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Rose Parade: Air Force temporarily grounds B-2 flyovers

CBS News Los Angeles: The Rundown (Dec. 20 AM Edition)
CBS News Los Angeles: The Rundown (Dec. 20 AM Edition) 02:39
B-2s Grounded
A B-2 Spirit stealth bomber, assigned to the 509th/131st Bomb Wings out of Whiteman Air Force Base Jeff Roberson / AP

New Year's Day in Pasadena will have plenty of floats, marching bands and football - but no familiar flyover.

The Air Force has grounded its entire fleet of B-2 stealth bombers following an emergency landing and fire earlier this month, and as a precaution, are pausing flyovers at all of this years' college bowl games, including the Rose Bowl.

The B-2 was scheduled to fly over the 2023 Rose Parade and Rose Bowl Game In Pasadena. 

It will be replaced by the B-1 Lancer, the 509th Bomb Wing said in a statement.

On Dec. 10, a bomber experienced an in-flight malfunction, forcing it to make an emergency landing at Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri, where it caught fire. The fire was extinguished and there were no injuries.

The standdown is significant in that there are fewer than 20 stealth bombers in the entire fleet and the aircraft provides, along with the B-52 Stratofortress, the air leg of the nation's nuclear triad. The B-2 has been regularly deployed to the Indo-Pacific and more recently to Europe as a show of force. During the standdown the entire fleet will be inspected, 509th Bomb Wing spokeswoman Air Force Master Sgt. Beth Del Vecchio said.

The B-2 stealth bomber took its first flight in 1989 and its flying-wing design formed the base of its eventual replacement, the B-21 Raider, which was introduced this month. The B-21 is scheduled to make its first flight next year.

In Sept. 2021 another B-2 at Whiteman had to make an emergency landing after the hydraulics system failed, resulting in the bomber's landing gear collapsing. The bomber's left wing dragged for about a mile before the aircraft came to a halt, resulting in at least $10 million in damage to the aircraft.

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