The Original Information on KAL Flight 007 1983http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history.do…http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history.do?action=Article&id=2777 --------------------------------->>>
KAL 007
|
| Unresolved Questions Surround KAL 007 | | Print | |
| Written by James Heiser |
| Tuesday, 01 September 2009 18:00 |
|
When a bomb planted by Libyan terrorists tore Pan Am flight 103 from
the sky on December 21, 1988, 270 people — 259 of them on the plane and
11 more on the ground — were killed. When a Soviet MiG-23 fired two
air-to-air missiles at Korean Air Lines flight 007 on September 1, 1983,
269 people were onboard. Because the bomb aboard the Pan Am flight
detonated earlier than planned, it was possible for investigators to
painstaking reconstruct the plane as part of the investigation to
determine the perpetrators of the heinous crime. The Soviets, however,
hampered the investigation of their own crime, with the result that
substantial questions remain unanswered a generation later. In 1991, Senator Helms, as Minority Leader of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, issued a report that noted: “KAL 007 probably ditched successfully, there may have been survivors, the Soviets have been lying massively, and diplomatic efforts need to be made to return the possible survivors.” On December 10, 1991, just five days after Senator Helms had written to President Boris Yeltsin of the newly established Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic concerning the whereabouts of U.S. servicemen who were POWs or MIAs, he sent a second letter to Yeltsin concerning KAL 007. Helms wrote: “One of the greatest tragedies of the Cold War was the shoot-down of the Korean Airlines flight KAL-007 by the Armed Forces of what was then the Soviet Union on September 1, 1983.... The KAL-007 tragedy was one of the most tense incidences of the entire Cold War. However, now that relations between our two nations have improved substantially, I believe that it is time to resolve the mysteries surrounding this event.” Nearly two decades later, those mysteries remain unresolved. In 2001, the International Committee for the Rescue of KAL 007 Survivors, Inc.
was formed “to uncover and disseminate the truth about the KAL 007
incident and to effect the rescue and return home of its survivors.” The
committee maintains, “Japanese radar trackings, Soviet ground-to-ground
and ground-to-air communications, KAL 007's flight data recorder and
cockpit voice recorder, the debris (and lack thereof), eye-witness
testimonies.... All these and more, when pieced together, tell of a
plane which was, indeed, damaged, but which managed to land safely, and
of passengers who survived and were rescued by the Russians — only to be
imprisoned to this day.” Although such a possibility stretches the
limits of the imagination, the evidence which allows for the possibility
of a controlled ‘ditching’ of the plane cannot be discounted. |

In
the midst of public outcry over the decision by Scottish authorities to
free Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, convicted in 1991 for his involvement in
the 1988 bombing of Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, the
anniversary of an older case of state-sponsored terrorism, the shooting
down by KAL 007 by Soviet jet fighters in 1983, is almost forgotten by
the media and public.
Among the passengers of KAL 007 was Rep. Larry McDonald (D-GA), who was both a member of the House of Representatives and chairman of the John Birch Society was a common name in my father's rhetoric