When will they admit Diego Garcia military base shot down Flight MH370? | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 20684689 United States 07/31/2015 06:07 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 58992787 United Kingdom 07/31/2015 06:30 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Got any evidence for your wild speculation? No? Thought not. Just add it to all the hundreds of other conspiracy theories about the disappearance of this plane. It's not good enough to propose a possible explanation to a mystery. You need to provide supporting evidence. And you don't. |
MatangLawin (OP) User ID: 34213048 United States 07/31/2015 07:08 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Really? The evidence has been staring at us right in the face for more than a year now. FACT: The plane's electrical systems were rebooted as it was flying near the northern areas of Singapore and Malaysian airspace. Also fact - if you ever wanted to disable a plane's transponder, you can either physically disable it, or shut it down by rebooting the plane's electrical systems. FACT: Villagers in the southern part of Maldives reported seeing a large passenger plane flying very low close to their island(s). FACT: Just happens that those southern Maldives isles are just a little over a 1000 km away from Diego Garcia. FACT: The lead pilot had flight and landing simulations for Diego Garcia on his home computer. He had tried to delete them, but investigators were able to recover them. The telemetry and search "data" provided to search parties came from the U.S. What better way to cover up the evidence of a shoot-down and lead all concerned away from the actual crash site near Diego Garcia than to POINT to the western Australian portion of the Indian Ocean. Needless to say, searches in the latter have proven to be fruitless. Diego Garcia has electronic communications and monitoring facilities powerful enough to capture DEEP SPACE comms, for goodness sake. It's a transit hub for B-1, B-52 and B-2 bomber missions by the U.S. Air Force, as well as a depot and service hub for U.S. ship and nuclear submarines. The Diego Garcia base is one of only a handful of locations equipped with a Ground-based Electro-Optical Deep Space Surveillance system for tracking objects in deep space. Given the levels of sophistication of these observation technologies, it is highly unlikely that the MH370 flight could have travelled unnoticed over a large span of the Indian Ocean. AND YET, no-one in the mainstream media has asked, or questioned, or demanded the U.S. military turn over all radar, radio and telemetry data on the day that Flight MH370 disappeared? Sir Tim Clark, a Knight Commander of the British Empire, a respected aviation industry titan, and current CEO of Emirates, one of the world's most respected airlines, has himself expressed serious doubts about how MH370 could've just disappeared so suddenly without a trace. [link to www.news.com.au] |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 68445972 Chile 07/31/2015 07:19 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
MatangLawin (OP) User ID: 34213048 United States 07/31/2015 07:38 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Hidden hijackers or not, the plane had to have made a low-level-flying attack attempt on Diego Garcia. A good number of B-1 and B-52 bombing missions over Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria are made possible only by basing, refueling and re-arming stops at Diego Garcia. The jihadists know this, so a blow against this important military installation would have not only propaganda value, but also tactical and strategic value as well. It would have been a palpable hit against one of the U.S.'s main heavy bomber service hubs in the Indian Ocean. |
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