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U.S. plans to act after 'careless' BA flight (FAA weighs steps over 747's long route w/1 engine out)
International Herald Tribune ^ | Tuesday, March 8, 2005 | Don Phillips

Posted on 03/07/2005 4:56:18 PM PST by Paleo Conservative

WASHINGTON Federal Aviation Administration officials said on Monday that they were preparing to take strong action against British Airways, including a charge of "careless and reckless operation of an aircraft," because of the airline's decision to allow a Boeing 747 to fly from California to England with one engine inoperable. Under normal circumstances, the United States would not take action against British Airways because such issues would be handled by Britain.

But senior U.S. aviation officials have become so concerned about the actions of the flight crew and its supervisors in London that they were preparing direct action.

"We will pursue every legal option available to us," said an FAA spokeswoman, Laura Brown.

British Airways expressed surprise over the developments.

"I am surprised that anyone at the FAA would make such statements," said Steve Shelterline, general manager for the 747 program with British Airways.

(Excerpt) Read more at iht.com ...


TOPICS: Extended News; Government; US: California; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: 747; 747400; aviation; boeing; britishairways; etops; faa; lax
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To: Nowhere Man

Yes, that C - 141 ride should have been called the " WHITE KNUCKLE EXPRESS " ... lol.


121 posted on 03/07/2005 8:33:27 PM PST by Prophet in the wilderness (PSALM 53 : 1 The ( FOOL ) hath said in his heart , There is no GOD .)
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To: FreedomCalls

You are quoting someone other than me in your reply. I saw your banter with another poster and went back to the story to see what it actually said, and that was my post to you.

In an earlier post, addressed to someone else, I said; "I see this same plane had a recurrance of engine problems a couple weeks later.", with no reference to India or Singapore. I went back to check the story wondering if this earlier post was approximately correct - guess it was off about a week. That, btw, was in post #90 on this thread, where I commented about a somewhat similar personal experience on a BA 747 flight from LA to London.


122 posted on 03/07/2005 8:33:48 PM PST by GGpaX4DumpedTea
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To: pissant

I was just thinking that!

I wonder if an airbus could be trusted to do that?


123 posted on 03/07/2005 8:36:46 PM PST by longtermmemmory (VOTE!)
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To: GGpaX4DumpedTea

Sorry.


124 posted on 03/07/2005 8:44:58 PM PST by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: Fred Hayek
All this reminds me of when Tex Johnson did a one-gee barrel roll with the 707 prototype in front of a demo crowd.

Here's a clip. You may have to right click on it and save it to your desktop to get it to play - and it's 21+MB.

707 Barrel/Aileron Roll

You can't do this in an Airbus; the computer will not let you. (Some of the AA guys have tried it, from what I've heard.)

125 posted on 03/07/2005 8:46:01 PM PST by Spktyr (Overwhelmingly superior firepower and the willingness to use it is the only proven peace solution.)
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To: Fred Hayek
Yes,, I saw that on the History Channel.
The Boeing execs were about to fire him for doing that, but, the top execs from the airlines saw him do that barrel roll ( let's see them do that with a AirRUST ) and then, they all wanted the plane, and the Boeing execs saw that, and changed their minds to fire Tex Johnson.
I think, Tex Johnson's son was also there that day when he did that.
Just imagine ? your dad doing that, and saying " yupppp,,, that's my dad " .
The actual DASH - 80 prototype that Tex Johnson flew that day and did that barrel roll is at the AIR&SPACE Museum near Dulles Air Port near Washington D.C. ,,,, I got to see the very DASH - 80 Boeing Jet that TEX flew. Hey ? a SR - 71 Blackbird is there also, so cool to look at. It looks fast just sitting there.
126 posted on 03/07/2005 8:48:12 PM PST by Prophet in the wilderness (PSALM 53 : 1 The ( FOOL ) hath said in his heart , There is no GOD .)
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To: Prophet in the wilderness
I have seen pictures of a 747 with 5 engines on the wings, the 5 th engine was only being carry to another destination for another plane.

Not a Photoshop.


127 posted on 03/07/2005 8:49:26 PM PST by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: Paleo Conservative
I was assuming the engine gave out in mid-flight and that continuing on to the Atlantic was the best course of action. But after reading the whole article, apparently the engine failed early in the flight, so they should have returned to LA and dumped fuel in the Pacific. When your passengers' lives are at stake, the crew must use an abundance of caution and land the plane as soon as possible. Then they have to make all repairs needed to make sure the key components of the airplane are functioning at full capability. This was reckless behavior by the Brits and I'd be really angry if I had been on that flight.

Yes the Miami incident with Eastern Airlines was a dire emergency and it may have been a really hard, over-weight landing (but of course better than crashing from total engine failure).

128 posted on 03/07/2005 8:59:17 PM PST by carl in alaska (The mission for today is golf. The mission code word is "Julius Boros".....)
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To: FreedomCalls
How is crossing the Atlantic with three engines (a 747 with one out) any less safe than crossing the Atlantic with two engines (on a two-engine A310 or 777)?

Without having a mechanic out on the wing to figure out what the failure is, it's a helluva lot less safe than a fully operational 777.

Unexpectedly losing an engine from an unknown failure which may be ticking seconds to a further systemic collapse is not the same as simply starting off the day without starting an engine.

You seem smart enough to know this...why make such a silly point?

129 posted on 03/07/2005 9:10:04 PM PST by sam_paine (X .................................)
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To: toddst

If I'm not mistaken, in order to fly across an ocean, doesn't the plane have to be able to continue flight with an engine. I thought the Boeing 777 can fly with only one engine.


130 posted on 03/07/2005 9:14:27 PM PST by dc27
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To: sam_paine
Unexpectedly losing an engine from an unknown failure which may be ticking seconds to a further systemic collapse is not the same as simply starting off the day without starting an engine.

So why is it more safe to fly circles over the Pacific for two hours with the added risk of dumping your full fuel load than it is to fly for two hours overland towards your destination? After the then two hours of completely normal operation, why not press on? The FAA regs allow it. The CAA regs allow it. The Boeing 744 flight manual allows recommends it. Any additional problems would have manifested itself by the third hour. Indeed, if any additional problems developed, they were never in an ETOPS 120-minute situation. They were never more than 60 miles away from a divert airfield on that particular flight route.

131 posted on 03/07/2005 9:16:16 PM PST by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: longtermmemmory
No, and an Airbus won't do anything listed in this article, either.
132 posted on 03/07/2005 9:16:27 PM PST by Spktyr (Overwhelmingly superior firepower and the willingness to use it is the only proven peace solution.)
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To: Paleo Conservative
Most seem to be missing the point of this.

Due to some changes in rules in Britain, the Airline is now responsible to pay compensation to passengers at forced layovers.

This is all about the bottom line and not the first time it has happened since the new rules were announced apparently.

The FAA wants them to change these rules or mandate compliance to U.S safety standards.

I don't blame them a bit.

133 posted on 03/07/2005 9:19:09 PM PST by Cold Heat (This space is being paid not to do anything.)
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To: sam_paine
Let's let a professional pilot weigh in and describe the decision process:
Let's be a little practical about this and imagine we are on the flight and in real time.

I am assuming several items to describe my thoughts but I have flown across the Atlantic many times to-wards the UK when I also worked for BA (not BAA which stands for British Airports Authority a different company).

Planning: You have a company produced fuel calculation and decide as Captain (or Pilot Flying) to load minimum legal fuel as no adverse conditions expected.

Event: You have an engine surge at a reasonable time after take-off. You have safe altitude and you have no control problems or any items requiring immediate action after recall items of thrust close and autothrottle disengaged. First conscious thought is: We have ample time to consider this. Maintain present altitude is probably decided intuitively.

Decision Process: Here we move into what most pilots have all done intuitively to high degrees but now British Airways and most UK operators are specifically trying to use a decision process that suits the circumstances. In this case with time available almost certainly the Captain and crew would be working to-gether discussing and using available resources.

The NOTECHS behaviour marker system validated under the JARTEL project uses the following for decision-making, as used by BA.

Problem definition and diagnosis:

Hyperthetically: We have an engine surge and the parameters indicate no damage or adverse effects to the aircraft. Discuss with crew members and even draw in relief crew for discussion. Call up maintenance for advice of possibility of any ongoing problems or not. Confirmation and agreement reached that one option is : flight can remain airborne for time being and also well within safe range of many suitable airfields. Suggestion and confirm engine should be shut down rather than increase any risk of damage.

Option generation:

Options: Circle further to consider and ponder, continue en-route for time being, return to nearest suitable airfield such as departure airport, continue to destination. Anything else?

Risk Assessment and Option generation:

Aircraft and passengers and crew are not at risk. All above options safe at present. Which is best ? Which is acceptable? Can fly all of USA over land within safe range of airfields so why not continue en-route for time being and at same time consider options further. Do we have enough fuel for destination if that becomes a viable option? Is it legal and is it acceptable for our company? Etc etc.

Option decided after such deliberations: Continue en-route and buy time in the direction we wish to go and possibly see if destination is achievable, acceptable and viable. Time taken to do this perhaps 20-30 minutes of fuel burn at very heavy weight. Internal thought of Captain

" Is this critical ? I will not know until later in flight but need to carefully watch and consider this." Tell other crew of this thought.

Outcome Review:

Travel a thousand miles and have no adverse problems and all options still available. Fuel burn computer and manual calculations indicates can reach London with legal minimums although have used some contingency fuel. Can contingency fuel be used for such a situation thinks Captain? Yes it can is the agreement of the crew members, and then checked in the ops manual for confirmation as time allows this.

So we now are approaching the Atlantic. Can we proceed legally? Yes

Do company requirement allow us to do this? Yes

Do we have enough anticipated fuel? Yes

Is it completely safe within our acceptable parameters? Yes

Is this an acceptable option to all crew concerned? Yes

Conclusion. Continue to destination London knowing that in any event Shannon in Ireland, ( 90minutes prior to London) Prestwick in Scotland (50 minutes prior to London) Manchester (30 minutes prior to London) and en-route alternatives are still going to be available crossing and approaching landfall the other side of the Atlantic.

En-Route: Fuel monitoring starts to show a poor picture. Poor flight level achieved and cannot improve and cruise fuel burn worse than expected due headwind.

Start the decision process over again:

Problem Definition and diagnosis/ Option generation/ Risk Assessment and Option selection/ Outcome review?

New option selection after the process. We are going to be tight on fuel for London. We may need to select an alternate. Let's go as far as we can which will in any event be well past Ireland before making a final decision but our bottom line is that we shall not go below legal minumum to reach London.

Approaching Scotland realise cannot reach London. Manchester is a likely new destination as we have BA staff coverage at this place. During descent fuel indicates will land with fuel marginally below final reserve fuel. Company requirement is that we must declare a fuel emergency so make a Pan Pan call. ( UK requirements no longer allow crew to request fuel priority descent and landing it's either an emergency or it's not !!!)

Because Pan Pan emergency call made the fire trucks and emergency services have to be in attendance on landing. The media love to report and see this.

Final Outcome Review again:

Was it a safe landing? Yes

Was a decision process used throughout with review? Yes

Were risk factors understood and acted upon ? Yes.

Did the crew exercise Co-operation? Yes

Did the Captain and crew exercise leadership and managerial skills? Yes

Was the captain and crew Situationally Aware in noticing, understanding and projecting ahead changing circumstances? Yes

Did outside influences of wind and altitude allocation affect Captains ongoing decisions? Yes

Did the crew communicate plans and contingencies and bottom lines ahead of events? Yes.


134 posted on 03/07/2005 9:31:30 PM PST by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: FreedomCalls

They even tested the 777 engine ( G&E - 90 ) mounted on a 747.


135 posted on 03/07/2005 9:34:32 PM PST by Prophet in the wilderness (PSALM 53 : 1 The ( FOOL ) hath said in his heart , There is no GOD .)
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To: Prophet in the wilderness

Thanks for the detail on the modifications to the 747 for the shuttle piggyback job.

For a time I worked in Northern Ireland for an American company and I sent one of my engineers to South Africa to handle a problem. It was on his flight from London to Johannesburg that the unscheduled stop in Nairobi was made, and he told me that it was a bit of a strange feeling to look out the window at that 5th engine strapped to the wing.


136 posted on 03/07/2005 9:35:56 PM PST by GGpaX4DumpedTea
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To: Spktyr
I don't know about it falling out of the sky, but as I recall from reading, if a four engine Airbus loses an engine, it drops the opposite number on the other wing back to idle "in the interests of preserving control" (and, I suspect, because the computer doesn't really know what to do with asymmetric thrust). As we all know, Airbus does not allow the pilot to override the computer in any way. Put these two together, and wonder what happens when you lose an engine on takeoff.
That's crazy. Computers aren't any smarter than the people who program them, and few of these guys have ever piloted a plane. I saw a clip where one of these closed control system Airbuses tried to land (crashed) at the end of the runway when a low altitude flyby convinced the flight computer that it was time to land the plane. I thought they gave up on the closed system, scary.

137 posted on 03/07/2005 9:37:16 PM PST by sixmil (In Free Trade We Trust)
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To: sam_paine
" Without having a mechanic out on the wing in flight to figure out what the failure is " imagine that.. lol !
138 posted on 03/07/2005 9:37:32 PM PST by Prophet in the wilderness (PSALM 53 : 1 The ( FOOL ) hath said in his heart , There is no GOD .)
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To: Spktyr; All

WOW THANKS:

FOR ALL!:

How to Stop a Hijacking

Need an effective way to thwart terrorists? Here’s the true story of El Al flight 219, whose pilot battled hijackers by pushing his Boeing 707 to its death-defying limits.

Stuff, April 2002

By John Parrish

Twenty minutes out of Amsterdam, Captain Uri Bar-Lev steadily guided El Al flight 219, a Boeing 707 bound for New York, toward a cruising altitude of 31,000 feet over the North Sea. It was the early morning hours of September 6, 1970. It hadn’t been a great morning for Bar-Lev. An hour earlier, at the airport, a pair of Senegalese diplomats had drawn the attention of a rookie security officer. They had bought their first—class tickets at the last minute—something unusual enough to interest the officer. Examining their passports, he discovered that the documents were nearly consecutively numbered. He knew that the odds against this were about the same as his chances of winning the lottery. Adding to the officer’s unease about this flight was a young blond couple traveling economy class on Nicaraguan passports-Central America isn’t exactly known for its blondes. The officer took his concerns to Bar-Lev. What happened after that shows that common sense and a zero-b.s. attitude can do more to stop hijackings than all the crotch-sniffing dogs and all the wand-waving dropouts in the world.

The passport numbers bothered Bar-Lev, too. At 39, he’d had years of experience sizing up threats. In 1948, at the age of 17, he had joined the Israeli Army to fight in Israel’s War of Independence. He later served as a fighter pilot with the Israeli Air Force and had flown numerous combat missions in conflicts with Israel’s Arab neighbors—something he still did as a reservist. He faced the enemy in his civilian life, too. Only a year before, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine had hijacked a TWA plane, using hostages as bargaining chips and attempting to blow it up—just another episode in what Bar-Lev saw as an ongoing war. He took one look at the passports and, without any fear of being accused of impolite behavior, unceremoniously bumped the two Senegalese off his flight. They boarded a Pan Am jet scheduled for an earlier departure. Bar-Lev also had the Nicaraguans searched. They were clean, so he allowed them to board.

As he prepared for takeoff, Bar-Lev saw the Pan Am jet taxiing ahead of him come to a stop. The Senegalese were taken down a ramp, and Bar-Lev watched as the captain himself patted them down. When the pilot asked to see their briefcases, they refused; because they held diplomatic passports, no one could search their attaché cases. The pilot led the two men back onboard. After the Pan Am jet took off, the El Al flight followed.

GUNFIRE in first class As the plane climbed, flight attendant Michelle Eder walked toward the curtained-off first-class section. When she pulled back the screen, she thought she’d wandered onto a movie set: The blond Nicaraguans were out of their seats-the woman clutching two grenades, the man wielding a pistol. Eder, who’d been an army officer during Israel’s 1967 Six-Day War, recognized the grenades as a type called Dutch Eggs. But before she could act, the male hijacker struck her across the head with his gun. She collapsed but remained conscious. The hijackers advanced toward the cockpit door.

Eder hadn’t seen the sky marshal who was supposed to sit in first class, so she feared that the hijackers had shot him. Though stunned from the pistol’s blow, she scrambled back into economy to alert the other marshal, who sat at the rear of the aircraft.

“They’re hijacking the plane!” she told him. Thinking she was joking, he laughed, but his laughter quickly faded when he saw her distress. He drew his gun and carefully advanced up the aisle. Eder rushed into the kitchen to activate the hijack alarm, which would sound and flash in the cockpit. Meanwhile, another flight attendant, Shlomo Vider, had unwittingly walked into first class from the other aisle, accompanied by a second female attendant, and they were taken hostage. Vider had served in the Israeli forces, where he was regarded as a tough combat vet. He sized up the attackers, saw an opportunity and lunged at the male hijacker. As they struggled, two shots rang out. Vider slumped to the floor, gravely wounded. The hijacker grabbed the female flight attendant and put his gun against her head.

THE PILOT’s daring plan The first-class sky marshal, the one Eder feared had been shot, was actually in the cockpit, talking with Bar-Lev and his crew. Everyone on the flight deck was unaware of the drama on the other side of the steel-reinforced door. Even the noise of the gunshots had been drowned out by the climbing jet’s engines. Suddenly the hijack alarm went off-Eder had activated it from the rear of the aircraft. “It’s just a false alarm,” said one of the crew, aware (like everyone else) that the system was prone to faults. Because of this, a confirmation alarm had been built in. Everyone froze when that too went off. Someone hammered on the cockpit door. Bar-Lev’s flight engineer looked through the door’s peephole and reported what he saw: a woman holding two grenades and a male accomplice with a gun to the head of a terrified flight attendant. The woman shouted for them to open up or she would kill the stewardess.

“Captain, we should do what they say,” one of the flight crew urged. Bar-Lev knew he had a few seconds, at most, to make a decision he’d have to live with for the rest of his life. The lives of 175 passengers and eight crew members depended on that decision. He thought about the presumptuousness of playing God with all those lives. As the crew member started quoting international aviation law, stating it was his duty to put the welfare of the passengers first, Bar-Lev racked his brain for a way to beat the hijackers. What he came up with was inspired and daring. He decided to throw the aircraft into a steep dive.

Such a dive would knock the hijackers off their feet and put them into a free fall inside the cabin. Effectively, they’d be weightless. NASA had used the technique for training astronauts. But this was a commercial jet full of passengers.

THE PLANE PLUNGES
Bar-Lev quickly thought his plan through. He reasoned that, since the aircraft was still climbing and he hadn’t switched off the seat-belt sign, the passengers would still be strapped in. But the grenades were a problem. If they exploded, they could severely cripple the aircraft. Even if the plane could still be flown after that, there’d be dangerous decompression. The potential for damage meant Bar-Lev had to lose altitude rapidly.

But doing this would push the aircraft to the extremes of its structural limits. If anyone knew those limits, it was Bar-Lev. During 707 training at Boeing’s headquarters in Seattle, the instructor had boasted that the aircraft was so good it could do aerobatics. Bar-Lev took him at his word and flew a loop. His bosses were not impressed at the time, but the experience now gave Bar-Lev the confidence to test the limits of the aircraft.

He yelled, “Hold fast!”-and then pushed the stick forward and put the aircraft into a terrifying dive. The aircraft hurtled downward at nearly the speed of sound. The two terrorists, along with everything else that wasn’t belted or bolted down, flew into the air. At the back of the aircraft, Eder clung to two other flight attendants, believing the aircraft was plunging to the ground and that she was about to die.

Bar-Lev dropped the jet 26,000 feet in three minutes, then, putting all his faith in the plane’s ability to handle excessive stress, suddenly pulled back on the stick to level her off, slamming the terrorists back.

Simultaneously, the sky marshal in the cockpit burst through the door. The hijacker fired three shots-at the wounded Vider. The sky marshal answered with a bullet that killed the hijacker. Meanwhile, another flight attendant and a passenger struggled with the female terrorist, who suddenly fainted, dropping the grenades she’d been clutching.

All eyes turned to the grenades as they rolled down the aisle toward the rear sky marshal. It takes four seconds for a grenade to explode: It was the longest four seconds anyone onboard had ever experienced. But nothing happened. They didn’t go off. Seeing that the male hijacker had been disabled, the rear sky marshal joined the other marshal in stripping the unconscious woman to see if she had any other weapons on her.

TO KILL OR NOT TO KILL A HIJACKER?
Bar-Lev emerged from the cockpit as the marshals found another grenade-this one stuffed in the woman’s bra. In her panties, they found a detailed plan of the hijacking, written in Arabic. She’d obviously hidden the grenades and pistol in her underwear to evade the search. One marshal tugged at her blond hair, and off came a wig. There was a collective intake of breath. Bar-Lev and the marshals recognized her. She was Leila Khaled, one of the world’s most notorious terrorists, a Palestinian and a sworn enemy of Israel. She had been the leader of the TWA hijacking the year before. One of the sky marshals drew his gun, intending to kill her.

Unexpectedly, Bar-Lev stepped in. He’d spent his adult life fighting Khaled’s kind, but he liked to think that he had always fought honorably. His own code wouldn’t allow him to sanction the killing of an unconscious prisoner. It was an honorable decision, but one that later almost cost him his job.

Bar-Lev then turned his attention to Vider. He’d been shot five times, and the pilot was surprised to see that there was very little bleeding. He feared that the bleeding was mostly internal, and if that were the case, Vider needed urgent medical attention. The captain decided to land at Heathrow Airport in London, get Vider help, then fly back to Israel.

But that plan posed a big problem: the dead hijacker. During a previous hijacking in Switzerland, a sky marshal had fatally shot a terrorist on the runway. The moronic Swiss, in a politically correct frenzy, jailed the marshal for a year. That was a fate Bar-Lev didn’t intend to share. As the 707 landed at Heathrow, Bar-Lev taxied very slowly along the runway. The marshals slipped out of a maintenance hatch in the bottom of the jet, then sneaked across to another El Al jet, which had been awaiting takeoff. The men boarded through the maintenance hatch and escaped.

Not surprisingly, Scotland Yard took in Bar-Lev’s crew for questioning. They wanted to know who’d killed the terrorist. Nobody would talk. While in custody, Bar-Lev learned that the Senegalese diplomats he had barred from his flight had hijacked the jet he’d seen pause on the runway. They flew it to Egypt, released the passengers and then blew it up. That same day, another two jets had been hijacked by Khaled’s group, followed by another one a few days later. They were all flown to Jordan and blown up. Some of the passengers were held hostage, pending Khaled’s release.

BAR-LEV TAKES THE HEAT
With the crew refusing to talk-including Vider, who was recovering in the hospital-Scotland Yard released them. Bar-Lev was feted internationally for being the first pilot ever to foil a hijacking. But when the British government caved in and released Khaled in return for hostages, the Israeli pilot was criticized in his homeland for halting her execution. Even though he realizes that Khaled would have killed innocent passengers and crew to achieve her aims, Bar-Lev still believes he chose the right course. “I’d seen combat, and you do what you have to do in war, but you do not kill a defenseless person in cold blood. You’d become like them, the terrorists.”

The storm of criticism led Bar-Lev to believe that his career—and reputation—were at stake, so he asked for a chance to explain himself to Israeli prime minister Golda Meir. He pleaded his case and won her support, retiring in 1995 after piloting 747s for 24 years.

After September 11, 2001, Bar-Lev relived the events of his own narrow escape 31 years before. When I contacted him, he told me he believed the only way to combat air terrorism is to foster a climate in which pilots feel they can fight back—killing terrorists, if necessary-without fear of being sued or fired or imprisoned for putting passengers at risk. To Bar-Lev, there just isn’t a choice.

Throwing the 707 into a life-threatening dive was “our only chance,” he recalls today. “If you give in to terror, you give the terrorists control. Then what happens? They blow up the aircraft? Kill the passengers and crew? We needed a fighting chance, and this was it.” Bar-Lev argues that it doesn’t matter how much security you have. “Fighting back is a state of mind,” he declares. “[If you say] ’I will not give in to terror,’ you will find a way to fight back somehow.”


139 posted on 03/07/2005 9:39:17 PM PST by longtermmemmory (VOTE!)
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To: FreedomCalls
All well and good, but that's a different argument. These points I have no complaint against. But what you asked first off was ridiculous. I'll continue to refresh your memory as long as needed....

How is crossing the Atlantic with three engines (a 747 with one out) any less safe than crossing the Atlantic with two engines (on a two-engine A310 or 777)?

Again, a 777 not manifesting any failures is MUCH SAFER than any other 4- or 2-engine aircraft with an undiagnosed failure in progress.

If you meant only to argue that flying on with 3-of-4 in this case was safer than landing immediately on 3-of-4, then you could've just stuck to that argument.

As it is, you strayed off with a half-cocked analogy to twin-engined planes that failed.

140 posted on 03/07/2005 9:40:28 PM PST by sam_paine (X .................................)
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