AirAsia flight QZ8501: US to send second ship to aid search for debris

The littoral combat ship USS Fort Worth arrives in Singapore, on a 16-month deployment to 7th Fleet in support of the Asia-Pacific rebalance. The US Navy plans to send a second ship to help search for wreckage from an AirAsia jet that
The littoral combat ship USS Fort Worth arrives in Singapore, on a 16-month deployment to 7th Fleet in support of the Asia-Pacific rebalance. The US Navy plans to send a second ship to help search for wreckage from an AirAsia jet that apparently crashed off the Indonesian coast, the Pentagon said Tuesday. -- PHOTO: UNITED STATES NAVY

WASHINGTON (AFP) - The US Navy plans to send a second ship to help search for wreckage from an AirAsia jet that apparently crashed off the Indonesian coast, the Pentagon said Tuesday.

The USS Fort Worth, a littoral combat ship, is "prepared to deploy from the region from Singapore," spokesman Rear-Admiral John Kirby told CNN.

"That ship can be ready to sail in a day or two," Kirby said.

AirAsia QZ8501 debris

An American destroyer, the USS Sampson, has already deployed to the area to aid with international efforts to find debris and bodies from the passenger plane that disappeared with 162 people on board.

The navy also was ready to provide maritime patrol aircraft to "help map the debris field on the surface" as well as sonar equipment if necessary to track down wreckage at the bottom of the sea, Kirby added.

Searchers on Tuesday spotted debris and bodies at sea that were believed to be from AirAsia Flight QZ8501, which disappeared en route from Indonesia's second city Surabaya to Singapore amid a storm on Sunday.

All indications suggested the jet crashed in the Java Sea south-west of the island of Borneo, officials said.

AirAsia QZ8501 search areas

AirAsia QZ8501 banner

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