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Coordinates: 46°34′N 141°17′E / 46.567°N 141.283°E / 46.567; 141.283 (KAL007) Coordinates: Parameter: "type=" should be "type:"
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<li>18:15 GMT - "KE007 requested FL [flight level] 350 [35,000 feet]"<ref name="icao_d3">ICAO Report, Appendix D, page D-3</ref>.</li>
<li>18:15 GMT - "KE007 requested FL [flight level] 350 [35,000 feet]"<ref name="icao_d3">ICAO Report, Appendix D, page D-3</ref>.</li>
<li>18:20 GMT - "Tokyo Radio transmitted the clearance for the aircraft to climb to this level<ref name="icao_d3">ICAO Report, Appendix D, page D-3</ref>.</li>
<li>18:20 GMT - "Tokyo Radio transmitted the clearance for the aircraft to climb to this level<ref name="icao_d3">ICAO Report, Appendix D, page D-3</ref>.</li>
<li>1`8:22:40-55 GMT - As power is diverted from velocity to lift, KAL 007 decreases speed and Maj. Ospiovich in his Su-15 draws abeam of the target. He will drop back and behind to fire the missiles.
Lt. Col. Titovnin (Combat Controller): "805, open fire on target". Maj. Osipovich: "It should have been earlier. How can I chase it? I’m already abeam of the target". Titovnin: "Roger, if possible, take up a position for attack". Osipovich: "Now I have to fall back a bit from the target"..
<li>18:23 GMT - "KE007 reported reaching FL 350" <ref name="icao_d3">ICAO Report, Appendix D, page D-3</ref>.</li>
<li>18:23 GMT - "KE007 reported reaching FL 350" <ref name="icao_d3">ICAO Report, Appendix D, page D-3</ref>.</li>
<!-- (no reference): The Interceptors had initially tried to contact the pilot of KAL 007 by radio and by making visual contact. An order to shoot down the airliner was given as it was about to leave Soviet airspace for the second time after flying over [[Sakhalin]] Island. -->
<!-- (no reference): The Interceptors had initially tried to contact the pilot of KAL 007 by radio and by making visual contact. An order to shoot down the airliner was given as it was about to leave Soviet airspace for the second time after flying over [[Sakhalin]] Island. -->
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<li>18:47 GMT - First Soviet SAR mission: involving the KGB Border Guard boats and rescue helicopters (Khomutovo air base). " Lt. Col. Novoseltski: prepare whatever helicopters there are . Rescue helicopters. Lt. Col. Titovnin:Rescue? Lt. Col. Novoseltski: Yes..." <ref>(ICAO, '93, Information Paper no. 1., pg. 93)</ref>
<li>18:47 GMT - First Soviet SAR mission: involving the KGB Border Guard boats and rescue helicopters (Khomutovo air base). " Lt. Col. Novoseltski: prepare whatever helicopters there are . Rescue helicopters. Lt. Col. Titovnin:Rescue? Lt. Col. Novoseltski: Yes..." <ref>(ICAO, '93, Information Paper no. 1., pg. 93)</ref>
<li>18:55 GMT - Second SAR mission: in addition to the borderguards and helicopters, civilian ships "near" Moneron were sent to Moneron itself. General Strogov (Deputy Commander oif Far East Military District): "The border guards. What ships do we have near Moneron Island, if they are civilian. send [them] there immediately." <ref>(ICAO, '93, Information Papes No. 1., pages 95,96)</ref>
<li>18:55 GMT - Second SAR mission: in addition to the borderguards and helicopters, civilian ships "near" Moneron were sent to Moneron itself. General Strogov (Deputy Commander oif Far East Military District): "The border guards. What ships do we have near Moneron Island, if they are civilian. send [them] there immediately." <ref>(ICAO, '93, Information Papes No. 1., pages 95,96)</ref>









== Crash Scene ==
== Crash Scene ==

Revision as of 06:09, 11 March 2008

Korean Air Lines Flight 007
A computer rendering of HL7442, the KAL 747 lost during Flight 007
Occurrence
DateSeptember 1, 1983
SummaryAirliner shoot down
Site46°34′N 141°17′E / 46.567°N 141.283°E / 46.567; 141.283 (KAL007) Coordinates: Parameter: "type=" should be "type:"

West of Sakhalin island
Aircraft typeBoeing 747-230B
OperatorKorean Air Lines
RegistrationHL7442
Flight originJohn F. Kennedy International Airport, New York City, New York
 United States
Last stopoverAnchorage International Airport, Anchorage, Alaska
 United States
DestinationGimpo International Airport, Seoul
 South Korea
Passengers240
Crew29
Fatalities269
Survivors0

Korean Air Lines Flight 007, also known as KAL 007, was a Korean Air Lines civilian airliner shot down by Soviet jet interceptors on September 1, 1983 just west of Sakhalin island. 269 passengers and crew, including US congressman Lawrence McDonald, were aboard KAL 007; there were no known survivors.

The Soviet Union stated that the aircraft had entered Soviet airspace as a deliberate provocation by the United States, the purpose being to test its military response capabilities, repeating the provocation of Korean Air Flight 902, also shot down by Soviet aircraft over the Kola Peninsula in 1978.

The incident attracted a storm of protest from across the world, particularly from the United States.

Flight & Passenger Information

Korean Air Lines Flight 007 was a commercial Boeing 747-230B (registration: HL7442, formerly D-ABYH[1], was previously operated by Condor Airlines) flying from New York City, United States to Seoul, South Korea. The aircraft—piloted by Chun Byung-in[2]—departed Gate 15, 35 minutes behind its scheduled departure time of 11:50 P.M. local time[3], and took off from New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport on August 31. After refueling at Anchorage International Airport in Anchorage, Alaska, the aircraft departed for Seoul while carrying 240 passengers and 29 crew at 13:00 GMT (3:00 AM local time) on September 1. KAL 007 flew westward and then turned south on a course for Seoul-Kimpo International Airport that took it much farther west than planned, cutting across the Soviet Kamchatka Peninsula and then over the Sea of Okhotsk towards Sakhalin, violating Soviet airspace more than once.

Senator Jesse Helms of North Carolina, Senator Steven Symms of Idaho and Representative Carroll J. Hubbard Jr. of Kentucky were to have joined Larry McDonald onboard KAL 007 but they accepted a later flight on KAL 015 in order to meet other commitments[4] [5]. Four of the people who boarded in New York, Robert Sears, his wife, and two children, left the aircraft in Anchorage; Sears had vacationed in New York with his family.[2]

63 Americans died in the shootdown.[6] 23 of the passengers were children under 12 years of age.[7]

The flight attendants included fourteen women and two men. 12 passengers occupied the upper deck first class. Passengers occupied almost all of the 24 business class seats. In economy class almost 80 seats had no passengers. 130 passengers planned to connect to other destinations such as Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Taiwan; they flew Korean Air Lines due to its fares.[3]

Interception

The Sukhoi Su-15, NATO codename Flagon, was a Soviet interceptor.

The following reconstruction of events is largely based on information provided by the US State Department and the ICAO.

Soviet air defense units had been tracking the aircraft for more than an hour while it entered and left Soviet airspace over the Kamchatka Peninsula. Two Su-15 Flagon interceptors, scrambled from Dolinsk-Sokol airbase.

Timeline of attack:

  • 17:53 GMT - First documented order for shootdown. General Anatoli Kornukov, Commander of Sokol Air base on Sakhalin to the command post of General Valeri Kamenski, Commander of Air Defense Forces for the Far East Military District, “…simply destroy [it] even if it is over neutral waters? Are the orders to destroy it over neutral waters? Oh, well.” [8]
  • 18:15 GMT - "KE007 requested FL [flight level] 350 [35,000 feet]"[9].
  • 18:20 GMT - "Tokyo Radio transmitted the clearance for the aircraft to climb to this level[9].
  • 1`8:22:40-55 GMT - As power is diverted from velocity to lift, KAL 007 decreases speed and Maj. Ospiovich in his Su-15 draws abeam of the target. He will drop back and behind to fire the missiles. Lt. Col. Titovnin (Combat Controller): "805, open fire on target". Maj. Osipovich: "It should have been earlier. How can I chase it? I’m already abeam of the target". Titovnin: "Roger, if possible, take up a position for attack". Osipovich: "Now I have to fall back a bit from the target"..
  • 18:23 GMT - "KE007 reported reaching FL 350" [9].
  • 18:24 GMT - KAL 007 is seen by Gen. Kornukov about to successfully leave Soviet air space. Gen. Kornukov: "Oh, [obsenities] how long [does it take him] to attack position, he is already going out into neutral waters. Engage afterburner immmediately. Bring in the MiG 23 as well...While you are wasting time, it will fly right out." [10]
  • 18:26 GMT - Major Gennadie Osipovich, pilot of the lead aircraft, fired 120 rounds of ammunition in four 30-round bursts from his cannon. The lack of tracers made them invisible to the 747, which continued on its course[11]. Moments later he fired a missile which exploded 50 meters behind KAL 007, the elevator cross over cable was either severed or unraveled causing an arc upward of one minute and 13 seconds - from 35,000 ft. to 38,250 ft. and down again to below 35,000. Captain Chun then brought KAL 007, pulling up for 10 seconds, out of a sharp descent back to 35,000 ft.,[12]
  • 18:26 GMT - Major Gennadie Osipovich, lead Soviet pilot, mistakenly (as subsequent Russian real-time military telecommunications show) reports: "The target is destroyed." [13].
  • 18:26 GMT - Immediate Soviet awareness that target is not destroyed. Lt. Col Novoseltski: "Well, what is happening, what is the matter, who guided him in, he locked on, why didn't he shoot it down?" [14]
  • 18:26:08 GMT - Captain Chun yells, "Retard throttles." First Officer Son responds, "Engines normal, sir." Indicating that Maj. Osipovich's heat seeking missile did not destroy any of the 4 engines. Son will again report engines normal at 18:26:45[15]
  • 18:26:46 GMT - Captain Chun of KAL 007 was able to turn off the autopilot and take manual control[16]. "Emergency procedures call for saying 'Mayday' three times, followed by other information about the nature of the emergency ... The cockpit crew should have continued broadcasting until the last possible moment to help lead rescuers to the plane's location" [17].
  • 18:27:10 - 18:27:25 GMT - "Tokyo Radio received a partly intelligible transmission from KE007. After extensive analysis and filtering of noise, the following words were discernible: Korean Air zero zero seven ... (unintelligible) ... rapid compressions ... (unintelligible) ... descending to one zero thousand [10,000 feet]."[18].
  • 18:28 GMT - KAL 007 makes its first post-detonation deviation from flight path by turning to the north. Lt. Gerasimienko: "The target turned to the north." Gen. Kornukov: "The target turned to the north?" Gerasimienko: "Affirmative." Kornukov: "Bring the 23 [MiG] in to destroy it!" [19]
  • 18:29:13 GMT - The Soviet pilots unsuccessfully try to locate the wreckage of KAL 007 stating: "I don't see it."[20]
  • 18:29:54 GMT - Another Soviet pilot says of their target: "No I don't see it."[20].
  • 18:30 GMT - KAL 007 was reported by radar at 5,000 meters (16,424 feet)[21].
  • 18:33 GMT - KAL 007 is seen by Soviet radar at 5,000 meters at intial stage of spiral descent over Moneron Island. Lt. Col. Gerasimenko. "Altitude of target is 5,000." General Kornukov: "5,000 already?" Gerasimenko (18:34): "Affirmative, turning left, right, apparently it is descending."[22]
  • 18:34 GMT - Last recorded location of KAL 007 in spiral descent over Moneron Island is within Soviet territorial waters. "Where is it now", "It is in the Moneron area", "In our territory?", "Affirmative" [23]
  • 18:35 GMT - KAL 007 begins spiral descent over Moneron Island after having attained level flight for almost 5 minutes "The last plotted radar position of the target was 18:35 hours at 5,000 meters."[24]
  • 18:36 - General Kornukov:"...you know the range, where the target is. It is over Moneron..."[25]
  • 18:38 GMT - KAL 007 disappeared from the radar screen (approximately 12 minutes after the initial attack)[21].. Soviet radar personnel stationed at Komsomolsk-na-Amura on the Siberian maritime reported KAL 007 disappearing from radar screen at 18:38 at 1,000 ft. altitude due to radar inability to track below that altitude. A free fall from 35,000 feet would take a similar aircraft approximately 2 minutes[26].
  • 18:38:37 GMT - The first Soviet Pilot reiterates: "I don't see anything in this area. I just looked." With fuel running low the Soviet jets return to their base without sighting the remains of their target[20].
  • 18:47 GMT - First Soviet SAR mission: involving the KGB Border Guard boats and rescue helicopters (Khomutovo air base). " Lt. Col. Novoseltski: prepare whatever helicopters there are . Rescue helicopters. Lt. Col. Titovnin:Rescue? Lt. Col. Novoseltski: Yes..." [27]
  • 18:55 GMT - Second SAR mission: in addition to the borderguards and helicopters, civilian ships "near" Moneron were sent to Moneron itself. General Strogov (Deputy Commander oif Far East Military District): "The border guards. What ships do we have near Moneron Island, if they are civilian. send [them] there immediately." [28]

    Crash Scene

    According to the ICAO: "The location of the main wreckage was not determined ... The approximate position was 46°34′N 141°17'E, which was in international waters." This point is about 41 miles from Moneron Island and about 45 miles from the shore of Sakhalin 33 miles from the point of attack[29]

    It was reported at the time that "Russian naval and air search units ... have barred the U.S. and Japanese search forces from the exact area where the 747 is believed to have crashed, even though that spot is beyond the 12-mi. territorial limit from Sakhalin Island." [30]

    The following had been recovered by September 20, 1983 (nearly three weeks after the incident):

    • Aircraft Debris: 503 (449 by Japan and 54 by the Soviet Union);
    • Victim Belongings: 345 (323 by Japan and 22 by the Soviet Union);
    • Suitcases: 0[31]
    • Human Remains: 13 body parts and tissues (13 by Japan and 0 the Soviet Union) including 2 torsos; [32][33]

    Six days later, the Soviets turned over another non-human 76 items.[34] On December 19, 1983, the Soviets surrendered yet another 83 small items, bringing the total of all items recovered to 1,020 [35] Life magazine reported: "The Russians picked up 18 articles of clothing and sent them to Japan -- but only after having them drycleaned."[36]

    In 1991 Izvestia published a series of interviews with civilian divers who had visited the wreckage of KAL 007 and the resting place of its 269 passengers and crew on the ocean floor near Moneron Island starting 7 days after the shootdown. From Captain Mikhail Igorevich Girs’ diary: "Submergence 10 October. Aircraft pieces, wing spars, pieces of aircraft skin, wiring, and clothing. But—no people. The impression is that all of this has been dragged here by a trawl rather than falling down from the sky". "So we were ready to encounter a virtual cemetery. But one submergence went by, then the second, and then the third... During the entire rather lengthy period of our work near Moneron, I and my people had maybe ten encounters with the remains of Boeing passengers. No more than that."[37]

    A comparable 747 crash on June 23, 1985, Air India Flight 182 with 329 passengers onboard, yielded: 131 bodies in 2 days[38][39] and many huge pieces of the airliner (about four tons in all)[40]. Nearly three weeks after that incident, the in-flight voice recorder and in-flight data recorder were retrieved [41]

    Early Reports

    On September 1, 1983, the New York Times noted: "Early reports said the plane ... had been forced down by Soviet Air Force planes and that all 240 passengers and 29 crew members were believed to be safe."[42] "Korean Foreign Ministry officials cited the United States Central Intelligence Agency as the source for the report that the plane had been forced down on Sakhalin, but American officials in Seoul, Tokyo and Washington said they could not confirm or deny that report." The informant reported that "the plane had landed at Sakhalin. The crew and passengers are safe." [43].

    Aviation Week & Space Technology for September 5, 1983, reported that Korean Air Lines had sent another aircraft "to pick up the passengers and bring them to South Korea." [44]

    Investigations

    Initial ICAO report

    Map showing the divergence of planned and actual flightpaths

    The initial International Civil Aviation Organization investigation into KAL 007 was not given access to the Flight Data Recorder (FDR) or the Cockpit Voice Recorder (CFR) but rather transcripts of the CFR. The ICAO released their initial report August 31, 1983, which concluded that the violation of Soviet airspace was accidental: The autopilot had been set to heading hold after departing Anchorage. It was determined that the crew did not notice this error or subsequently perform navigational checks that would have revealed that the aircraft was diverging further and further from its assigned route. This was later deemed to be caused by a "lack of situational awareness and flight deck coordination".[16]

    According to a U.S. Department of State transcript of the shoot down reported by the New York Times,[45] the pilot who shot the plane, Gennady Osipovich, stated that he fired multiple bursts from his cannon prior to releasing the two missiles.[46] The pilot admitted there were no tracers, and these shots could not have been seen by the KAL 007 crew. The Soviets officially maintained that they had attempted radio contact with the airliner and that KAL 007 failed to reply. No other aircraft or ground monitors covering those emergency frequencies at the time reported hearing any such Soviet radio calls. The Soviet pilot reported that KAL 007 was flashing navigation lights, which should have suggested that the plane was civilian. In 1996, Osipovich indicated that he knew KAL 007 was a Boeing: "I saw two rows of windows and knew that this was a Boeing. I knew this was a civilian plane. But for me this meant nothing. It is easy to turn a civilian type of plane into one for military use."[47] The United States used RC-135s to spy on Russia, and, according to Osipovich, he feared that the plane could have been an RC-135. [7]

    Revised ICAO report

    On November 18, 1992 Russian President Boris Yeltsin released both the FDR and CVR of KAL 007 to South Korean President Roh Tae-woo. Initial South Korean research showed the FDR to be empty and the CVR to have an unintelligible copy. The Russians then released the "original recordings" to the ICAO. The ICAO Report continued to support the initial assertion that KAL 007 accidentally flew in Soviet airspace,[16] after listening to the flight crew's conversations recorded by the CVR.

    American reaction

    US President Ronald Reagan condemned the shoot down on September 5, 1983, calling it the "Korean airline massacre," a "crime against humanity [that] must never be forgotten" and an "act of barbarism … [and] inhuman brutality."[46] In an act that surprised many within the US intelligence community, the US delegation to the United Nations played tapes of intercepted communications between Soviet fighter pilots and their ground control. While not publicly claimed, it is almost certain that these communications were originally encrypted.[46]

    And make no mistake about it; this attack was not just against ourselves or the Republic of Korea. This was the Soviet Union against the world and the moral precepts which guide human relations among people everywhere. It was an act of barbarism, born of a society which wantonly disregards individual rights and the value of human life and seeks constantly to expand and dominate other nations. They deny the deed, but in their conflicting and misleading protestations, the Soviets reveal that, yes, shooting down a plane—even one with hundreds of innocent men, women, children, and babies—is a part of their normal procedure if that plane is in what they claim as their airspace. [48]

    On September 15, President Reagan ordered the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to revoke the license of Aeroflot Soviet Airlines to operate flights into and out of the United States. As a result, Aeroflot flights to North America were only available through cities in Canada or Mexico. Aeroflot service to the United States was not restored until April 29, 1986.[49]

    The US ambassador to the United Nations, Jeane Kirkpatrick, commissioned an audio-visual presentation in the Security Council using tapes of the Soviet radio conversations and a map of the plane's flight path to depict the shoot-down as savage and unjustified. Alvin A. Snyder, producer of the video, later revealed in a September 1, 1996 article in the Washington Post that he was given only selected portions of the tape of the Soviet military conversation that led to the downing of the aircraft.

    Airway R20 (Romeo 20), the flight path that Korean Air Flight 007 was supposed to fly, which came within 17 miles of Soviet airspace at its closest point, was closed after the accident on September 2. This reflected shock, and the need to reassure the public. However, pilots and airlines fiercely resisted and the route was reopened on October 2. More significantly, the US decided to utilize military radars, extending the radar coverage from Anchorage from 200 to 1200 miles. These radars had been used in 1968 to alert Seaboard World Airlines Flight 253 in a similar situation. R. W. Johnson writes in his 1986 book Shootdown: "The question of why these radars were not used to alert 007 remains."[50]As a result of this incident, Ronald Reagan announced that the Global Positioning System (GPS) would be made available for civilian uses once completed.[51]

    Soviet version

    The Soviet Government expressed its "regret over the death of innocent victims", but laid the blame for this "criminal, provocative act" on the CIA.[52]

    Soviet authorities argued that:

    Today, when all versions have been viewed from all possible angles, when leading specialists, including pilots who have flown Boeings for thousands of hours, have declared that three computers could not break down all at once and neither could five radio transmitters, there can be no doubt as to the intentions of the intruder plane.
    The Soviet pilots who intercepted the aircraft could not have known that it was a civilian plane. It was flying without the navigation lights, in conditions of poor visibility and did not respond to radio signals.[53]

    According to the Soviet line, the airliner was clearly on a spy mission as it "flew deep into Soviet territory for several hundred kilometres, without responding to signals and disobeying the orders of interceptor fighter planes."[54]

    The purpose of this alleged mission was to probe Soviet air defenses over the highly sensitive military sites on the Kamchatka Peninsula and Sakhalin Island.[55]

    Controversy

    Flight 007 has been the subject of ongoing controversy in America and has spawned a number of conspiracy theories, including allegations that the flight was a spy mission.[56][57] One of these theories was that Space Shuttle Challenger and a satellite were monitoring the airliners progress over Soviet territory. Time magazine, which printed this claim, was sued by Korean Air Lines and forced to pay damages as well as print an apology.[58]

    The controversy has continued. In 1994, Robert W Allardyce and James Gollin wrote Desired Track: The Tragic Flight of KAL Flight 007, supporting the spy mission theory.[59] In 2007, they reiterated their position in a series of articles in Airways magazine, arguing that the investigation by the International Civil Aviation Organization was a cover-up.[60]

    In January 1996, Hans Ephraimson, Chairman of the American Association for Families of KAL 007 Victims, claimed that South Korean President Chun Doo-hwan accepted $4 million from Korean Air in order to gain "government protection" during the investigation of the shootdown. [61]

    Cold War context

    The Flight 007 shootdown occurred in the context of heightened Cold War tensions related to the Soviet war in Afghanistan and the confrontational strategy of the newly elected Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher.

    1983 saw at least two incidents in which Soviet forces apparently believed nuclear attack was imminent: the false alarm on September 24 allegedly quashed by Stanislav Petrov and the Able Archer NATO exercise in November.

    • Two television movies were produced about the incident; both films were produced before the fall of the Soviet Union allowed access to archives:
      • Shootdown (1988), starring Angela Lansbury, John Cullum, and Kyle Secor, was based on the book of the same title by R.W. Johnson, about the efforts of Nan Moore (Lansbury), the mother of a passenger, to get answers from the US and Russian governments.
      • The British Granada Television documentary drama Coded Hostile, screened on 7 September 1989, detailed the US military and governmental investigation, highlighting the likely confusion of Flight 007 with the USAF RC-135 in the context of routine US SIGINT/COMINT missions in the area. Written by Brian Phelan and directed by David Darlow, it starred Michael Murphy, Michael Moriarty, and Chris Sarandon. It was screened by HBO in the United States under the title Tailspin - Behind the Korean Airliner Tragedy on 20 August 1989. An updated version of Coded Hostile was screened in the UK on 31 August 1993, incorporating details of the 1992 UN investigation.
    • A documentary from Unsolved History, a program of Discovery Channel, featured this incident.
    • The song "Murder in the Skies" by Gary Moore on his album Victims of the Future (1983) retells the incident.
    • The song "The Ballad of Flight 007" by Gerald R. Griffin (1983) recounts the story from both a personal and political perspective.
    • The drama "Light of Million Hopes" (In Chinese 萬家燈火), produced by Asia Television Limited (ATV) Hong Kong, a role named "Go Lai" (starred by Joey Meng 萬綺雯) was killed in during a "1983 Korean flight shot downed by Soviet". However in the drama the flight was flying from Japan to Korea, while KAL 007 was a US to Korea flight.

    See also

    References

    1. ^ Air Disaster.com entry
    2. ^ a b Doerner, William R, Ed Magnuson. "Atrocity In the Skies," Time. 5.
    3. ^ a b Doerner, William R, Ed Magnuson. "Atrocity In the Skies," Time. 4.
    4. ^ Farber, Stephen. "TELEVISION; Why Sparks Flew in Retelling the Tale of Flight 007," The New York Times. Published November 27, 1988. Accessed January 4, 2008
    5. ^ http://www.townhall.com/columnists/MaryKatharineHam/2005/10/17/book_review_heres_where_i_stand
    6. ^ Farber, Stephen. "TELEVISION; Why Sparks Flew in Retelling the Tale of Flight 007," The New York Times. Published November 27, 1988. Accessed January 4, 2008
    7. ^ a b "Korean Air Disaster," Unsolved History
    8. ^ ICAO "93, Information Paper No.1, 101
    9. ^ a b c ICAO Report, Appendix D, page D-3
    10. ^ ICAO '93, Information Paper 1., pg. 130
    11. ^ New York Times, September 12th, 1983, pg.1
    12. ^ ICAO '93, Bureau- Enquetes - Paris [ICAO subcontract], Chart 8, Pg. 93
    13. ^ ICAO Report, Appendix D, page D-3
    14. ^ ICAO ;93, Information paper No. 1, pg. 88
    15. ^ http://aviation-safety.net/investigation/cvr/transcripts/cvr_ke007.php
    16. ^ a b c http://www.icao.int/cgi/goto_m.pl?icao/en/trivia/kal_flight_007.htm Summary of the 1993 second ICAO report of KAL 007 shoot down. Cite error: The named reference "ICAO 2" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
    17. ^ David Pearson and John Keppel, The Nation for August 17/August 24, 1985
    18. ^ ICAO Report page 43
    19. ^ ICAO'93, Information Paper No. 1. pg. 132
    20. ^ a b c ICAO Report, Appendix D, pages D-3 and D-4
    21. ^ a b Secretary of State George Shultz, press briefing on the morning of September 1, 1983
    22. ^ ICAO '93, Information Paper No. 1, pg. 156
    23. ^ ICAO '93, Information Paper No.1, pg. 156
    24. ^ ICAO 1993, pg. 53, para. 2.15.8
    25. ^ ICAO, 1993, Information Paper No. 1, pg. 136.
    26. ^ Deseret News (Salt Lake City), February 20, 1985: China Airlines jumbo jet
    27. ^ (ICAO, '93, Information Paper no. 1., pg. 93)
    28. ^ (ICAO, '93, Information Papes No. 1., pages 95,96)
    29. ^ ICAO Report, page 28
    30. ^ Aviation Week & Space Technology, September 12, 1983
    31. ^ Franz Kadell, The KAL 007 Massacre
    32. ^ South Korean investigative committee
    33. ^ ICAO Report, Appendix G, page G-16.
    34. ^ ICAO Report, Page G-20
    35. ^ Franz A. Kadell, The KAL 007 Massacre, pages 280-281
    36. ^ Life magazine for January 1984, page 100
    37. ^ Izvestiya, May 28, 1991, p. 8.
    38. ^ AP dispatch, Salt Lake Tribune, June 24, 1985
    39. ^ UPI dispatch, Salt Lake Tribune, June 25, 1985
    40. ^ UPI dispatch, Deseret News, July 12, 1985
    41. ^ AP dispatch, Deseret News, July 11, 1985
    42. ^ September 1, 1983, the New York Times
    43. ^ Michel Brun, Incident at Sakhalin: The True Mission of KAL 007, p. 5, ISBN: 1-56858-054-1; independent confirmation, confidential sources, Seoul Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    44. ^ Aviation Week & Space Technology for September 5, 1983
    45. ^ New York Times, September 12th, 1983, pg.1
    46. ^ a b c [1] CIA monograph of US/Soviet relations around 1983
    47. ^ New York Times interview, September 9, 1996
    48. ^ Transcript of Reagan's speech from the University of Texas
    49. ^ Timeline of US/Russian relations from the US Embassy in Moscow http://moscow.usembassy.gov/links/history.php
    50. ^ Johnson, R. W. (1986). Shootdown: Flight 007 and the American Connection. New York, N.Y: Viking. pp. 81–82, 277. ISBN 0-670-81209-9.
    51. ^ History of GPS from usinfo.state.gov
    52. ^ "The Truth and Lies about the South Korean Airliner", Sputnik: A Digest of the Soviet Press, December 1983, p 9.
    53. ^ "The Truth and Lies about the South Korean Airliner", Sputnik: A Digest of the Soviet Press, December 1983, p 9.
    54. ^ "The Truth and Lies about the South Korean Airliner", Sputnik: A Digest of the Soviet Press, December 1983, p 11.
    55. ^ "The Truth and Lies about the South Korean Airliner", Sputnik: A Digest of the Soviet Press, December 1983, p 10.
    56. ^ Fallout from Flight 007 Time magazine, Monday, Sep. 10, 1984 By ED MAGNUSON
    57. ^ Fallout from Flight 007 page 2, Time magazine, Monday, Sep. 10, 1984 By ED MAGNUSON
    58. ^ Backing Down on Flight 007 Time magazine, Monday, Dec. 03, 1984
    59. ^ [http://www.planesafe.org/books/desiredtrack.shtml DESIRED TRACK The Tragic Flight of KAL Flight 007 (1994) by Robert W Allardyce & James Gollin]
    60. ^ Flight KAL007: The Anatomy of a Cover-up by Robert W Allardyce & James Gollin
    61. ^ "Korean Bribe Rekindles Flight 007 Issues," The New York Times

    Further reading

    • Bamford, James (1983). The Puzzle Palace. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-006748-5.
    • Brun, Michael (1996). Incident at Sakhalin: The True Mission of KAL Flight 007. Four Walls Eight Windows. ISBN 1-56858-054-1. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
    • Clubb, Oliver (1985). KAL Flight 007: The Hidden Story. The Permanent Press. ISBN 0-932966-59-4.
    • Dallin, Alexander (1985). Black Box: KAL 007 and the Superpowers. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-05515-2.
    • Gollin, James (1994). Desired Track. American Vision Publishing. ISBN 1-883868-01-7. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
    • Grady, William P. (2005). "KAL 007". Understanding the Times - Volume One: How Satan Turned America From God. Grady Publications. pp. pp. 504-570. ISBN 0-9628809-3-0. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
    • Hersh, Seymour M. (1987). "The Target Is Destroyed": What Really Happened to Flight 007. Vintage. ISBN 0-394-75527-8.
    • Johnson, R. W. (1986). Shootdown: Flight 007 and the American Connection. Viking Penguin. ISBN 0-670-81209-9.
    • Kirkpatrick, Jeane Jordan (1988). "KAL-007: Violating the Norms of Civil Conduct". Legitimacy and Force. Transaction, Inc. pp. pp. 374-375. ISBN 0-88738-100-6. Retrieved 2007-07-27. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
    • Luttwak, Edward N. (1985). "Delusions of Soviet Weakness". Strategy and History. Transaction, Inc. pp. pp. 241-243. ISBN 0-88738-065-4. Retrieved 2007-07-27. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
    • Pearson, David E. (1987). KAL 007: The Cover-Up. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-55716-5.
    • Pry, Peter Vincent (1999). "The KAL Crisis, September 1983". War Scare: Russia and America on the Nuclear Brink. Praeger Publishers. pp. pp. 27-31. ISBN 0-275-96643-7. Retrieved 2007-07-27. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
    • Rohmer, Richard (1984). Massacre 007: The Story of the Korean Air Lines Flight 007. Hodder Headline Australia. ISBN 0340364475.
    • "Secrets of the Black Box: KAL 007". The History Channel. 2006.
    • Snyder, Alvin (1995). Warriors of Disinformation. Arcade Publishing. ISBN 1-55970-389-X.
    • St. John, Jeffrey (1984). Day of the Cobra: The True Story of KAL Flight 007. Thomas Nelson. ISBN 0-8407-5381-0.
    • Sypher, Richard (2002). Death of Flight 007. Think Publishing. ISBN 1891098055.
    • Takahashi, Akio (1985). Truth Behind KAL Flight 007. Apt Books. ISBN 0865907870.
    • Woodson, Frank (2000). The Last Flight of 007 (Take Ten: Disaster). Artesian Press. ISBN 1586590251.