This is a list of military accidents in Taiwan (formally known as the Republic of China), primarily involving the Republic of China Armed Forces.
2007
In April eight people aboard a Bell UH-1H military helicopter were killed in a crash.[1] In May a F-5F fighter crashed into base housing occupied by Singaporean personnel, killing the pilots. Nine Singaporeans on the ground were injured and two were killed.[2]
2008
An S-70C Seahawk crash killed one crew member, injured two and left two others missing, [3]
Two pilots were killed after crash landing their AH-1W Super Cobra attack helicopter in the island's north. [4]
2011
3 pilots and one RF-5 surveillance plane and a two-seater F-5F trainer.
[5][6]
In 2019 a Singaporean soldier was seriously injured during nighttime parachute training.[8] He underwent intensive surgery in Taiwan. In 2020 he was flown back to Singapore aboard a Singapore Air Force A330 Multi-Role Tanker Transport.[9]
2020
A ROCAF F-16A similar to the one that crashed on 17 November
In January Taiwan's top military chief Shen Yi-Ming was killed along with eight other senior officers when their Black Hawk helicopter crashed in the mountains near Taipei.[10]
In October a F-5 fighter jet crashed and its pilot was killed after it plunged into the sea several hundred meters (a half-mile) off the coast of Taitung County.[12]
In December a hiker on a coastal trail on Shoushan in Kaohsiung was injured by a stray bullet believed to have originated from an offshore firing range.[14]
2021
An F-5E fighter similar to the one that crashed on 22 March
Two F-5 fighter jets crashed into the sea near the southeastern coast in an apparent collision, resulting in two deaths. The air force later grounded all F-5s and suspended all training missions, after concerns were raised about both training and maintenance.[15][16]
2022
In January a F-16 fighter jet crashed into the sea while taking part in training exercises. Combat training for Taiwan's F-16 fleet was suspended in the aftermath of the crash.[17]
In May a AIDC AT-3 training aircraft crashed minutes after taking off from the southern port city of Kaohsiung during a training mission. The air force halted all academy training flights as President Tsai Ing-wen ordered an investigation into the cause of the incident.[19]