Anyone who has been in aviation long enough knows stupid things happen.
Complacency, overconfidence, fatigue, get-home-itis syndrome, etc. are all factors.
I was sitting right seat in an MH-47, and after startup, watched the ground crew as they were pulling a MH-60 Blackhawk to the flight line.
Instead of going straight like they were supposed to, they made a 90* turn.........and hit a parked fuel truck with the tailboom.
We were talking on radios of course, since we could see what was going to happen, but no one could contact the tow driver. (Radio volume was later found to be turned all the way down) and our crew chief, who was running over to them, couldn’t get there fast enough before it hit.
Ground guide was on opposite side of helo.
Expensive mistake is an understatement.
Our operational tempo had been high and we were all feeling it.
Lots of missions and everyone was giving their all.
But having tunnel vision is a common problem.
They were so focused on getting the bird to the pad, they missed what should have been so obvious.
Lots of aircraft and lives have been lost for same reason.
Aviators like me are just as guilty.
You train and prepare as best as you possibly can, but we are still human beings.
It’s easy to have hindsight.
Easy to say...they should have done this or that.......after the fact.
When you are “in the moment”, you have a thousand things going through your mind.
Extremely easy to miss something.
That’s where checklist and training and experience make a difference.
Yes, they should have paused before attempting the takeoff.
Mentally, physically and verbally going over everything.
Easy for me to say, but I wasn’t there.
Unfortunately......They missed something simple and paid the price.