South Korean Jet Crash Tragedy: What We Know, and What Questions Remain Unanswered

AP Photo/Binsar Bakkara

One hundred-and seventy-nine people were killed in a Jeju Air Flight crash in southwestern South Korea Sunday after the aircraft skidded along the runway, after landing before crashing into a wall and bursting into flames.

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Two crew members, a male and a female, miraculously survived.

Warning: graphic footage

Here's what we know:

It is the deadliest aviation disaster to hit South Korea since 1997, when a Korean Airlines Boeing 747 crashed in the Guam jungle, with the loss of 228 lives.

What happened?

Jeju Air flight 7C 2216 from Bangkok was carrying 175 passengers and six crew when disaster struck at the airport in Muan county, on the country’s southwestern tip, just after 9 a.m. local time Sunday (7 p.m. ET Saturday).

Footage of Sunday’s crash broadcast by multiple South Korean news outlets showed the plane sliding on its belly at high speed, hitting an earthen embankment and erupting in a fireball.

However, many questions remain, including: why wasn’t the landing gear deployed?

What caused the accident?

Experts told CNN that the plane’s undercarriage – specifically, the wheels used for takeoff and landing – appeared not to have fully deployed before landing. But what caused this failure to deploy is still unclear.

Aviation analysts said more evidence is needed before South Korean authorities can definitively pinpoint what might have caused Sunday’s crash, including speculation from local officials about a possible bird strike prior to the crash landing.

The comments came after Lee Jeong-hyun, the head of the Muan Fire Department, briefed the media that the cause was “estimated to be the occurrence of a bird strike or bad weather.” Footage of the crash showed clear skies at the time.

David Soucie, former Federal Aviation Administration safety inspector, said that “speculation is the worst enemy of an investigator.”

“In fact, that’s why it’s so protected when there is an aircraft accident investigation, the information is protected. They’re not supposed to be making any speculation about this type of thing,” Soucie told CNN’s Paula Newton.

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Officials will continue to investigate the tragedy:

Flight data and cockpit voice recorders of the plane's black box have been retrieved by workers. They will be examined by government experts investigating the cause of the crash and fire, Senior Transport Ministry official Joo Jong-wan said.

The White House issued a statement at 1:55 p.m. ET:

Statement from President Joe Biden on the Plane Crash in the Republic of Korea
Jill and I are deeply saddened to learn of the loss of life that occurred as a result of the Jeju Airlines accident in Muan, Republic of Korea. As close allies, the American people share deep bonds of friendship with the South Korean people and our thoughts and prayers are with those impacted by this tragedy. The United States stands ready to provide any necessary assistance.

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RedState will continue to keep you updated as new developments come in.


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South Korea's President Is Impeached but Will He Stay That Way?

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