Air traffic control ‘hotline’ between Pentagon and Reagan Washington National Airport has been broken since 2022

A US Army Blackhawk helicopter flies over The Pentagon on May A US Army Blackhawk helicopter flies over The Pentagon on May CNN A hotline between air traffic controllers at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and the Pentagon intended to coordinate aircraft has not worked since March the Federal Aviation Administration revealed in a congressional hearing Wednesday The FAA was not aware the direct line was broken until a May development where a helicopter circled the Pentagon and caused two flights to abort landings Franklin McIntosh the FAA s deputy chief operating officer testified The airport was the site of the deadliest US airline crash in more than a decade when an American Airlines regional jet and an Army Blackhawk helicopter on a training mission collided on January The unit flying the helicopter that circled the Pentagon was the same one involved in January s midair collision as CNN previously revealed Military flights to the Pentagon have been suspended since the case and will not resume until the hotline is fixed McIntosh disclosed The hotline is maintained by the Department of Defense and is one way for controllers to coordinate in addition to using regular landline telephones Before the military halted flights the FAA considered revoking the permission that allowed helicopters to operate in the DC airspace without explicit clearance We were ready to deploy any option available that we could use or have that we felt was necessary to bring safety measures and better behaviors from the DOD McIntosh disclosed CNN s Pete Muntean contributed to this document The-CNN-Wire Cable News Architecture Inc a Warner Bros Discovery Company All rights reserved Source