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Wednesday, March 19, 2014

MISSING #MH370: Retired Lt. Col. Thomas McInerney Says Plane Landed in Pakistan

Last week, retired United States Air Force Gen. Thomas McInerney speculated that the missing Malaysian passenger airliner had been flown to South Asia where it could be used as a delivery vehicle for nuclear explosives by terrorist actors.

On Tuesday, McInerney repeated the claim on Hannity:
“I think we’re going to see in the next 24 to 48 hours that the Malaysian government may break it. The Pakistani government isn’t saying anything. And why should they? Because it means they’re complicit.”

6 comments:

  1. BREAKING: On board missing Malaysian #MH370 were 20 ppl who worked for an electronic warfare & military radar firm.

    https://twitter.com/TarekFatah

    ReplyDelete
  2. via Vlad: Missing Malaysia MH370: Search planes grounded by ‘red tape’

    (Video at source)

    18 March 2014 Last updated at 12:17 GMT The aerial search for missing Malaysia Airlines MH370 flight has been hampered by refusal from Indonesia to let planes overfly their territory.

    ****

    God help me, I cannot help but imagine the worst about this administration. Convinced this administration is aware of a lot more detail than they have revealed, it begins to smell of complicit involvement.

    Considering the lack of accountability within this administration for blood spilled due to Fast&Furious gun running, Fort Hood scandal, Benghazi setup, US involvement in Arab Spring, Extortion 17, Samantha Powers' expressed desire to invade Israel, etc. this administration's clear move away from support for Israel's independence in conjunction with it's full throttled support for the Muslim Brotherhood, this administration's silence appears to be the proverbial wink and a nod for what is potentially in store for the enemies of Islam.


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  3. Why didn't missing Malaysian jet passengers use their cell phones?


    Phone records under investigation


    "Malaysia Airline chief executive Ahmad Jauhari Yahya said on Monday there was no evidence of any attempt by the people on board to make calls, but he added that "millions of records" needed to be processed. "
    "For mobile phones to be used, there must be a contact between the handset and the network - known as a "handshake". This requires a strong enough signal from both a transmission tower and the phone."

    "Even if nobody on board the plane tried to make a call, logs of the "handshakes" might provide some clues about the route taken by the jet after it disappeared."

    ReplyDelete
  4. Apparently, even the FBI consider the deleted files worthy of further investigation:

    via ABCNews: FBI Examining Malaysia Airline Pilot's Flight Simulator

    more specifically:

    via: TheGuardian: FBI asked to help retrieve pilot’s deleted flight simulator data


    • US investigators in Quantico, Virginia, were examining “hard drives belonging to [the] two pilots”, CNN reported. Malaysian officials said some material had been deleted from a flight simulator used by the pilot.

    • MH370 may not have used waypoints to navigate after losing contact with ground control, Malaysia’s defense minister suggested, contradicting a Reuters report last week.

    ReplyDelete