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The Mystery of Swissair 111
Something which could be the size of a "fingernail
"
"Bring down their planes" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The facts surrounding the crashes of TWA 800 and EgyptAir 990 (See The Mystery of EgyptAir 990) become more curious in the light of the crash of SwissAir 111.
February 1, 2000 The Associated Press The Canadian Transportation Safety Board hints that "something else" other than an arcing wire might be involved ....
August 30, 2000 The Globe and Mail
November 5, 1998 The Associated Press Elaine Scarry (The NY Review of Books, Vol XLVII, Number 14, Sept 21, 2000 http://nybooks.com/nyrev/WWWfeatdisplay.cgi?20000921092F) highlights some very strange facts about what was going on with SwissAir while it travelled along the same flight path as TWA 800. Both flights took off on a Wednesday evening at 8:19 pm and followed the same flight path along Long Island Sound. Scarry writes: "Reports about Swissair 111 have left the public with the incorrect impression that the plane managed to make its way, uneventfully, east along Long Island and north along the New England coast before suddenly beginning to encounter trouble when it was sixty miles from Halifax. The record of the difficulty, as widely reported in the press, begins at 9:14 PM, when Swissair 111's pilot requests permission to make an unscheduled landing at Boston; the air controller in Moncton, Canada, reminds him that he is much closer to the Halifax airport than to Boston, and asks him if he would prefer to land at Halifax. At the moment of the 9:14 call, the cockpit has smoke in it. In the early stage of the flight, while Swissair 111 was still traveling east along the southern coast of Long Island, it lost radio contact with the eastern seaboard air controllers for thirteen minutes. TWA 800 had begun its fatal fall (and had lost the use of its radio, transponder, cockpit recorder, and data box recorder) at a clock time of 8:31 PM. Swissair 111 had its last normal exchange with the Boston air controllers at 8:33 PM, after which it lost radio contact with every air controller on the northeast coast for the next thirteen minutes. Under normal conditions, exchanges between air controllers and pilots occur in pairs: a call initiated by the air controller will be answered by the pilot, who restates what the air controller has just said; or the call may instead be initiated by the pilot, who asks a question (such as permission to climb to an altitude that has less wind turbulence), which the air controller answers, after which the pilot repeats the information to verify that the words have been heard and understood. This pattern of call and recall is not a casual practice; it is a required procedure. While the sentences of pilots and air controllers normally occur in tight pairs, there can be many factors that for a few seconds interrupt the rhythm of the call-and-recall pattern, and necessitate a repetition of the call. But the failure to answer is never taken lightly and if it continues, it may become a matter of grave concern. For a thirteen-minute period from 8:33 PM until 8:47 PM, no completed act of radio contact took place between Swissair 111 and the Boston area air controllers, whose radars are positioned at Sardi on Long Island, Hampton on Long Island, Cape Cod, Nantucket, and Augusta, Maine. As the plane progresses, it is passed along from one controller to the next. In Swissair 111's last successful exchange at 8:33, the Hampton controller had told the pilot the radio frequency he should now use as he begins to enter the Cape Cod airspace and the pilot had accurately repeated back to him that new frequency:
Hampton Controller: Swissair 111. Boston
one two eight point seven five. From this point forward, Swissair 111 should be in communication with the Cape sector. But the Cape controller cannot reach the plane; and so at 8:34 PM, he asks the Hampton controller to try to reach him on the old frequency: "Try him again, thanks."
Hampton Controller: Swissair 111.
Center. The radio a commercial pilot uses for communication with air traffic control has a double screen: the frequency used for one sector (in this case, Hampton) is kept in place on the first screen when the new frequency (in this case, Cape) is dialed in on the second screen. That way the pilot can quickly get back to the first frequency, should he discover that he has misheard or misdialed the new frequency. But Swissair 111 can now be reached on neither frequency (though it remains visible on radar). Unable to reach Swissair 111, the Hampton controller goes on to normal exchanges with other planes in the areahe instructs a plane addressed as Echo Charley to descend and maintain a specified altitude (and Echo Charley repeats back the altitude); he instructs a Delta flight to proceed to its destination (and the Delta flight repeats back the instruction). The clock moves forward to 8:36 and the Cape controller renews his efforts to reach Swissair 111:
Cape Controller: Swissair 111. Climb and
maintain flight level three one zero [31,000]. The Cape controller now contacts the associated controller at Hampton to enlist his help once more:
Hampton Associated Controller: Hampton. At 8:38 the Cape controller tries and fails to reach the plane:
Cape Controller: Swissair 111. Cleared
direct [to] Bradd. The Cape associated controller contacts the Hampton associated controller to ask for help:
Hampton Associated Controller: Hampton. The Hampton air controller now twice tries to reach the plane, once by calling the name of the plane and announcing the radio frequency to be used for contact; then by calling the name and identifying who it is that is attempting to reach him:
Hampton Controller: Swissair 111. One
twenty-eight seventy-five. Having observed the failed exchange between the Hampton controller and the pilot, the Hampton associated controller now reports the unhappy result to the Cape associated controller:
Cape Associated Controller: Ya. Go
ahead. Although Swissair 111 is still in the air, it has lost radio contact. Swissair 111off the air for a total of thirteen minuteseventually does get back in contact with the air controller. The pilot's voice first comes through not at the air controller station at Hampton, Cape Cod, or Nantucket but at Augusta, Maine. The Augusta air controller at first believes he is receiving a call from a different Swissair plane (flight 104), one that is flying in the Augusta region airspace; but he quickly corrects himself and swiftly relays to the Swissair 111 pilot the frequency on which he should contact Boston:
Swissair 111: Boston Center, Swissair
111 heavy. The time is 8:47.34 A moment later, at 8:48, Swissair 111 successfully contacts Boston's Nantucket sector:
Swissair 111: Boston Center. Swissair
111 heavy. Other than the spirited inquiry about legibility"How do you read? I read you loud and clear"the air controller and pilot do not stop to welcome one another back or to discuss the previous radio blackout. They at once turn to the business at hand, the resumption of the scheduled climb to 33,000 feet that had been interrupted at 27,000 feet when the radio transmissions were suspended. The confident tone and the reassuringly professional procedure of information given (two niner zero) and repeated (two niner zero) continue over a sequence of exchanges about altitude and radio frequency until 8:58, when the Nantucket controller passes the plane on to the Moncton controller in Canada. Radio contact has been restored; a normal flight has been regained; the events of the previous quarter-hour now seem an uneventful anomaly." It should be noted that the Flight Data Recorder shows that the pilots keyed their microphones several times in this blackout period and were therefore aware that they were out of radio contact with air traffic control. Shortly thereafter smoke was observed in the cockpit and the emergency descent of SwissAir 111 began during which radio transmissions with the aircraft again ceased for the six and one half minutes that preceded impact with the ocean... 10:10:45 (Atlantic Summer time) Pilots first notice odor and 2 minutes later smoke in the cockpit. 10:14:15 - 33,000 feet Swissair 111 declares "Pan, Pan, Pan" with a request to divert to Boston. 10:15:08 - Air traffic controller suggests Halifax is closer. Pilots agree. 10:18:15 - 22,000 feet Non-emergency descent rate of 4,000 ft./min. Swissair 111, now heading 049 degrees is still roughly in line with Halifax's longest runway (060 degrees) and accepts Halifax's air traffic controller's offer of "vectors for (runway) six." 10:19:36 Swissair 111 is now 50 kilometres from the runway, pilots elect to turn away. 10:21:25 - 15,700 feet Pilots request a turn out to sea to dump fuel and lighten aircraft. 10:24:40 - 10,000 feet The pilots of Swissair 111, now flying level, declare "Emergency" after the autopilot disengages and ask for immediate landing. (No further radio communication comes from the aircraft. It crashes about 6 minutes and 40 seconds later.) 10:31:21 - Impact The TWA 800 incident over Long Island Sound, and the SwissAir 111 incident in losing radio contact in the same location, were not the only strange events to happen in this area of Long Island Sound. Here are two other incidents ..... 1) Three weeks to the day before TWA 800 was shot down in approximately the same location as the TWA 800 downing, and within hours of the Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia, the Coast Guard received a report of "three red flares" launched 25 miles south of Shinnicock Inlet. An air and surface search was carried out which found nothing out of ordinary. TWA Flight 848 (New York to Rome) blocked out at exactly 10:00 pm on June 26, 1996 and assuming normal handling, Flight 848 would have passed about 11 NM South of Shinnecock Inlet at 10:29 p.m. EDT. TWA Flight 884 (New York to Tel Aviv) was scheduled to depart before FL 848 but blocked out late at 10:19 p.m. EDT. 2) On November 16, 1996, subsequent to the TWA 800 downing, a missile was fired at two commercial aircraft in the vicinity of Long Island. Pakistan International Airlines Flight 712 left Kennedy at 9:25 pm, bound for Frankfurt. The pilot, W. Shah, said his co-pilot saw an orange light coming from the left hand side to the right hand side of the airplane. The object was 3 - 4 miles in front of the aircraft and above it. Boston apparently confirmed 'two unidentified blips' on radar. The tapes were turned over to the FBI and NTSB since the object(s) rose directly out of Long Island Sound and ascended almost vertically. Radio 5 in the U.K. reported that the object which crossed the Pakistani aircraft had exploded. (Click for RealAudio file PIA712 duration 2 minutes 30 seconds. Gaps between transmissions have been removed. See also The Tale of The Tapes)
PIA 712: Boston Pakistan
712 During the 13 minute blackout of SwissAir 111 what was said on the cockpit voice recorders? The transcripts of these CVR conversations are not to be released and so we will be unable to determine why it is that on the Transportation Safety Board of Canada's website there is a strange reference to "speculation". What was the speculation about?
Protection of CVR Information in Canada:
http://www.tsb.gc.ca In her article Scarry mentions that investigators have investigated the possibility of a lightning strike in both the SwissAir and the TWA cases ... Because the events have features that appear to suggest a powerful electrical event, the Canadian Safety Board has looked closely at the question of a lightning strike, as did investigators in the TWA 800 case, who discovered there had been no lightning strike within a 300-mile radius of the plane (Docket No. SA-516, Exhibit No. 5-A, p. 5). But what about a nearby missile explosion? Could SwissAir 111, like PIA 712 and TWA 884 in November 1996, have been the target of a missile that missed but did explode? Recall that the P3 flying in the vicinity of TWA 800 reported it had lost the use of several pieces of electrical equipment. Did it lose them because of the missile explosions that were occurring nearby and destroying TWA 800? Could "something the size of a fingernail" be a fragment from a missile that exploded too far from the aircraft to have caused significant damage? Could a fragment have penetrated the aircraft in the region where a major fire later ignited? Could an external explosion over Long Island Sound have temporarily knocked out the ability of Flight 111 to receive radio transmissions for a period of 13 minutes? What cockpit conversations were going on between the pilots at the start of the radio blackout? Did they know they were in a blackout? Did they hear anything strange at the beginning of the blackout period? Did they comment on any strange "turbulence" at the beginning of the blackout period? Only the cockpit voice recorder can answer these questions. On September 7, 1998 on the Today show Matt Lauer interviewed an eyewitness to the crash who said that there was flame coming from the front of the left wing of the aircraft .....
MATT LAUER: Brenda Murphy saw the troubled plane right before it went down
on Wednesday evening. Ms. Murphy, Good morning to you.
BRENDA MURPHY: Good morning. The suggestion that we must consider a possible missile attack on SwissAir 111 at approximately 8:33 pm is sharpened by the fact that military warning zones were activated when Flight 111 took off just as they were on July 17, 1996 when Flight 800 was destroyed. Scarry notes: TWA 800 and Swissair 111 attempted to make their flights on an evening when military craft were in the air or sea below. The route from JFK International Airport east along the southern coast of Long Island and north past the New England shoreline requires any plane on its way to northern Europe to thread its way through a ribbon of air that is skirted on one side or the other by military warning zones. Such military warning zones are, of course, often unused by the military, and during such unused periods can be entered by civilian flights. But the record of scheduled military exercises shows plans for air and sea activities in the week during which Swissair 111 attempted its flight, just as the equivalent record from two years earlier shows planned exercises during the week of TWA 800's flight. This may be why Swissair 111, like TWA 800 earlier, had been directed onto the Bette route in traveling east out of New York, for this route is assigned when the military exercise zones south and southeast of Long Island, called W-105 and W-106, are in use by the military. We know that there was a classified "maneuver" involving U.S. Naval forces going on below TWA 800 when it crashed. James Kallstrom admitted so in a telephone conversation (Click) with Reed Irvine of Accuracy in Media. As I have argued in other articles on this website, this "classified maneuver" was probably an anti-terrorist operation. Which raises the question - did the U.S. government have intelligence information that another attack was to take place on an aircraft departing JFK and was it again trying to stop this attack the night that SwissAir 111 went down. (For further details see for example: The Tale of the Tapes) SwissAir aircraft were involved in at least two other probable missile incidents. 1) In August 1997 two Swissair pilots had to "duck" at 23,000 feet over Long Island ......
September 26, 1997 Agence France Presse
September 27, 1997 (Neue Zuricher Zeitung) The U.S. preferred a "balloon" to a "rocket" explanation despite the pilots objections .....
March 5, 1999 www.cbcnews.com Ottawa (CP)
The captain (Bobet) and the first officer (Grunder) were interviewed the following day in Boston by the FAA, the FBI, and the NTSB. The FAA report quoted the captain as stating that the object "appeared to be moving" and "the object did not appear to have an exhaust plume, or resemble any characteristics of a rocket". The captain denied that these were his statements when interviewed by staff of the UFO Research Coalition which conducted an investigation of the incident...
The UFO Research Coalition Report on Swissair
127 ISBN 1-928957-00-5 (1999) Pages 7-8 Asked about the FAA report that United Airlines Flight 176 had seen a weather balloon and that was the FAA's opinion of what the Swissair pilots saw, Captain Bobet commented....
The UFO Research Coalition Report on Swissair
127 ISBN 1-928957-00-5 (1999) Page 11 2) There was another Swissair incident in mid-June 1998 which Bobet revealed was reported to Swissair but not to American authorities.
The UFO Research Coalition Report on Swissair
127 ISBN 1-928957-00-5 (1999) Page 26 These incidents with two other Swissair aircraft should lead one to be suspicious of why Swissair Flight 111 from JFK crashed on the tenth anniversary in the Islamic calendar of the bombing of PA 103....
September 2, 1998
11 Jumaada al-awal 1419 A.H.
December 21, 1988 11 Jumaada
al-awal 1409 A.H. Was this crash an attempt to down an aircraft on the tenth anniversary of the downing of PA 103 in exactly the same spot as TWA 800 had been downed earlier? On board the aircraft was a Saudi prince whose family Osama bin Laden is attempting to overthrow.
September 5, 1998 The Hindu Online And the Saudi royal family saw itself in a state of siege ....
October 7, 1996 The Telegraph (U.K. Electronic Edition)
Issue 502 Should we be amazed therefore that two months later Osama bin Laden was the victim of an assassination attempt by poisoning which he blamed on Saudi Prince Salman bin Abdul-Aziz.
Bin Laden suffered acute kidney failure and for
the next few months he hobbled around leaning on a stick.
(The New
Jackals by Simon Reeve)
In 2003 the Canadian NTSB published it final report in
which it did not definitively find the cause of this crash!
(Articles from news sources have been placed
within for educational, research, and discussion purposes only, in compliance
with "Fair Use" criteria established in Section 107 of the Copyright Act
of 1976.)
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