jj@rabbit.UUCP (09/02/83)
"Subject: Korean Jet Message-ID: <2765@rochester.UUCP> What's up? Did the jet land or get shot down? Could it be arch-conservative congressman could have decided that he . . . damned fishy to me. The Russians are sometimes clumsy, but blowing up a real 747 would rate as a major slip, I'd say. Politically Aware in Rochester" PLEASE DO NOT EVEN REPLY TO THIS NOTE UNLESS YOU HAVE INFORMATION OF A FACTUAL NATURE THAT LEADS YOU TO THE SAME CONCLUSIONS. DO NOT FLAME AT THE AUTHOR IF YOU DISAGREE. DO NOT ADD TO THE ATTENTION THAT THE ABOVE MESSAGE GETS, UNLESS YOU HAVE GOOD REASON! I don't want flaming at this author (either the above, or me) to obscure other discussion. The one thing I wonder about is ?WHY? I can't understand any reason why the USSR would shoot down a commercial airliner for overflying an area, when that area is photographed twice a day by sattelite, and heavily monitored for any sign of electronic activity. I don't doubt that it happened, simply because I don't think that the US news media is either that controlled or that stupid. I can offer two suggestions to why it happened: The first <which I'd like to see proven> is that it was a mistake on the part of an overzealous commander at whatever level. The second is that there is something hokey going on on the Kamchatka Peninsula, and we don't know about it yet. I'd rather that wasn't the case, but close inspection is clearly indicated. rabbit!<uh oh!>jj
sts@ssc-vax.UUCP (Stanley T Shebs) (09/06/83)
The Koreans don't have satellites. We do. All they ever see is what our intelligence organizations choose to show them, and they may have been suspicious as to whether our guys were telling the truth. Don't you love the spooks and their antics? stan the l.h. ssc-vax!sts (or utah-cs!shebs)