KAL CONSPIRACY THEORISTS DISTORT FACTS, EXPERTS SAY

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000403090005-4
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 17, 2012
Sequence Number: 
5
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
October 14, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/17: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403090005-4 r1rV APPEARED PAG rp r_z Z~ LOS ANGELES TIMES October 14 1985 KU Conspiracy Theorists Distort Facts, Experts Sad By MICHAEL WINES and SAM JAMESON, Times Staff Writers WASHINGTON-Two years af- ter a Soviet fighter downed a Korean Air Lines jumbo jet in Soviet air pace and plunged 269 people to their deaths in the Sea of Japa% a handful of skeptics claim to have unearthed tantalizing new evidence that the airliner's fatal course, far from accidental mean- dering, had a far more sinister purpose-spying. 'heir startling assertions, out- lined in articles and letters, include Japanese radar data suggesting that the jet misled Tokyo air con- trollers about its altitude and course, as well as maps portraying KAL Flight 007 as veering over Soviet East Asian military bases. There is even a recording of an American controller supposedly saying, "We should warn them," seconds after the doomed jet left U.S. airspace near Alaska. It is damning stuff indeed, except for one problem: On closer scruti- ny, U.S. officials and other experts say, none of it appears to be true. The revelations that are not false on their face are distortions of innocuous facts, they argue. "It's a great story," said Thomas R. Maertens, a former State De- partment intelligence analyst now with the department's Soviet af- fairs office. "But it doesn't hold together." "Once you get into the technical- ities of it, the conspiracy theories fade away," agrees Murray Sayle, a Tokyo-based journalist and former Newsweek magazine reporter who has studied the KAL disaster al- most since it occurred Sept. 1, 1983. "Where's their evidence?" he said. Yet, troubles with the facts have not prevented sly buffs and dedi- cated researchers alike from ele- vating the KAL 007 disaster to a stellar level-a level once reserved fqt the likes of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, the ;Rosenberg spy trial of the early '1950s and the Lindbergh kidnap- ing. Although congressional intelli- gence experts have derisively re- jected any hint of a secret U.S. link tq-the tragedy, a House transports- thin subcommittee this fall began cdllecting data on the disaster after a?usatory articles in The Nation magazine and reports by New York Tines columnist Tom Wicker ex- pc wing skepticism about official accounts. In Japan, backbench leglalators and grieving families of crash vic- tims still hope to pry loose govern- ment secrets they believe will prove that the South Korean jet was spying for the United States. In IC6rea, where the topic remains udItificially taboo, many citizens a 'general belief' that the ed jet deliberately flew over Union to save fuel. 2 But nothing has emerged to lee the conclusion of major avia- tffn bodies, including the U.S. Air LAhe Pilots Assn. and the Interna. tional Civil Aviation Organization, dept the KAL disaster probably at2mmed from pilot error, mechan- ical failure or both. The explanation is bolstered by sobering data that sibw that pilots in general stray f*n their assigned flight paths re often than has been assumed till, no one has yet offered an clad explanation of how an dor could have carried the Kore- ao jet on the exact course that it td k over the Soviet Union's mili- t sensitive Kamchatka Penin- sula and Sakhalin Island. The only sources of the most definitive an- swers to that question-the "black boxes" that recorded KAL 007's flight path and cabin conversa- tions-lie under water in the Sea of Japan. The refusal of U.S., Japanese and Korean officials to release more of their own files on the downing- and their occasional denials that more exist-only deepen the suspi- cions of conspiracy advocates. "The government apparently, has a very, very strong inter In keeping this case closed," said David Pearson, a Yale University aselology student who has written tit often-quoted articles on the shooting for The Nation magazine and who now plans a book. Pearson and John Kappel, a retired U.S. Foreign Service aft who is also investigating the KAL affair, are the leading American skeptics. Last month. they con- cluded in The Nation that the airliner "could not have acciden- tally or unknowingly flown its 4REemm came" over the Soviet Utgn and that the Reagan Admin- istration probably "haa covered up vital evidence about the downing." Normal Repssls Korean A* Lines Flight 007 left Anchorage. Alaska. on a nonstop flight to Seoul at 3 a.m. (local time) and was shot down by one or two Soviet air-to-air missiles 5 hags, 39 minutes later as it left Soviet airspace over Sakhalin Island. Between the jet's takeoff and its 12-minute spiral into the Sea of Japan, the 747's three-man cockpit crew reported a normal flight to pound controllers, radioing their position as they passed computer- set "way pants" along their North Pacific route and receiving permis- sion to ascend from 33,000 to 35.000 feet only minutes before being shot down. Despite the routine reports, the jet actually had strayed from its assigned path only 10 minutes after takeoff and was more than 300 miles off course by the time it was shot down-so far that it some- times was out of radio range and had to relay its position reports to the ground via a second KAL jet flying nearby. All experts agree that an alert crew should have discovered such a Gargantuan misstep, either through ordinary double-checking of data in flight or by sighting unexpected land masses on the jet's weather radar. The International Civil Aviation Organization con- cluded in its analysis of the disaster that the sort of inattention required to fly in the wrong direction for more than five hours is rare, "but not to a degree unknown in civil aviation." One Senate staff expert, who was briefed by the CIA in September, 1984, after the first round of accu- sations surfaced that Flight 007 was on a spying mission, said he has "zero reason to believe that the Korean Air Lanes tragedy was the result of anything but a terrible pilot error." Continued I STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/17: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403090005-4