A U.S. military aircraft carrying four people has crashed in northern Norway, the country’s rescue coordination center announced Friday.
A V-22 Osprey aircraft—a multi-mission, tiltrotor military aircraft with both vertical takeoff and landing—belonging to the U.S. Marine Corps “has hit the ground,” said a spokesperson for the Joint Rescue Coordination Centre (JRCC) in Norway.
The spokesperson said the status of the people on board the aircraft was not known.
The JRCC spokesperson said a rescue helicopter and a Norwegian military Orion plane were searching the area and located the plane from the air at 9:17 p.m. local time.
“We found it after an emergency signal was received,” he said. “Because of the bad weather, we cannot get down. Police and rescue services are on their way” by land, according to the spokesperson.
“Further coordination is handled by the police in Nordland,” per the JRCC statement.
“Around 30,000 troops from 27 nations, including NATO’s close partners Finland and Sweden, are taking part in the exercise, as well as about 220 aircraft and more than 50 vessels,” NATO also wrote.
The drills are held every two years over large areas across Norway, including above the Arctic Circle. The latest drills were planned long before Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, and seek to explore how Norway would manage reinforcements. NATO said that it offered an invitation to Russia to observe the drills, but Moscow declined to attend.