WHAT REALLY HAPPENED TO KAL FLIGHT 007

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000100490002-7
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RIPPUB
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K
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4
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 22, 2010
Sequence Number: 
2
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Publication Date: 
January 1, 1984
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OPEN SOURCE
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/22 :CIA-RDP90-005528000100490002-7 ~:.~ F jP ~~ ~~P~,RED ~, :~~~ ~hE~ ~a -.t January 1984 What Really Happened'. to KAL Flight 007 At 6:~6 a.m. on September t, t983, a Soviet Su-15 int~rccptor aircraft fired taro missiles at a Korean Airlines Boeing 747 near the Soviet island of Sakhalin, north ofJapan. Momrnts later, Japanese air controllers heard a faint, frantic message from the airliner: :911 engines .. rapid decompression." Poem gone, fuselage punctured, the huge 747 spun uncontrollably downward for tZ minutes. At b: j8 a.m., KAL Flight 007 disappeared from Japanese radar screens. Everyone on board-Z6cj men, women and children-perished. Ever since this atrocity, the Soviet Union has labored to confuse and deceive the world about what actually happrned. 'The Soviet pilou, in stopping the actions of the intruder lane, could not 1~now that it was a civilian aircraft,': declared the o~ictal news agrnry, Tars. "It was fl ing without navigation lights, at the height of night, in conditions ofYbad viribility, and was not answering signals.' Bessdes, claimed the Soviets, the Korean airliner really was a CIA spy plane. This massive ~ropa anda effort has succeeded in implanting ~rnuine doubu in she minds o~millions. Could the Soviets have misidrnt~ed the airliner? Did thry try to warn it? Was it rngagcd, in a spy miss:on? Nobody in the West is better uah cd to answer these questions than former Sovies L.t. Viktor Bclrn~o. Before his daring escape to Japan in ~ 1976 in a MiG-25, ? Bclrnko flew the Su-1 S interceptor and served in the same Far East Air Defense Command whose radar and planes tracked and pursued the doomed airliner. He knows the mentality of Soviet commanders, pilou and ground controllers, as well as the fears and secret orders that govern them. Since his escape, he has aced as a consultant to the U.S. A:r Force and American aircraft companies, and has thus bern kept informed about the latest developments inside the Soviet air force. Also, at the request of the U.S. governmrnt, he has carcf~lly listrne to the voices of Soviet pilots recorded as thry stalked and destroyed KAL 007. Here is his revealing analysis of how and why the tragedy took place. 'See "MiG Pilot: The Final F-xape of Lt. Belenko," Reader's Digest. January 'So. HENEVER radar screens ~~~reveal an unidentified air- ~, YY craft within ioo kilomc- ', tern of Soviet borders, its position is immediately reported to the Na- tional Command Center at Kali- nin, northwest of Moscow. So long as the aircraft remains in the too- kilometer zone, its course, speed and altitude are shown on a gigan- tic screen at the Command Center, where a general officer always is on duty. In the early hours of September t, Soviet radar spotted an American RC-135 reconnaissance plane in in- ternational airspace over the Ber-ng Sca, cast of the Kamchatka Pcnin- ?There is nothing secret, sinister or illegal !~' akaut these patrols. They are conducted in ac- cordance with the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty, which specifies that the United States and the Soviet Union will verify compliance by the other through their respcaive "national tech- nipl means of verifir~tion"-which means re- connaissance by aircraft and satellites. sula. Subsequently, KAL 007 flew past the general vicinity where the U.S. plane had been earlier. The STAT Soviets have tried to persuade the world that their air defenses mis- took the civilian airliner for the U.S. military plane. Such a mistake is ut- ', terly impossible. I will tell you why. Because Kamchatka is an im- portant Soviet missile-testing site, RC-135s almost daily patrol over international waters off the pen- insula.' So Soviet air-defense per- sonnel, in both the Far East and Moscow, arc very familiar with the RC-135 and its distinctive charac- teristics. Amodified Boeing 707, the RC-135 is heavily laden with external antennas and electronic gear, which drastically reduce its speed. Moreover, once the RC-135 arrives in its patrol area, it circles lazily downward, flying as slowly as it can to conserve fuel and re- main on station as long as possible. Soviet air defenses also arc very familiar with the Boeing 747. Every day, 747s belonging to different foreign airlines fly along interna- tional route R-20, which passes close to the southern tip of Kam- chatka. Having tracked both types of aircraft daily for many years, the Soviets well know that the 747 cruises at Least t~5 knots faster than the RC-135 flies. So the speed alone of KAL 007 unmistakably told the Soviets that it was not an RC-135. And Soviet radar stations recorded and reported this speed for more than two hours. A secret standing order, issued by the Soviet Ministry of Defense and sanctioned by the Politburo, dictates that once an alien aircraft ventures into Soviet airspace it must not be allowed to escape: Sovi- ~~TT'J1v ~yY Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/22 :CIA-RDP90-005528000100490002-7 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/22 :CIA-RDP90-005528000100490002-7 et pilots arc supposed to fly ahead of the foreign plane, attract attention by firing tracers, rocking wings and, if it is dark, by flashing their navigational lights. If the foreign plane dots not signal willingness to follow the interceptors, then Soviet pilots arc to shoot it down. , Thus, as KAL 007, now disas- trously off course, came within 25 kilometers of Kamchatka, local commanders launched intercep- tors.. But the Soviet fighters failed co catch KAL 007. They did not even come close enough to warn the airliner or to fire at it successfully. Perhaps the ground commander was slow in scrambling his planes. Perhaps ground controllers were inept in vectoring them. Whatever, the standing order was unfulfilled; an unauthorized aircraft had trans- gressed Soviet airspace and been allowed to escape. As KAL 007 flew blithely on- ward, its cxccutioncr sat in a Ready Room at the Dolinsk-Sokol air base on southern Sakhalin. I know the scene well. The pilot reports at dusk, under- goes acursory physical examina- uon,and has a big meal followed by another at t r p.m. Throughout the ' night he must wear his pressure suit, which is tight and uncomfort- able. He may read and play chess; he is not supposed to sleep. Parked about 3o feet outside the Ready Room, all set for a quick takeoff, is the Su-I5. The wail of a siren shortly before Ei a.m. suddenly ended the boredom of the veteran pilot and summoned him to a mission, a real one. Within five minutes he was airborne. And now two (cars preoccupied him: Will 1 execute properly? During all of his career, a Soviet pilot is taught: You may not think. You may neuver arc dictated by ground; bly see shells which spent themselves control. Over water, the pilot con- ~ and fell earthward five kilometers tinually worries about whether ~ behind and below them. the controllers will guide him so far Ordered to close upon the "tar- from land, or keep him airborne so get," the Su-IS overshot and for a long, that he will have to ditch at I few seconds was ahead of .the 747 sea. Unlike American pilots, he before falling back alongside it. does not wear an insulated, water- Had the pilot during those fleeting proof suit that would help him ~ moments fired tracers or flashed his survive in frigid waters. So ditching lights, he would have reported Bo- at sea means death. ing so. He made no such report. Because of an incessant stream of Neither did he mention any effort orders from the ground, the Su-15 to contact KAL 007 by radio. And ', pilot replied almost continuously to I the transmissions from the Korean his controllers. The Japanese and ; airliner after the interceptor fired Americans recorded his every ; its cannon clearly show that its crew word, and I have listened to the ' had neither seen nor heard any- tape again and again. The tape I ', thing to suggest that there was a analyzed did not include transmis- ! problem. sions from ground control. But the i From the outset, the Soviet inter- pilot's own words, frequently spo- ceptor~ew to attack, not to warn. At ken in a tremulous voice that be-' E):20 a.m., the pilot positioned the trays extreme tension, prove many Su-15, not ahead of the airliner important and telling' points: where he could signal it, but below The visibility above Sakhalin was ~~ and behind it-the attack position. very good. At 6:06 a.m., while the ~ Then the pilot, manifestly in obedi- pilot was many kilomctcrs away' cncc to orders from the ground, j from KAL 007, he reported seeing : reported that his missiles were it. At 6:iz, while still far away, he' locked on the airliner and ready to reported, "I sec it visually and on strike. radar." Had the weather been bad, But suddenly, because of indeci- the pilot could not have seen the lion on the ground-whether at airliner from such distances. Sakhalin, the Regional Command The lights of KAL 007 shone Center at Khabarovsk "or in Mos- brightly. At 6: i o a.m,, apparently in ~ cow-the pilot was ordered to response to a direct question from i break the missile lock-on and to j ground control, the pilot answered, ~ move closer to KAL 007. His voice "Roger. (The target's strobe] light i reflects disgust at the order. is blinking." At 6: r 8 he reported, ! Soviet indecision ended about "The A.N.O. (air navigational two minutes later, and the pilot lights] are burning. The [strobe] received the fateful order. Obedi- light is flashing." And at 6:Zr he cntly, he dropped back and beneath j again volunteered, "The target's KAL 007, positioning himself to (strobe] light is blinking." kill. At 6:z3 a.m. he said, "Now I The Soviets made no realistic effort will try rockets." He flew very close to warn KAL 007 or force it to land. ~ to the 747-probably within two To support their claim that they 'i~ kilometers-and his panel lights tried to warn the airliner, the Sovi- j signaled that the missile-guidance ._~ .-..- ~...-a-. You ~ may only execute. Your com- mander will think for you. The pilot, of course, does think co himself: 1 must do exactly as 1 am told. 1 must execute perfectly. If not, 1 and my family will be ruined. Will I have to ditch? From the moment a Soviet interceptor pilot rakes off, his every action and ma- burst of cannon fire. At 6:~o a.m. the pilot did indeed report, "I am firing cannon bursts." But at this time the interceptor was at least six ', kilomctcrs behind and below KAL 007. The maximum range of an Su- 15 cannon is only one kilometer, i Thus, the Korean pilots in their cockpit atop the 747 could not possi- systems were fixed on the airliner. ~, At 6:~6 a.m. he reported, "I have '. executed the launch." Two seconds later he said, "The target is ~~ destroyed." Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/22 :CIA-RDP90-005528000100490002-7 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/22 :CIA-RDP90-005528000100490002-7 THE Soviet Air Defense Command had tracked and evaluated KAL 007 for almost ZI/z hours. The familiar speed of the airliner, its direct flight path, its distinctive configuration-unlike any other aircraft in the world-its gleam- ing navigation lights and Bashing strobe light all .identified KAL 007 as a civilian 747, not an RC-135. Why then did the Soviets finally make the calculated decision to blow up the airliner and kill its innocent passengers? Certainly, KAL 007 was far off course (see box, page 77). It violated Soviet airspace for about t~ min- utes over Kamchatka and again for a shorter time over Sakhalin. This was wrong. But when Soviet planes, evefi military ones, have violated' American sovereign airspace-as they did at least twice in ty83- they have not been shot down. Typically, our interceptors warn and lead straying aircraft away, in accordance with international agreements. Why could not the So- viets have done the same? The answer may be found back in April t978, when a Korean . Airlines 707, bound from Paris to Seoul, suffered navigational- equipment failure near the North Pole and blundered into Soviet air- space. Although fully aware that it was .a civilian airliner, the Soviet', Air Defense Command ordered it '~ shot down. Struck by cannon fire from a Soviet interceptor, the trip- ', pled 707 nevertheless flew over Soviet territory for another go min- utes before making an extraordi- narycrash landing on a frozen lake. Only two people wcrc killed and t3 ~ injured. The Soviet military felt acute embarrassment for having allowed the airliner to fly aimlessly over Russian territory for another qo minutes unmolested. The Politbu- ro demanded answers. If you can't stop a civilian airliner from wan- dering around our territory for so long, they asked, how can we ex- . peer you to cope with advanced military aircraft? As a consc- ~. 77 Lured to Destruction? THE LOST KOREAN AIRLINER pOSSeSSed [hrte separate computerized navigational systems-the same systems that each day safely and unerr- ingly guide commercial aircraft to their destinations throughout the world. Additionally, there were radio beacons along the prescribed route of KAL 007 by which its pilots could verify their position. Yet sometime after the airliner passed beyond the range of radar in Alaska, it veered off course. Transmissions from the aircraft to japan showed that the pilots did not realize they had strayed. Perhaps the pilots misprogrammed their computers before takeoff. Perhaps in flight they set the wrong dial on the navigational control panel. Perhaps, seeing a landmass on their weather radar, they confused Kam- chatka with a Japanese _ island. Unless the airliner's flight recorder is recovered from the ocean floor (now unlikely), the cause of their mistake will remain unclear. Could the Soviets have deliberately lured KAL 007 off course? While no evidence to support such a charge has come to light, the possibility cannot be discounted. According to the Defense Department, in each of the past few years the Soviets have made dozens of electronic attempts to dupe and confuse American pilots into flying over forbidden territory where they could be shot at. The practice involves "meaconing"-the sending of misleading navigational signals from powerful portable trans- mitters-as well as radar and radio jamming. It continues today, and, in fact, reports of mcaconing and jamming increased roughly so percent in Ig83. Sophisticated American countermeasures, coupled with special training of air crews, have reduced the efTectiveness of this predatory deception. Nevertheless, the Soviets keep trying, hoping to create international incidents which their propagandists can exploit. quence, several senior officers were cashiered. Now the National Command Centcr? was aware that Soviet air defenses at Kamchatka had failed again. I suspect the Moscow com- manders reasoned that the risks of killing wcrc Icss than those of em- barrassing the Politburo anew. But the worldwide outrage that the slaughter provoked embar- rassed the Kremlin far more. Ex- planations had to be contrived. Initially, the Soviets refused even to admit they had shot down KAL 007. Hours after its destruction, Tass reported that an "unidentified plant" had violated Soviet airspace over Kamchatka and Sakhalin. "The plane did not have navigation lights, did not respond to queries and did not enter into contact with the dispatcher service," Tass said. "Fighters of the anti-aircrak de- fense, which wcrc sent aloft toward the intruder plane, tried to give it ~N,fZNi:7ED Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/22 :CIA-RDP90-005528000100490002-7 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/22 :CIA-RDP90-005528000100490002-7 assistance in directing it to the near- est airfield. But the intruder plane did not react to the signals and warnings from the Soviet fighters and continued its flight in the di- rection of the Sea of Japan."? The next day, Tass reiterated the Soviet claim that the missing plant Acw without lights and stated that an interceptor fired warning shots at it. On September 3, Tass pub- lished an inordinately abusive dia- tribe against the United States and President Reagan, excoriating them for saying the Soviets had shot down KAL 007. This was fol- lowed by the assertion of Soviet Colonel-General Semyon Roma- nov that KAL 007 had its lights off and that in any case the "outlines" of a Boeing 747 "resemble much those of the American reconnais- sance plant RC-135." On September g, President Rea- gan played the damning tape rcpro- ?In my time, there was no'dispatchcr service" or ground~ontrol system on either Kamchatka or Sakhalin apable of communiption with foreign aircraft. Moreover, none of the half- dozen commercial planes in the air or ground- monitoring stations hard any warning over the international emergency frequency. ducing the voice of the Su-15 pilot shooting down KAL 007. ,And fi- nally, five days after the atrocity, the Soviets admitted the undeni- able. "Since the intruder plane did not obey the demand to Ry to a Soviet airfield and tried to evade pursuit, the interceptor-fighter plant of the anti-aircraft defenses fulfilled the order of the command post to stop the flight," Tass an- nounced on September 6. Ever since this confession, Soviet propagandists have reiterated the , theme that KAL 007 was embarked upon some kind of espionage mis- sion. But they have never presented any tangible evidence in support of this claim. Indeed, almost every substantive statement the Soviets have made in justification of the slaughter over Sakhalin is demon- strably False. Listening to all the bellicose So- viet fabrications, I am reminded of an old Russian adage: "I will uri- , Hate in your eyes, and you will say it is Holy Water." That is the attitude the Soviets have adopted in trying to justify the slaughter of 26g inno- cent men, women and children. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/22 :CIA-RDP90-005528000100490002-7