NEW PIECES TO KOREAN AIR LINES PUZZLE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000605480033-6
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 1, 2012
Sequence Number: 
33
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 7, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000605480033-6.pdf99.11 KB
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ST Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/02 CIA-RDP90-00965R000605480033-6 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE t' NITOR 7 June 1985 BOOK REVIEW New pieces to Korean Air Liip~71 es z. e By Warren Richey tween Soviets and Washington military superiors on The crew of the Korean Air Lines commercial the ground monitored jet shot down by Soviet fighters in September by US intelligence 1983 may have provided false information to and released by the United States and Japanese civilian air traffic con- U tale Department. trollera during most of its armmthorized flight 1 e is no upon through strategic Soviet territory. to date that the pilot According to two books and recent new infor- made any distress sig- mation about the tragic Anchorage-to-Seoul flight, nal or ever aekuowl- the crew may have deliberately issued a series of . edged he was being false position reports in an effort to disguise the pursued by a Soviet fact that the plane was consistently off its sched- fighter; even though uled course. 5'/2 minutes elapsed The airliner KAL 7, was eventually shot down after the tracer can- by the Soviets over Sakhalin Island several hun- non and before the dred miles off course and 53/2 hours into the flight, plane was shot. after having already overflown a number of key ' T question is ~--- Soviet military installations. There were 269 peo- why? Most explana- pie aboard. The plane has never been recovered, lions attribute the tragedy to equipment failure, human error, COMMENTARY or an attempt to carry ? out.. an indigence and there are no knawasurrivorra.. operation, Ale ander Dallin, a Stanford University pro- Oliver Clubb, a fessor and Soviet specialist, writes in his book, Syracuse University Black Box, KAL 007 and the Superpowers (Uni- professor, suggests in versity of i ornia Press, Berkeley, $14.95), that his book, KAL 007, The Hidden Sto the plane reported to Anchorage it was flying at its (Permanent Press, Sag Ha or, ., authorized altitude of 33,000.feet. But according to $16.95), that the Korean airliner was on a the Soviets, when the plane entered Soviet air- mission for the 'US National Security space near Kamchatka it was flying at 26,250 feet, Agency. He says the intruding plane was without having received authorization to change used to cause the Soviets to think they altitude. were under an air attack and thus turn on "If the Soviet reports of KAL 007's altitude their air-defense radar systems. This were accurate, this might constitute a solid morsel :would enable the US and Japan of evidence showing that the copilot - who could through nearby listening posts and sur- obviously read off the aircraft's correct altitude - veillasce aircraft - to rnunita['and assess waa wdlfatty pm' ` iff, p ? -the capabilities of the full range of Soviet tion reports." Dallin writes. air radar defenses. Japanese military radar reports released in To- He writes, "We can't expect the US kyo in March indicate the KAL pilot may have National Security Agency to present us tried to mislead Japanese air traffic controllers with a smoking gun; quite obviously those when at 3:15 a.m. - 11 minutes before he responsible for operations of this sort do was shot down - the pilot requested per- everything possible to cover their tracks." mission to climb to 35,000 feet from Clubb feels he has a "strong prirua 32,000 feet. But after receiving authoriza- facie case suggesting that US governmen- tion, Flight 7 actually reduced its altitude tal officials have. been guilty of serious and then rose back up to 32,000 feet.- The wrongdoing." He suggests that US offi- pilot reported his altitude as 35,00( feet. cials, led by President Reagan and Seere- Japanese radar showed the piaw at tary of State George Schultz, were "gam- '32.000 feet i . bling with innocent lives" in an effort to Within moments of the ilot's rt? perfect a strategy for a "decapitating" nu- ing "new" altitude to the Japanese, a clear attack against the Soviet Union. He Soviet ?et fi a burst of tracer cannon sots across the e lane s flight pa ac- ticalling for a congressional irrves- ; r g to tranSrnnts tigation. of conversations be D ' whose book is a more careful and' easoned analysis, is less-w-Mi-to to G>1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/02 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605480033-6