The RAF Hercules transport plane that went down in southern Iraq was destroyed after it was damaged during landing.
The Ministry of Defence said two people suffered minor injuries in Monday's incident, after which the C130 plane was destroyed because of the potential risk involved in recovery.
A military spokesman said there was no evidence of hostile action during the landing in Maysan province.
The plane, based at RAF Lyneham, had been on a routine re-supply journey.
It landed 20km north of Al-Amarah at about 8pm local time.
The two people injured were taken to hospital, but the spokesman would not confirm if they were military personnel.
The Hercules could not safely be recovered and was destroyed by coalition forces three hours later.
The MoD said the plane was "significantly damaged" during landing, which led to the site being secured and a thorough assessment being carried out.
"It was concluded that the aircraft could not be recovered without exposing our personnel to undue risk," said a spokesman.
He said: "There was also a potential risk that anti-Iraqi forces might obtain information on specialist equipment.
"The aircraft was therefore safely destroyed by multinational forces."
The MoD stressed the aircraft had been making "a routine landing on a tactical landing zone" and the plane had not been shot down.
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