The United States have called back the naval ship that has been aiding the international search for a missing Malaysian airliner and will send use long-range naval aircrafts in the search from now on, Pentagon officials said Monday, according to the Associated Press.
The decision was taken because the search area was now so extensive that it was more efficient to look for the jet using surveillance aircraft, officials said, the AP reported.
The guided missile destroyer, the USS Kidd, had joined the massive search last week and had shifted its focus west to the Andaman Sea on the request of the Malaysian government, according to the AP.
The Kidd, with a MH-60 helicopter on board, had completed a search of 15,000 square miles but "no debris or wreckage associated with an aircraft was found," it said, the AP reported.
At one point both the Kidd and another U.S. destroyer were taking part in the search but now the U.S. navy planned to rely on a P-8 Poseidon plane and a P-3 Orion aircraft for the effort, officials said, according to the AP.
The decision was made in consultation with the government of Malaysia, the AP reported.
"With the search area expanding into the southern Indian Ocean, long range patrol aircraft such as the P-8A Poseidon and P-3C Orion are more suited to the current SAR (search and rescue) mission," the U.S. Pacific Fleet said in a statement, the AP reported.
After taking off from Kuala Lumpur headed to Beijing, Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappeared on March 8 with 239 people on board, triggering a massive international search across Southeast Asia and the Indian Ocean, according to the AP.