 5:54 AM EDT.
  177. ^ Muñoz, Carlo, "U.S. airstrike kills 5 al-Shabaab militants in Somalia," washingtontimes.com, May 12, 2016.
  178. ^ "Leg 11: Phoenix to Tulsa". Solar Impulse.
  179. ^ Anonymous, "Airstrikes kill at least 12 in northern Syria," Associated Press, May 13, 2016, 2:27 p.m. EDT.
  180. ^ Lamothe, Dan, "," washingtonpost.com, May 13, 2016, 2:09 p.m. EDT.
  181. ^ "Islamic State: Turkish strikes in Syria 'kill 27 militants'," bbc.com, 16 Mat 2016.
  182. ^ a b Ali, Idrees, and Megha Rajagopalan, "China demands end to U.S. surveillance after aircraft intercept," Reuters, May 19, 2016, 9:13 p.m. EDT.
  183. ^ Halsey, Ashley III, "Worried that drones might strike airplanes, FAA seeks airport detection system," washingtonpost.com, May 17, 2016, 12:16 p.m. EDT.
  184. ^ Chuter, Andrew, "Gripen E Debuts as Saab Reports Continued Interest in C Variants," defensenews.com, May 18, 2016, 11:05 a.m. EDT.
  185. ^ Roth, Andrew, "Russia proposes joint airstrikes with U.S.-led coalition in Syria," washingtonpost.com, May 20, 2016, 5:16 p.m. EDT.
  186. ^ Craig, Tim, Antonio Olivo, and Missy Ryan, "https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/airstrike-on-taliban-leader-escalates-us-involvement-in-afghan-war/2016/05/22/f26ced5a-2014-11e6-aa84-42391ba52c91_story.html," washingtonpost.com, May 22, 2016, 8:39 a.m. EDT.
  187. ^ Anonymous, "Activists: Suspected coalition airstrike kills Syrian family," Associated Press, May 21, 2016, 1:13 p.m. EDT.
  188. ^ a b c http://www.nbcnews.com/tech/innovation/solar-impulse-2-lands-ohio-complete-latest-leg-global-trip-n578171 Anonymous, "Solar Impulse 2 Lands in Ohio to Complete Latest Leg of Global Trip," Associated Press, May 22, 2016, 12:02 am EDT.
  189. ^ "Leg 12: Tulsa to Dayton". Solar Impulse.
  190. ^ Morris, Loveday, and Mustafa Salim, "," washingtonpost.com, May 22, 2016, 7:45 p.m. EDT.
  191. ^ a b Salim, Mustafa, and Erin Cunningham, "Iraqi military claims advances in Islamic State-held Fallujah," washingtonpost.com, May 23, 2016.
  192. ^ a b Anonymous, "The F-35 made its debut in European Airshow circuit at the Leeuwarden air show, in the Netherlands.," The Aviationist, undated.
  193. ^ Ryan, Missy, and Mustafa Salim, "Mixed Iraqi force prepares for push into militant stronghold of Fallujah," washingtonpost.com, May 24, 2016.
  194. ^ Yousufzai, Gul, and Saud Mehsud, "Brother of man killed in U.S. strike on Taliban chief files police report," Reuters, May 30, 2016, 2:50 a.m. EDT.
  195. ^ Naylor, Hugh, "Russia calls off attacks against Syria's al-Qaeda franchise," washingtonpost.com, May 25, 2016.
  196. ^ "Leg 13: Dayton to Lehigh Valley". Solar Impulse.
  197. ^ Halsey, Ashley III, "TSA chief Neffenger takes another crack at explaining long airport security lines," washingtonpost.com, May 25, 2016.
  198. ^ a b Ali, Idrees, and Saif Hameed, "Islamic State commander in Falluja killed, U.S. military says," Reuters, May 28, 2016, 1:33 a.m. EDT.
  199. ^ Halsey, Ashley III, "American Airlines: Something ‘needs to be done, and fast’ about TSA lines," washingtonpost.com, May 26, 2016.
  200. ^ a b Sly, Liz, "Airstrikes kill dozens near a hospital in Syria as violence escalates," washingtonpost.com, May 31, 2016.
  201. ^ Muñoz, Carlo, "U.S. airstrike kills key al-Shabab leader; terrorist group bombs Somali hotel," washingtontimes.com, June 1, 2016.
  202. ^ Anonymous, "40 years for Vietnamese man accused in plot to bomb Heathrow ," Associated Press, May 27, 2016.
  203. ^ Kochman, Ben, Kerry Burke, and Dennis Slattery, "Pilot of vintage World War II plane killed after crashing in Hudson River," nydailynews.com, May 28, 2016, 2:08 PM EDT.
  204. ^ Davenport, Christian, "Elon Musk's SpaceX does it again. Nails fourth landing," washingtonpost.com, May 27, 2016.
  205. ^ Anonymous, "Lufthansa to suspend flights to Venezuela," bbc.com, May 29, 2016.
  206. ^ Anonymous, "Second airline suspends flights to Venezuela," bbc.com, May 30, 2016.
  207. ^ Halsey, Ashley III, "TSA says most airport security lines weren’t so bad over Memorial Day weekend," washingtonpost.com, May 31, 2016.
  208. ^ a b c Gambrell, John, "US grants Airbus, Boeing permission to sell aircraft to Iran," Associated Press, September 22, 2016.
  209. ^ Clark, Nicola, and Nour Youssef, "Black Box From Missing EgyptAir Flight 804 Is Said to Be Detected," nytimes.com, June 1, 2016.
  210. ^ Gibbons-Neff, Thomas, "In bizarre coincidence, a Blue Angels F-18 and a Thunderbirds F-16 crash on same day," washingtonpost.com, June 2, 2016.
  211. ^ DeYoung, Karen, "U.N. Security Council to formally request Syrian approval of humanitarian airdrops," washingtonpost.com, June 3, 2016, 6:49 p.m. EDT.
  212. ^ Gibbons-Neff, Thomas, "As pressure increases on Islamic State's capital, U.S. aircraft carrier starts striking from the Mediterranean," washingtonpost.com, June 3, 2016.
  213. ^ Guarino, Ben, "Turkey sinks an Airbus jumbo jet in Aegean Sea to attract fish — and tourists," washingtonpost.com, June 6, 2016, 4:35 a.m. EDT.
  214. ^ Anonymous, "Malaysia Airlines Passengers Injured Due to Turbulence," Associated Press, June 5, 2016, 12:12 P.M. EDT.
  215. ^ Denyer, Simon, "U.S. spy plane buzzed by Chinese jets in ‘unsafe’ intercept," washingtonpost.com, June 8, 2016.
  216. ^ Sly, Liz, "Assad pledges more bloodshed in Syria, says the peace process has failed," washingtonpost.com, June 7, 2016, 12:41 p.m. EDT.
  217. ^ Halsey, Ashley III, "TSA says it's improving at keeping lines moving at mega-airports," washingtonpost.com, June 7, 2016, 2:53 p.m. EDT.
  218. ^ Durando, Jessica, "Syrian activists say airstrikes in Aleppo kill at least 15," usatoday.com, June 8, 2016, 12:05 p.m. EDT.
  219. ^ Chmaytelli, Maher, and Isabel Coles, "U.S, Iraqi officials can't confirm report Islamic State leader wounded," Reuters, June 10, 2016, 4:22pm EDT.
  220. ^ Eltman, Frank, "Aerospace firm successfully tests solar-powered aircraft ," Associated Press, June 10, 2016, 3:39 PM EDT.
  221. ^ Ryan, Missy, and Thomas Gibbons-Neff, "U.S. widens war in Afghanistan, authorizes new action against Taliban," washingtonpost.com, June 10, 2016, 3;16 p.m. EDT.
  222. ^ Mayerowitz, Scott, and Joan Lowy, "US airlines to start scheduled flights to Cuba," Associated Press, June 10, 2016, 4:39 PM EDT.
  223. ^ Svan, Jennifer H., and Marcus Kloeckner, "'No Drone War.' Thousands converge in protest outside Ramstein," stripes.com, June 11, 2016.
  224. ^ "Leg 14: Lehigh Valley to New York". Solar Impulse.
  225. ^ Denyer, Simon, "Explosive device at Shanghai airport leaves 5 injured," washingtonpost.com, June 12, 2016, 11:39 a.m. EDT.
  226. ^ a b Anonymous, "Dubai airport grounds flights due to 'drone activity,'" bbc.com, 28 September 2016.
  227. ^ Anonymous, "Airstrikes kill at least 27, including children," Associated Press, June 12, 2016.
  228. ^ Al-Haj, Ahmed, "Suspected US drone kills 3 al-Qaida suspects in Yemen," Associated Press, June 13, 2016.
  229. ^ Levin, Alan, "Amazon Fined by U.S. FAA for Air Shipment of Dangerous Cargo," bloomberg.com, June 13, 2016, 3:08 PM EDT.
  230. ^ Aonymous, "FAA asks US pilots to be considerate of walruses," Agence France-Presse, 14 June 2016, 14:22.
  231. ^ Brulliard, Karin, "The grim reason pilots need to worry about walruses," washingtonpost.com, June 23, 20166, 11:23 a.m. EDT.
  232. ^ Michael, Maggie, "Egypt says it has found plane wreckage," Associated Press, June 15, 2016, 7:02 PM EDT.
  233. ^ Fung, Brian, "SpaceX's latest rocket landing ended in a ‘rapid unscheduled disassembly’," washingtonpost.com, June 15, 2016, 11:28 a.m. EDT.
  234. ^ Anonymous, "EgyptAir MS804 crash: Voice recorder recovered from sea," bbc.com, June 16, 2016.
  235. ^ a b c Anonymous, "China confirms fighter jet encounter with Japan," Associated Press, July 5, 2016, 5:40 a.m. EDT.
  236. ^ Al Deeb, Sarah, and Phillip Issa, "Strikes on Syria's divided Aleppo kill 7; activists wounded," Associated Press, June 17, 2916, 2:11 p.m. EDT.
  237. ^ a b Gibbons-Neff, Thomas, "Images suggest that Russia cluster-bombed U.S.-backed Syrian fighters," washingtonpost.com, June 18, 2016.
  238. ^ Pearson, Michael, and Lorenza Brascia, "EgyptAir Flight 804: Second black box found," cnn.com, June 17, 2016, 5:46 p.m. EDT.
  239. ^ Anonymous, "EgyptAir flight MS804: repairs needed to 'extensively damaged' black boxes ," Associated Press, 17 June 2016 16.25 EDT
  240. ^ Chang, Kenneth, "NASA Unveils Plans for Electric-Powered Plane," nytimes.com, June 17, 2016.
  241. ^ Morris, Loveday, "Inside Fallujah, Iraqi forces dodge snipers and car bombs in final fight for the city," washingtonpost.com, June 18, 2016.
  242. ^ Issa, Philip, "Syrian forces advance on IS-held air base ," Associated Press, June 19, 2016, 2:58 p.m. EDT.
  243. ^ Soper, Spencer, and Yalman Onaran, "Reusable rocket clears fourth trial run at Bezos space-exploration firm," Bloomberg News, June 19, 2016, 7:40 p.m. EDT.
  244. ^ Bogage, Jacob, "Flying cars just took a big step closer to being legal," washingtonpost.com, June 20, 2016.
  245. ^ "Leg 15: New York to Sevillerk". Solar Impulse.
  246. ^ Kaplan, Sarah, "Plane lands at South Pole in rare, risky effort to rescue sick worker," washingtonpost.com, June 21, 2016, 5:55 PM EDT.
  247. ^ Kaplan, Sarah, "Rescuers succeed in evacuating sick workers at the South Pole," washingtonpost.com, June 22, 2016, 2:15 PM EDT.
  248. ^ Halsey, Ashley III, "Before feared spike in drone crashes, White House sets new rules," washingtonpost.com, June 21, 2016, 5:50 p.m.
  249. ^ Murphy, Brian, "Boeing reaches tentative plane-sale deal with Iran in first major post-sanctions outreach," washingtonpost.com, June 21, 2016, 1:01 p.m. EDT.
  250. ^ Westcott, Ben, "Officials: Plane debris found on Kangaroo Island not from MH370," cnn.com, June 22, 2016, 2:57 a.m. EDT.
  251. ^ El Deeb, Sarah, "US-backed forces enter IS bastion in Syria amid clashes," Associated Press, June 23, 2016.
  252. ^ "Leg 15: New York to Seville". Solar Impulse.
  253. ^ Mutzabaugh, Ben, "USA-Serbia nonstops now flying for first time in 24 years," usatoday.com, June 23, 2016, 3:19 p.m. EDT.
  254. ^ Anonymous, "Aeromexico Latest Airline to Suspend Flights to Venezuela," Associated Press, June 23, 2016, 4:23 p.m. EDT.
  255. ^ Shah, Amir, and Lolita C. Baldor, "After Obama decision, first US airstrikes hit Afghan Taliban," Associated Press, June 24, 2016, 4:46 p.m. EDT.
  256. ^ Anonymous, "Afghanistan: U.S. airstrikes are a debut of broader role," Reuters, June 24, 2016, 5:11 p.m.
  257. ^ Mroue, Bassem, "Hundreds of Syrian Kurds flee IS-held areas amid abductions," Associated Press, June 25, 2016, 11:22 a.m. EDT.
  258. ^ Roth, Andrew, and Erin Cunningham, "Turkish president apologizes for downing of Russian warplane last year," washingtonpost.com, June 27, 2016, 12:43 p.m. EDT.
  259. ^ Anonymous, "Istanbul Ataturk airport attack: At least 32 dead and dozens injured," bbc.com, 28 June 2016.
  260. ^ Payton, Matt, and Justin Carissimo, "Turkey airport attack: 36 dead after suicide bombers strike Ataturk International airport in Istanbul
  261. ^ a b Cunningham, Erin, "Turkey urges world to ‘stand firm’ against terrorism after airport carnage," washingtonpost.com, June 29, 2016, 6:21 a.m. EDT.
  262. ^ []
  263. ^ Cunningham, Erin, "Istanbul airport attackers identified as Russian, Uzbek and Kyrgyz nationals," washingtonpost.com, June 30, 2016
  264. ^ a b Anonymous, "First F-35 Lightning IIs arrive in United Kingdom," Aeroresource, June 29, 2016, updated on June 30, 2016.
  265. ^ Salim, Mustafa, and Thomas Gibbons-Neff, "Iraqi, U.S. aircraft bomb convoy of Islamic State fighters fleeing Fallujah with their families," washingtonpos.com, June 30, 2016.
  266. ^ Gibbons-Neff, Thomas, and Liz Sly, "U.S. jets abandoned Syrian rebels in the desert. Then they lost a battle to ISIS," washingtonpost.com, July 6, 2016.
  267. ^ DeYoung, Karen, "U.S. offers to share Syria intelligence on terrorists with Russia," washingtonpost.com, June 30, 2016.
  268. ^ a b Anonymous, "US Central Command: 2 Yemen strikes kill 4 al-Qaida members," Associated Press, July 8, 2016, 3:44 PM EDT.
  269. ^ a b http://bigstory.ap.org/article/ae6ef8f5175547e6909af374791bc168/airstrikes-kill-25-opposition-area-near-syrian-capital Issa, Philip, "Syrian activists say airstrikes on rebel-held area kill 25," Associated Press, July 2, 2016, 12:03 p.m. EDT.
  270. ^ DeYoung, Karen, and Greg Miller, "White House releases its count of civilian deaths in counterterrorism operations under Obama," washingtonpost.com, July 1, 2016, 2:17 p.m. EDT.
  271. ^ Anonymous, "Israel strikes Hamas sites in Gaza after rocket attack," Associated Press, July 2, 2016, 6:17 p.m. EDT.
  272. ^ Anonymous, "Militants repel push by U.S.-allied forces," Associated Press, July 3, 2016, 7:18 p.m. EDT.
  273. ^ a b Rajagopalan, Megha, "China criticizes Japan over 'dangerous' jet scramble," Reuters, July 4, 2016, 8:35 a.m. EDT.
  274. ^ DeYoung, Karen, "Eight U.S. airlines will fly between American cities and Havana," washingtonpost.com, July 7, 2016, 5:17 p.m. EDT.
  275. ^ Barrington, Lisa, "Almost 50 killed in Syria on ceasefire's last day: monitor," Reuters, July 8, 2016, 9:33 p.m. BST.
  276. ^ Roth, Andrew, and Thomas Gibbons-Neff, "Russia may have lied about losing a gunship to ISIS," washingtonpost.com, Ju;y 12, 2016.
  277. ^ Ahmda, Jibran, "," washingtonpost.com, July 14, 2016, 2:46 a.m. EDT.
  278. ^ Lamothe, Dan, and Loveday Morris, "Pentagon will send hundreds more troops to Iraq following seizure of key airfield," washingtonpost.com, July 11, 2016.
  279. ^ Anonymous, "UN Airlifts Food to Cut off Families in Northeast Syria," Associated Press, July 10, 2016, 8:46 AM EDT.
  280. ^ Wam, "WFP flight delivers 40 tonnes food in Syria," emirates247.com, July 11, 2016.
  281. ^ Mroue, Bassem, "More fighting in Syria's Aleppo, Idlib kills at least 26 ," Associated Press, July 11, 2016 12:07 PM EDT.
  282. ^ Johnsson, Julie, "Boeing Sees Airline Thirst for New Mid-Range Jetliner Family," bloomberg.com, July 11, 2016.
  283. ^ a b "Leg 16: Seville to Cairo". Solar Impulse.
  284. ^ BREAKING A Lockheed C-130 Hercules started to burn on take off from Portugal," airlive.net, July 11, 2016.
  285. ^ a b Anonymous, "Fedor Konyukhov breaks world hot air balloon record," aljazeera.com, July 24, 2016.
  286. ^ Holley, Peter, "The D.B. Cooper case has baffled the FBI for 45 years. Now it may never be solved," washingtonpost.com, July 12, 2016, 5:19 p.m. EDT.
  287. ^ Rauhala, Emily, and Simon Denyer, "Beijing's Dilemma After South China Sea Ruling: Double Down or Cool Down?," washingtonpost.com, July 13, 2016, 6:47 a.m. EDT.
  288. ^ Anonymous, "," Associated Press, July 13, 2016, 1:29 p.m. EDT.
  289. ^ Birnbaum, Michael, "Russia offers plan to improve air safety over Baltics," washingtonpost.com, July 13, 2016, 5:18 p.m.
  290. ^ Pennetier, Marine, "France to deploy aircraft carrier against Islamic State: Hollande," Reuters Canada, July 13, 2016, 8:39 p.m. EDT.
  291. ^ a b El Deeb, Sarah, "Airstrikes kill at least 12 in Syria's rebel-held Aleppo," Associated Press, July 14, 2016, 10:08 a.m. EDT.
  292. ^ Morello, Carol, and Karen DeYoung, "," washingtonpost.com, July 14, 2016, 3:38 p.m. EDT.
  293. ^ Morello, Carol, "U.S. and Russia Have Plan to Quell Conflict in Syria But Won't Say What It Is," washingtonpost.com, July 15, 2016, 10:31 p.m. EDT.
  294. ^ Jasper, Christopher, Julie Johnsson, and Andrea Rothman, "Air-Show Pop Fizzles as Airbus, Boeing Orders at Six-Year Low," bloomberg.com, July 14, 2016.
  295. ^ a b Anonymous, "Israel launches anti-aircraft missiles at Syrian drone: army," Reuters, July 17, 2016, 12:04 p.m. EDT.
  296. ^ Anonymous, "Libya attack: French soldiers die in helicopter crash," bbc.com, 20 July 2016.
  297. ^ http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/experienced-pilot-dies-after-plane-crashes-at-cold-lake-air-show-1.3683081
  298. ^ Anonymous, "Coalition raids kill 21 civilians in Syria," Agence France-Presse, July 18, 2016, 11:05 a.m.
  299. ^ a b Mroue, Bassem, "Activists: Airstrikes on IS-held villages in Syria kill 56," Associated Press, July 19, 2016.
  300. ^ Anonymous, "Pilots arrested on suspicion of being too drunk to take Glasgow-Toronto flight," theguardian.com, 19 July 2016 02.10 EDT.
  301. ^ Lupton, Andrew, and Errol Nazareth, "," CBC News, July 19, 2016, 6:41 AM EDT.
  302. ^ Clark, Stephen, "SpaceX sends supplies to space station, lands another Falcon rocket," Spaceflight Now, July 18, 2016.
  303. ^ Miller, Greg, "U.S. agrees to pay nearly $3 million to family of Italian killed in CIA strike," washingtonpost.com, September 16, 2016, 12:31 p.m. EDT.
  304. ^ Sly, Liz, "Suspected U.S. airstrikes in Syria kill scores of civilians, activists say," washingtonpost.com, July 19, 2016, 1:01 p.m. EDT.
  305. ^ Bearak, Max, "An airstrike in Syria killed entire families instead of ISIS fighters," washingtonpost.com, July 21, 2016.
  306. ^ Ryan, Missy, Zakaria Zakaria, and Thomas Gibbons-Neff, "The 500-lb bombs struck their targets in a Syrian village. But who did they kill?," washingtonpost.com, August 26, 2016, 7:13 p.m. EDT.
  307. ^ Ryan, Missy, "Pentagon assembles allied nations to plot out next stage of Islamic State fight," washingtonpost.com, July 9, 2016.
  308. ^ Shine, Connor, "," dallasnews.com, 25 July 2016 03:59 PM.
  309. ^ Anonymous, "Russian adventurer Fedor Konyukhov breaks record for flying solo around the world," Australian Associated Press, 23 July 2016 18.43 EDT .
  310. ^ Anonymous, "Intense Airstrikes in Syria's Aleppo Province Hit 5 Clinics," Associated Press, July 24, 2016, 12:51 P.M. EDT.
  311. ^ Anonymous, "Syria civil war: Air strikes hit Aleppo hospitals," aljazeera.com, July 24, 2016.
  312. ^ "Leg 17: Cairo to Abu Dhabi". Solar Impulse.
  313. ^ Dennis, Brady, "White House takes aim at a fast-growing source of emissions: airplanes," washingtonpost.com, July 25, 2016, 1:44 p.m. EDT.
  314. ^ Baldor, Lolita C., "US Drone Strike Killed Islamic State Leader in Afghanistan," Associated Press, August 13, 2016, 2:30 AM EDT.
  315. ^ "We Are in Abu Dhabi", Solar Impulse, 26 July 2016
  316. ^ Sly, Liz, and Karen DeYoung, "Syria's Jabhat al-Nusra splits from al-Qaeda and changes its name," washingtonpost.com, July 28, 2016.
  317. ^ Miroff, Nick, "Venezuela was once an aviation gateway to South America. Now it's an outcast," washingtonpost.com, July 29, 2016.
  318. ^ Anonymous, "Small medical plane crashes in California, 4 killed," Associated Press, July 29, 2016, 7:53 p.m.
  319. ^ Rodgers, John, "Skydiver becomes first person to jump and land without chute," Associated Press, July 31, 2016, 9:52 AM EDT.
  320. ^ Anonymous, "Syrian rebels launch push aimed at breaking Aleppo siege," Associated Press, July 31, 2016.
  321. ^ Halsey, Ashley III, "Latest skirmish in war to control international travel: Has the Fly America Act been violated?," washingtonpost.com, August 30, 2016, 1:49 p.m. EDT.
  322. ^ Isachenkov, Vladimir, and Bassem Mroue, "Russian helicopter shot down in Syria, killing all 5 onboard," Associated Press, August 1, 2016, 4:04 PM EDT.
  323. ^ Ryan, Missy, and Sudarsan Raghavan, "U.S. strikes Islamic State stronghold in Libya, expanding campaign against militant group," washingtonpost.com, August 1, 2016.
  324. ^ Tilghman, Andrew, Christopher P. Cavas, Jeff Schogol, David Larter, and Oriana Pawlyk, "U.S. conducts new round of airstrikes against ISIS in Libya," militarytimes.com, 2:42 p.m. EDT August 1, 2016
  325. ^ Anonymous, "Guwahati: Mid-air scare for passengers as two Indigo flights cross path," hindustantimes.com, August 3, 2016, 19:48 IST.
  326. ^ El Deeb, Sraha, and Philip Issa, "Syrian government and rebels trade gas attack accusations," Associated Press, August 2, 2016, 3:48 PM EDT.
  327. ^ Insinna, Valerie, "," defensenews.com, August 2, 2016,
  328. ^ Constable, Pamela, "Taliban ambushes tourist convoy in west, takes helicopter crew hostage in east," washingtonpost.com, August 4, 2016.
  329. ^ Beck, Christina, "Amazon unveils Prime Air, its new cargo plane," csmonitor.com, August, 5, 2016.
  330. ^ Halzack, Sarah, "Amazon's latest weapon in the e-commerce wars: Its own air force," washingtonpost.com, August 5, 2016.
  331. ^ Adam, Karla, "Black Lives Matter branches out to U.K., launches protests," washingtonpost.com, August 5, 2016, 3:30 PM EDT.
  332. ^ DeYoung, Karen, "Newly declassified document sheds light on how president approves drone strikes," washingtonpost.com, August 6, 2016, 1:58 p.m. EDT.
  333. ^ Anonymous, "," Associated Press, August 6, 2016, 11:58 AM EDT.
  334. ^ Anonymous, "MSF says a hospital it supports in Syria bombed, 13 killed," Associated Press, August 8, 2016, 4:57 PM EDT.
  335. ^ Halsey, Ashley III, "Delta computers crash, causing delays and cancellations; Experts say it shouldn’t have happened," washingtonpost.com, August 8, 2016, 5:00 p.m. EDT.
  336. ^ a b Peters, Bill, "Delta Says Flight Cancellations Cost $100 Million, Cites Other Industry Woes," Investor′s Business Daily, September 2, 2016.
  337. ^ Dehghan, Saeed Kamali, "Saudi-led airstrikes on Yemen food factory kill at least 14 people," theguardian.com, 9 August 2016, 14:26 EDT.
  338. ^ a b Almujahed, Ali, and Sudarsan Raghavan, "Saudi airstrike hits a school in northern Yemen, killing 10 children," washingtonpost.com, August 13, 2016, 5:23 p.m. EDT.
  339. ^ a b c Anonymous, "Airstrikes on Islamic State-held city in Syria kill at least 20 civilians," Associated Press, August 11, 2016, 9:51 a.m. EDT.
  340. ^ a b Loveluck, Louisa, and Hugh Naylor, "Aleppo's humanitarian crisis worsens while Islamic State loses key Syrian city," washingtonpost.com, August 13, 2016, 12:45 p.m. EDT.
  341. ^ Anonymous, "Iraqi military helicopter falls south of Iraq," iraqinews.com, August 10, 2016
  342. ^ Anonymous, "Turbulence leaves more than 20 injured on JetBlue flight," Associated Press, August 12, 2016, 5:31 AM EDT.
  343. ^ Shum, David, "Markham man killed after stolen small plane crashes in Peterborough," globalnews.ca, August 12, 2016, 5:42 a.m. EDT.
  344. ^ Adam Miller, Cindy Pom and Allison Vuchnich, "RCMP investigated Peterborough plane crash as ‘national security issue’," globalnews.ca, August 18, 2016, 1:14 p.m. EDT.
  345. ^ Andrew Russell, "Peterborough plane crash: Should there be more security at private airports?," globalnews.ca, August 19, 2016, 12:36 p.m. EDT.
  346. ^ Constable, Pamela, and Mohammed Sharif, "Taliban pushes toward strategic provincial capital in Afghanistan," washngtonpost.com, August 13, 2016, 11:25 a.m. EDT.
  347. ^ Szlanko, Balint, and Qassim Abdul-Zahra, "Iraqi Kurds advance near Islamic State-held city," Associated Press, Sunday, Aug. 14, 2016, 5:30 p.m.
  348. ^ Al-Haj, Ahmed, "Yemeni troops seize towns from al-Qaida," Associated Press, August 14, 2016, 10:33 a.m. EDT.
  349. ^ Faul, Michelle, and Haruna Umar, "Boko Haram: Some Abducted Chibok Girls Killed in Air Strikes," Associated Press, August 14, 2016, 4:06 p.m. EDT.
  350. ^ Bates Daniel, "Shooting alert at JFK Airport may have been sparked by people cheering for Usain Bolt in the Olympics," Evening Standard via businessinsider.com, August 15, 2016, 8:01 a.m. EDT.
  351. ^ Raghavan, Sudarsan, "Airstrike hits Doctors Without Borders hospital in northwestern Yemen," washingtonpost.com, August 15, 2016, 5:49 p.m. EDT.
  352. ^ a b Almosawa, Shuaib, and Rod Nordlandaug, "Doctors Without Borders Is Pulling Staff After Hospital Bombings in Yemen," nytimes.com, August 18, 2016.
  353. ^ The Associated Press, "Alabama Plane Crash Kills 3 Married Couples From Mississippi," abcnews.go.com, August 15, 2016, 11:22 a.m. EDT.
  354. ^ Cunningham, Erin, "Strikes from Iranian air base show Russia's expanding footprint in the Middle East," washingtonpost.com, August 16, 2016, 5:59 p.m. EDT.
  355. ^ a b c d Anonymous, "Airstrikes on Rebel-Held Syrian City Kill 17," Associated Press, August 17, 2016.
  356. ^ Browne, Ryan, "Key ally in Syria bombed while US troops 'nearby'," cnn.com, August 19, 2016, 6:57 AM EDT.
  357. ^ Kube, Courtney, "U.S. Military Comes Under Attack from Syrian Regime Airstrikes," nbcnews.com, August 19, 2016, 1:28 p.m. EDT.
  358. ^ a b Gibbons-Neff, Thomas, and Karen DeYoung, "U.S. jets scramble as Syrians bomb near American forces," washingtonpost.com, August 19, 2016, 6:45 p.m. EDT.
  359. ^ a b Guarino, Ben, "World's largest aircraft just took flight. But, observers are stuck on what it looks like.," washingtonpost.com, August 18, 2016, at 4:14 AM EDT.
  360. ^ Anonymous, "Gaza militant rocket hits Israel, Israel responds with air strikes, shells," Reuters, August 22, 2016 6:02am EDT.
  361. ^ Ryan, Missy, "New commander will increase tempo of U.S. operations in conclusive stage of ISIS fight," washingtonpost.com, August 21, 2016.
  362. ^ Constable, Pamela, and Sayed Salahuddin, "Taliban forces consolidate gains around Kunduz," washingtonpost.com, August 22, 2016, 1:27 p.m. EDT.
  363. ^ Roth, Andrew, "Iran ends Russian use of air base because of unwanted publicity," washingtonpost.com, August 22, 2016, 7:22 a.m. EDT.
  364. ^ Faul, Michelle, "Nigeria: Air raid 'fatally wounds' Boko Haram leader," Associated Press, August 23, 2016, 1:25 p.m. EDT.
  365. ^ Mclean, Ruth, "Nigeria says Boko Haram commanders killed in airstrike," theguardian.com, August 23, 2016, 08:10 EDT.
  366. ^ Searcy, Dionne, "Boko Haram Leader Is Wounded in Airstrike, Nigeria's Military Says," nytimes.com, August 23, 2016.
  367. ^ Anonymous, "Boko Haram crisis: Nigeria air strike 'kills commanders'," bbc.com, 23 August 2016.
  368. ^ Cunningham, Erin, Liz Sly, and Karen DeYoung, "Turkish troops enter Syria to take on ISIS, backed by U.S. warplanes," washingtonpost.com, August 24, 2016, 4:52 p.m. EDT.
  369. ^ Federman, Josef, "Israel Clears Forces in Several Deadly 2014 Gaza War Cases," Associated Press, August 24, 2016, 4:21 p.m. EDT.
  370. ^ Dearden, Lizzie, "Couple stranded on desert island rescued after writing SOS message in sand on beach," independent.co.uk, 27 August 2016.
  371. ^ DeYoung, Karen, "U.S., Russia say they are close to cooperation deal in Syrian war," washingtonpost.com, August 26, 2016, 7:20 p.m. EDT.
  372. ^ Loveluck, Louisa, "Airstrike in east Aleppo hits funeral," washingtonpost.com, August 27, 2016, 1:58 p.m. EDT.
  373. ^ Raghavan, Sudarsan, and Erin Cunningham, "How Turkey's offensive into Syria is opening up a hornet's nest," washingtonpost.com, August 27, 2016, 3;19 p.m. EDT.
  374. ^ Anonymous, "BREAKING Southwest Boeing 737 #WN3472 loses part of left engine after inflight explosion," airlive.net, August 27, 2016.
  375. ^ Helsel, Phil, "Scare in the Sky After Passenger Jet Engine Suffers Major Malfunction," nbcnews.com, August 28, 2016, 8:19 a.m. EDT.
  376. ^ Simon Hradecky (27 August 2016). "Accident: Southwest B737 near Pensacola on Aug 27th 2016, uncontained engine failure". The Aviation Herald. Retrieved 29 August 2016.
  377. ^ Anonymous, "Russia lifts ban on charter flights to Turkey, airlines start submitting requests," rt.com, 28 August 2016, 15:57.
  378. ^ Anonymous, "First charter flights from Russia to Turkey will fly on Sept. 4-5," Tass.com via Russia Beyond the Headlines, August 29, 2016.
  379. ^ a b Karimi, Nassefr, "Iran deploys S-300 air defense around nuclear site," Associated Press, August 29, 2016, 6:57 a.m. EDT.
  380. ^ Kurzweil, Anthony, and Eric Spillman, "Man Dressed as Zorro Detained at LAX Moments Before False Active Shooter Reports Surfaced," ktla.com, August 29, 2016, 6:18 AM.
  381. ^ Fung, Brian, "As of today, it's finally legal to fly drones commercially," washingtonpost.com, August 29, 2016.
  382. ^ Ryan, Missy, and Greg Miller, "In potential blow to propaganda power, Islamic State reports death of senior leader in Syria," washingtonpost.com, August 30, 2016.
  383. ^ Roth, Andrew, Liz Sly, and Thomas Gibbons-Neff, "Russian military claims it killed senior ISIS strategist," washingtonpost.com, August 31, 2016, 7:08 p.m. EDT.
  384. ^ Schudel, Matt, "Joe Sutter, Boeing engineer who led project to build the first jumbo jet, dies at 95," washingtonpost.com, August 31, 2016, 7:16 PM EDT.
  385. ^ Anonymous, "Yemeni Rebels: Saudi-Led Airstrikes Kill 16 Civilians," Associated Press, August 31, 2016, 11:04 a.m. EDT.
  386. ^ Ghobari, Mohammed, Mostafa Hashem, and Michelle Nichols, "Air strike kills 16 members of Yemeni imam's family," Reuters, August 31, 2016, 2:15 p.m. EDT.
  387. ^ Robles, Frances, "Scheduled Flights to Cuba From U.S. Begin Again, Now With Jet Engines," nytimes.com, August 31, 2016.
  388. ^ a b Anonymous, "Historic commercial flight from US lands in Cuba," Associated Press, August 31, 2016, 8:35 PM EDT.
  389. ^ Anonymous, "Man pushes girlfriend from plane, saves her life before dying in crash," fox43.com, August 31, 2016, 1:51 p.m. EDT.
  390. ^ Aviation Safety Network Accident Description
  391. ^ Anonymous, "Five killed in Alaska mid-air collision," bbc.com, September 1, 2016.
  392. ^ Issa, Philip, "," Associated Press, September 1, 2016, 10:35 PM EDT.
  393. ^ Barrington, Lisa, "Syrian Rebels Shoot Down Helicopter Amid Hama Offensive ," Reuters, September 2, 2016, 8:46 PM.
  394. ^ Sputnik. "Syrian Source Confirms Government Helicopter Downing by Terrorists in Hama".
  395. ^ a b Dolomari, Mewan, "Iraqi planes drop seven million leaflets on Mosul," kurdistan24.net, 15 September 2016.
  396. ^ a b c Ryan, Missy, "A reminder of the permanent wars: Dozens of U.S. airstrikes in six countries," washingtonpost.com, September 8, 2016, 6:06 p.m. EDT.
  397. ^ Wan, William, Karen DeYoung, and Liz Sly, "U.S. still trying for a Syria cease-fire deal with Russia," washingtonpost.com, September 5, 2016, 7:55 a.m. EDT.
  398. ^ Wan, William, "Obama pledges $90 million to help clear remnants of U.S. bombing in Laos," washingtonpost.com, September 6, 2016.
  399. ^ Sly, Liz, "Chlorine attack deepens fears among besieged Aleppo residents," washingtonpost.com, September 6, 2016.
  400. ^ a b Issa, Philip, and Sarah El Deeb, "Aleppo Bombed As US and Russia Plan Syria Talks," Associated Press, September 7, 2016, 4:51 p.m. EDT.
  401. ^ Salazar, Juan Ignacio. "Mexico probes if gang downed police helicopter". yahoo.com. Agence France-Presse. Retrieved 8 September 2016.
  402. ^ Ryan, Missy, and Kareen DeYoung, "," washingtonpost.com, September 16, 2016, 2:19 p.m. EDT.
  403. ^ Salahuddin, Sayed, "Taliban launches surprise surge into former southern Afghan stronghold," washingtonpost.com, September 8, 2016, 12:56 PM EDT.
  404. ^ Anonymous, "Syria conflict: Senior militant leader 'killed' near Aleppo," bbc.com, September 9,2016.
  405. ^ Abi-Habib, Maria, "Top Syrian Rebel Commander Killed in Airstrike," wsj.com, September 9, 2016, 9:47 a.m. EDT.
  406. ^ CNN WIRE, "3 killed in mid-air collision near west Georgia airport," myfox8.com, September 8, 2016, 12:04 PM.
  407. ^ al-Haj, Ahmed, "UN says airstrikes on Yemen water well reportedly kill 30," Associated Press, September 12, 2016.
  408. ^ a b Sly, Liz, and Karen DeYoung, "Doubts, concerns greet Syria cease-fire deal as violence surges," washingtonpost.com, September 10, 2016, 10:15 p.m. ET.
  409. ^ Browne, Ryan, and Elise Labott, "Kerry announces US-Russia deal on Syrian ceasefire," cnn.com, September 10, 2016, 1:31 PM EDT.
  410. ^ http://news.sky.com/story/us-and-russia-announce-syria-peace-plan-10571819
  411. ^ Nehme, Dahlia, "Drones keep watch as pilgrims ascend Mount Arafat for haj climax," Reuters, September 11, 2016, 10:31 a.m. GMT.
  412. ^ Sly, Liz, and Karen DeYoung, "Syrian cease-fire backed by U.S. and Russia gets off to rocky start," washingtonpost.com, September 12, 2016.
  413. ^ Lamothe, Dan, "After investigation, Navy's Blue Angels will stop using maneuver that killed a pilot," washingtonpost.com, September 15, 2016.
  414. ^ Davenport, Christian, "Air Force grounds 15 F-35 Joint Strike Fighters because of ‘peeling and crumbling’ insulation," washingtonpost.com, September 16, 2016, 3:32 p.m. EDT.
  415. ^ Facebook
  416. ^ DeYoung, Karen, and Thomas Gibbons-Neff, "U.S. admits carrying out airstrike that Russia says killed 62 Syrian soldiers," washingtonpost.com, September 16, 2016, 10:33 p.m. EDT.
  417. ^ Amiri, Ehsanullah, and Jessica Dona, "U.S. Airstrikes in Afghanistan Killed Eight Policemen, Local Officials Say ," The Wall Street Journal, September 19, 2016, 11:49 a.m. EDT.
  418. ^ Sly, Liz, Karen DeYoung, and Louisa Loveluck, "New violence in Syria threatens cease-fire, as U.S. and Russia blame each other," washingtonpost.com, September 18, 2016, 6:47 p.m. EDT.
  419. ^ DeYoung, Karen, and Erin Cunningham, "At least 12 aid workers killed in Syria airstrike," washingtonpost.com, September 19, 2016, 9:10 p.m. EDT.
  420. ^ a b Anonymous, "Russia furious as US blames it for Syria aid strike," Agence France-Presse, 20 September 2016, 16:05 EST.
  421. ^ a b DeYoung, Karen, and Erin Cunningham, "Pentagon says Russian jet likely to blame for attack on aid convoy in Syria," washingtonpost.com, September 20, 2016, 10:56 p.m. EDT.
  422. ^ Martin, Mike, "The B-21 has a name: Raider," Secretary of the Air Force Public Affairs, September 19, 2016.
  423. ^ Facebook
  424. ^ "Military helicopter crash leaves 8 dead in east Libya: Army," presstv.ir, September 20, 2016, 7:35AM
  425. ^ a b c d DeYoung, Karen, "U.S. calls on Russia and Syria to ground all aircraft in northwest Syria," washingtonpost.com, September 21, 2016, 2:54 p.m. EDT.
  426. ^ a b c DeYoung, Karen, "U.S., Russia continue to exchange charges amid effort to salvage cease-fire," washingtonpost.com, September 22, 2016, 9:44 p.m. EDT.
  427. ^ Tankersley, Jim, "WTO rules Europe illegally subsidized airlines, handing victory to Obama administration ahead of trade fight," washingtonpost.com, September 22, 2016, 10:45 a.m. EDT.
  428. ^ Sly, Liz, "Syria ignores Kerry and launches an offensive to recapture Aleppo," washingtonpost.com, September 23, 2016.
  429. ^ Cunningham, Erin, and Brian Murphy, "Syrian airstrikes hammer Aleppo amid expanding offensive against rebels," washingtonpost.com, September 23, 2016, 9:39 a.m. EDT.
  430. ^ a b Loveluck, Louisa, "Syrian and Russian airstrikes continue major offensive to take back Aleppo," washingtonpost.com, September 24, 2016, 5:05 p.m. EDT.
  431. ^ Loveluck, Louisa, and Liz Sly, "U.S. accuses Russia of ‘barbarism’ and war crimes in Syria," washingtonpost.com, September 25, 2016, 6:18 p.m. EDT.
  432. ^ a b Sly. Liz, and Louisa Loveluck, "Darkness and fear in Aleppo as the bombs rain down," washingtonpost.com, September 28, 2016, 6:12 p.m. EDT.
  433. ^ a b Roth, Andrew, "Dutch probe: Missile brought from Russia downed Malaysia Airlines plane over Ukraine," washingtonpost.com, September 28, 2016, 5:00 p.m. EDT.
  434. ^ Karp, Aaron, "FAA touts Data Comm installations at 45 US airport ATC towers," Air Transport World, September 27, 2016.
  435. ^ Halsey, Ashley III, "New direct digital link between tower and cockpit will speed planes on their way," washingtonpost.com, September 27, 2016, 4:21 p.m. EDT.
  436. ^ Faiez, Rahim, "Afghan official: Airstrike hits house, killing 13 civilians," Associated Press, September 28, 2016, 10:13 a.m. EDT.
  437. ^ Sheikh, Abdi, "U.S. accused of killing 22 in misdirected Somalia air strike," Reuters, September 28, 2016, 2:40 p.m. EDT.
  438. ^ a b Guled, Abdi, "Somalia Accuses U.S. Over Strike," Associated Press, September 30, 2016, 2:07 p.m. EDT.
  439. ^ DeYoung, Karen, "U.S. threatens to suspend all bilateral cooperation with Russia over Syria," washingtonpost.com, September 28, 2016, 5:00 p.m. EDT.
  440. ^ Constable, Pamela, "U.N. officials criticize fatal U.S. airstrike in Afghanistan," washingtonpost.com, September 29, 2016.
  441. ^ DeYoung, Karen, "Russia says U.S. criticism of its actions in Aleppo ‘disagrees with reality,’" washingtonpost.com, September 29, 2016.
  442. ^ Sly, Liz, "No sign of Obama's predicted ‘quagmire’ as Russia's engagement in Syria escalates," washingtonpost.com, September 30, 2016, 6:02 p.m. EDT.
  443. ^ van Tartwijk, Maarten, "Dutch Call Russian Ambassador to Hague Meeting Over Flight MH17 ," wsj.com, September 30, 2016, 9:11 a.m. EDT.
  444. ^ Anonymous, "Iran says new attack drone modeled on U.S. aircraft," Associated Press, October 1, 2016, 11:09 a.m. EDT.
  445. ^ a b Schmidt, Michael S., and Eric Schmitt, "Pentagon Confronts a New Threat From ISIS: Exploding Drones," nytimes.com, October 11, 2016.
  446. ^ Loveluck, Louisa, "Bombing in Aleppo puts another major hospital out of service," washingtonpost.com, October 1, 2016, 4:38 p.m. EDT.
  447. ^ Lanyon, Charley, "ISIS Uses Exploding Drones to Kill Kurdish Troops in First Successful Attack of Its Kind," nymag.com, October 12, 2016, 1:52 a.m. EDT.
  448. ^ Facebook
  449. ^ Facebook
  450. ^ Aerolineas Argentinas converts B737-800 order to MAX – ch-aviation
  451. ^ Anonymous, "Families Evacuating Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Cuba," navy.mil, 1 October 2016, 7:05:00 PM
  452. ^ Rosenberg, Carol, "Guantánamo Navy base begins evacuating 700 parents and kids, plus pets, ahead of Hurricane Matthew," miamiherald.com, October 1, 2016, 1:15 p.m. EDT.
  453. ^ Constable, Pamela, and Thomas Gibbons-Neff, "Taliban opens offensives in Afghanistan ahead of government appeal to donors," washingtonpost.com, October 3, 2016.
  454. ^ DeYoung, Karen, and David Filipov, "U.S. abandons efforts to work with Russia on Syria," washingtonpost.com, October 3, 2016, 6:45 p.m. EDT.
  455. ^ Ryan, Missy, "Civilian casualties in Yemen bring charges of U.S. responsibility for Saudi actions," washingtonpost.com, October 3, 2016, 12:40 p.m. EDT.
  456. ^ Constable, Pamela, and Sayed Salahuddin, "Afghan forces battle in key northern city amid Taliban offensives across country," washingtonpost.com, October 4, 2016, 4:13 p.m. EDT.
  457. ^ Isachenkov, Vladimir, "Russia sends more air defense missiles to Syria," Associated Press, October 4, 2016, 3:01 p.m. EDT.
  458. ^ a b Oliphant, Roland, "Russia warns it will shoot down alliance jets over Syria if US launches air strikes against Assad," telegraph.co.uk, 6 October 2016, 5:12 p.m.
  459. ^ DeYoung, Karen, "Russian air defense raises stakes of U.S. confrontation in Syria," washingtonpost.com, October 17, 2016, 6:37 p.m. EDT.
  460. ^ a b c Anonymous, "Finland, U.S. to deepen military ties through pact," Associated Press, October 7, 2016.
  461. ^ Lowy, Joan, "UN agreement reached on aircraft climate-change emissions," Associated Press, October 6, 2016, 1:54 p.m. EDT.
  462. ^ a b c Filipov, David, and Andrew Roth, "Russia has its permanent air base in Syria. Now it's looking at Cuba and Vietnam.," washingtonpost.com, October 7, 2016.
  463. ^ Loveluck, Louisa, and Karen DeYoung, "Kerry urges war crimes probe into Syrian and Russian bombing of civilians," washingtonpost.com, October 7, 2016.
  464. ^ Anonymous, "Qatar Airways orders 100 Boeing planes for up to $18.6 bn," Agence France-Presse, 7 October 2016, 13:03 EST.
  465. ^ Belarus's Belavia ends scheduled Tu-154M operations – ch-aviation
  466. ^ Facebook
  467. ^ Turkey's Borajet confirms EMB-190-E2 lease plans – ch-aviation
  468. ^ Al-Mujahed, Ali, and Sudarsan Raghavan, "Airstrike kills more than 100, injures hundreds at Yemen funeral," washingtonpos.com, October 8, 2016, 5:07 p.m. EDT.
  469. ^ a b c Oliphant, Roland, "Saudi Arabia promises investigation following outrage at Yemen funeral airstrike that killed 140 ," telegraph.co.uk, 9 October 2016, 5:49 p.m..
  470. ^ Loveluck, Louisa, "Russia vetoes U.N. Security Council resolution to end Aleppo bombing," washingtonppost.com, October 8, 2016, 6:04 p.m. EDT.
  471. ^ Anonymous, "Seven dead as Afghan army helicopter crashes: officials," Agence France-Presse, 9 October 2016, 14:45.
  472. ^ Anonymous, "Eight killed in Afghanistan army helicopter crash," Associated Press, October 9, 216.
  473. ^ Facebook
  474. ^ Air Madagascar to resume China flights in mid-1Q17 – ch-aviation
  475. ^ Anonymous, "Airstrikes in Syria's Aleppo and shelling in south kill 20," Associated Press, 11 October 2016, 8:18 p.m.
  476. ^ Marsh, Rene, Chris Boyette, and Shachar Peled, "Fatal plane crash in Connecticut was intentional, authorities suspect," cnn.com, October 12, 2016, 9:46 p.m. EDT.
  477. ^ Shapiro, Emily, "East Hartford Plane Crash Appears to Be 'Intentional,' NTSB Says," abcnews.go.com, October 12, 2016, 9:46 p.m. EDT.
  478. ^ Krishnamoorthy, Anand, and Julie Johnsson, "Boeing wins $3.2 billion order from China Southern as 787 soars," Bloomberg News, October 12, 2016, 1:47 p.m.
  479. ^ Wren, David, "China Southern Airlines to buy a dozen Dreamliners from Boeing Co.," postandcourier.com, October 12, 2016, 3:55 p.m.
  480. ^ Overly, Steven, "Remote Parts of Rwanda Get Medical Essentials Via Drone," The Washington Post, October 24, 2016, Page A13.
  481. ^ Overly, Steven, "In Rwanda, lifesaving blood now drops from drones," washingtonpost.com, October 13, 2016.
  482. ^ Simmons, Dan, "Rwanda begins Zipline commercial drone deliveries," bbc.com, October 14, 2016.
  483. ^ Toor, Amar, "Drones Begin Delivering Blood in Rwanda," theverge.com, October 13, 2016, 6:00 p.m.
  484. ^ McFarland, Matt, "Rwanda's hospitals will use drones to deliver medical supplies," cnn.com, October 14, 2016, 9:00 a.m. EDT.
  485. ^ Hirsch, Jerry, "Zipline, UPS Begin Using Drones for Rwanda Blood Deliveries," trucks.com, October 13, 2016.
  486. ^ Fletcher, Robson, "Former Alberta premier Jim Prentice among 4 killed in B.C. plane crash," CBC News, October 14, 2016, 10:49 MDT.
  487. ^ Ryan, Missy, "Mosul offensive poses key test for U.S. strategy against Islamic State," washingtonpost.com, October 14, 2016.
  488. ^ Raghavan, Sudarsan, "U.S.-backed, Saudi-led coalition found responsible for Yemen funeral attack that killed more than 100," washingtonpost.com, October 15, 2016, 8:10 a.m. EDT
  489. ^ a b Mroue, Bassem, "Turkey-Backed Forces Attack IS Stronghold in Syria," Associated Press, October 15, 2016, 12:09 p.m. EDT.
  490. ^ Tsukayama, Hayley, "The Samsung Galaxy Note 7 is officially banned from airplanes," washingtonpost.com, October 14, 2016, 4:43 p.m. EDT.
  491. ^ Issa, Philip, "Turkish-backed Syrian opposition captures Dabiq from IS," Associated Press, October 16, 2016, 9:02 a.m. EDT.
  492. ^ Morris, Loveday, and Msutafa Salim, "Iraqi forces begin assault to retake Mosul from Islamic State," washingtonpost.com, October 16, 2016.
  493. ^ a b Mroue, Bassem, "Russia sets brief cease-fire for Aleppo as strikes kill 36," Associated Press, October 17, 2016, 10:13 p.m. EDT.
  494. ^ Aratani, Lori, "Obama administration unveils new rules to protect air travelers," washingtonpost.com, October 19, 2016, 6:29 p.m. EDT.
  495. ^ Toksabay, Ece, and Angus McDowall, "Turkey bombs Syrian Kurdish militia allied to U.S.-backed force," Reuters, October 20, 2016, 6:54 p.m. EDT.
  496. ^ a b Morris, Loveday, and Kareen Fahim, "Iraq’s U.S.-trained counterterrorism troops join attack on Mosul," washingtonpost.com, October 20, 2016, 6:48 p.m. EDT.
  497. ^ DeYoung, Karen, "Aleppo residents in rebel-held areas wary of Russian-Syrian humanitarian pause," washingtonpost.com, October 20, 2016, 11:33 a.m. EDT.
  498. ^ Birnbaum, Michael, "European leaders threaten new sanctions against Russia," washingtonpost.com, October 20, 2016, 5:02 p.m. EDT.
  499. ^ Jansen, Bart, "American Airlines earnings drop 56% in 3Q, but meet expectations," usatoday.com, October 20, 2016, 11:43 a.m. EDT.
  500. ^ []https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/innovations/wp/2016/10/20/the-airplane-is-preparing-to-land-please-remove-your-virtual-reality-headset/ Overly, Steven, "The airplane is preparing to land. Please remove your virtual reality headset," washingtonpost.com, October 20, 2016.
  501. ^ Morris, Loveday, and Thomas Gibbons-Neff, "Iraqi, Kurdish forces say they feel let down by level of U.S.-led air support," washingtonpost.com, October 21, 2016, 8:33 PM EDT.
  502. ^ Mogg, Trevor, "Sweden has just made it a whole lot harder to fly camera drones," Digital Trends, October 24, 2016.
  503. ^ Anonymous, "Sweden bans cameras on drones," bbc.com, October 25, 2016.
  504. ^ Anonymous, "Colombia airline avoids Venezuela after warplane approaches flight," Reuters, 22 October 2016, 14:18 EDT.
  505. ^ a b Forero, Juan, "Colombian Airline Avianca to Resume Flights to Venezuela," wsj.com, October 22, 2016, 8:12 p.m. EDT.
  506. ^ Naylor, Hugh, and Zakaria Zakaria, "Cease-fire crumbles in Aleppo as fighting resumes," washingtonpost.com, October 23, 2016.
  507. ^ a b c Mroue, Bassem, "In renewed Aleppo attacks, Syrian troops capture high ground," Associated Press, October 24, 2016, 10:55 a.m. EDT.
  508. ^ Richardson, Valerie, "North Dakota pipeline protesters' drone shot after buzzing police helicopter," washingtontimes.com, October 23, 2016.
  509. ^ Anonymous, "Authorities open fire at unmanned drone during North Dakota pipeline protests," Associated Press, October 24, 21.
  510. ^ Aviation Safety Network Accident Description
  511. ^ nytimes.com, Castle, Stephen, "Third Heathrow Airport Runway Backed by British Government," nytimes.com, October 25, 2016.
  512. ^ Anonymous, "How the cost of a third Heathrow runway would stack up," bt.com, 1 July 2015, 12:50 BST.
  513. ^ Meyers, Meghann, "Combat vet sues American Airlines for rejecting her service dog," armytimes.com, October 27, 2016.
  514. ^ Antczak, John, "Top pilot who stole plane to escape WWII prison camp dies," Associated Press, October 26, 2016. 
  515. ^ Francis, Ellen, and John Davison, "Airstrikes in Syria's Idlib kill 26 people, between 15 and 20 of them children: rescuers, monitor," Reuters, October 26, 2016, 6:51 p.m. EDT.
  516. ^ Meseret, Elias, "2 Eritrean Pilots Defect to Ethiopia With Jets, Group Says," ABC News, October 27, 2016, 6:20 AM EDT.
  517. ^ Anonymous, "Turkey arrests dozens of pilots with alleged links to Gulen," Associated Press, October 27, 2016.
  518. ^ Anonymous, "Mike Pence’s Plane Skids Off Runway While Landing At LaGuardia," CNS Bew York/Associated Press, October 27, 2016, 10:00 p.m. EDT.
  519. ^ Almasy, steve, Jon Ostrower, and Rene Marsh, "At Chicago O'Hare, American Airlines 767 catches fire on runway," October 29, 2016, 1:47 p/m. EDT.
  520. ^ Scott, Aylwin, and Tim Hepher, "American Airlines plane engine flung debris in rare failure," Reuters, October 29, 2016, 8:56 p.m. EDT.
  521. ^ Pamuk, Humeyra, and Tulay Karadeniz, "Turkey Expects First F-35 Delivery in 2018, Plans More Orders," Reuters, October 28, 2016, 4:53 p.m. EDT.
  522. ^ Anonymous, "Thousands impacted as drone halts traffic at Dubai airport," Reuters, 30 October 2016.
  523. ^ Raghavan, Sudarsan, "Airstrikes kill more than 40 and wound scores in Yemeni port city," washingtonpost.com, October 31, 2016, 1:32 a.m. EDT.
  524. ^ Twitter
  525. ^ ch-aviation.com China's Donghai Airlines commits to five B787s – ch-aviation
  526. ^ dailystar.com.lb Aviation authority bans Samsung Galaxy Note 7 – The Daily Star (Lebanon), November 2, 2016.
  527. ^ Salahuddin, Sayend, and Pamela Constable, "2 U.S. troops killed fighting Taliban in Afghanistan; civilians hit by airstrike," washingtonpost.com, November 3, 2016, 8:02 a.m. EDT.
  528. ^ a b Constable, Pamela, and Sayed Salahuddin, "U.S. military acknowledges anti-Taliban airstrikes killed Afghan civilians ," washingtonpost.com, November 5, 2016
  529. ^ Facebook
  530. ^ Birnbaum, Michael, "Russian warplanes keep buzzing the Baltics. Here’s how NATO scrambles," washingtonpost.com, November 6, 2016.
  531. ^ Loveluck, Louisa, "Islamic State sends car bombs against U.S.-backed forces advancing on Raqqa," washingtonpost.com, November7, 2016.
  532. ^ Ali, Idree, and Phil Stewart, "U.S. ready to resume air strikes in Libya if needed: Pentagon," November 7, 2016, 5:01 p.m. EST.
  533. ^ Anonymous, "Syria conflict: Coalition strike 'kills 20 civilians near Raqqa'," bbc.com, November 9, 2016.
  534. ^ Hennessy-Fiske, Molly, "Activists Claim U.S. Coalition For Airstrike in Syria That Kills At Least 20 People," latimes.com, November 9, 2016, 2:45 p.m.
  535. ^ Ryan, Missy, "U.S. military announces that civilian casualties in Iraq and Syria are more than double previous estimate," washingtonpost.com, November 9, 2016, 6:17 p.m. EST.
  536. ^ Koenig, David, "Computer outage briefly grounds flights on several airlines," Associated Press, November 11, 2016, 2:47 p.m.
  537. ^ El Deeb, Sarah, "Violence in northern Syria kills 23," Associated Press, November 13, 2016, 5:26 p.m. EST.
  538. ^ Loveluck, Louisa, and David Filipov, "Russian warplanes from Mediterranean carrier join Syria attacks," washingtonpost.com, November 15, 2016.
  539. ^ Allen, Keith, and Steve Almasy, "Airline employee killed at Oklahoma City airport; suspect dead," cnn.com, November 16, 2016, 8:11 a.m. EST.
  540. ^ Jervis, Rick, "Former Southwest Airlines employee named as shooter in Okla. airport murder," usatoday.com, November 16, 2016, 6:41 p.m. EST.
  541. ^ Loveluck, Louisa, "," washingtonpost.com, November 16, 2016, 5:38 p.m. EDT.
  542. ^ Anonymous, "World Digest: Nov. 19, 2016," washingtonpost.com, November 19, 2016, 6:24 p.m. EST.
  543. ^ Torbati, Yeganeh, "Exclusive: U.S. grants second Airbus license to sell planes to Iran," Reuters, November 22, 2016, 4:03 p.m. EST.
  544. ^ Anonymous, "Pilot Strike Could Delay Amazon’s Holiday Shipments," fortune.com, November 22, 2016.
  545. ^ [1]
  546. ^ Rohan, Bria, and Qassim Abdul-Zahra, "Airstrike Hits Mosul Bridge, Disrupting ISIS Supply Lines," Associated Press, November 23, 2016.
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