Korean Airlines flight shot down by Soviet Union
Soviet jet fighters intercept a Korean Airlines passenger
flight in Russian airspace and shoot the plane down, killing 269 passengers and
crew-members. The incident dramatically increased tensions between the Soviet
Union and the United States.
On September 1, 1983, Korean Airlines (KAL) flight 007 was on
the last leg of a flight from New York City to Seoul, with a stopover in
Anchorage, Alaska. As it approached its final destination, the plane began to
veer far off its normal course. In just a short time, the plane flew into
Russian airspace and crossed over the Kamchatka Peninsula, where some
top-secret Soviet military installations were known to be located. The Soviets
sent two fighters to intercept the plane. According to tapes of the conversations
between the fighter pilots and Soviet ground control, the fighters quickly
located the KAL flight and tried to make contact with the passenger jet.
Failing to receive a response, one of the fighters fired a heat-seeking
missile. KAL 007 was hit and plummeted into the Sea of Japan. All 269 people on
board were killed.
This was not the first time a South Korean flight had run
into trouble over Russia. In 1978, the Soviets forced a passenger jet down over
Murmansk; two passengers were killed during the emergency landing. In its first
public statement concerning the September 1983 incident, the Soviet government
merely noted that an unidentified aircraft had been shot down flying over
Russian territory. The United States government reacted with horror to the
disaster. The Department of State suggested that the Soviets knew the plane was
an unarmed civilian passenger aircraft. President Ronald Reagan called the
incident a “massacre” and issued a statement in which he declared that the
Soviets had turned “against the world and the moral precepts which guide human
relations among people everywhere.” Five days after the incident, the Soviets
admitted that the plane had indeed been a passenger jet, but that Russian
pilots had no way of knowing this. A high ranking Soviet military official
stated that the KAL flight had been involved in espionage activities. The
Reagan administration responded by suspending all Soviet passenger air service
to the United States, and dropped several agreements being negotiated with the
Soviets.
Despite the heated public rhetoric, many Soviets and American
officials and analysts privately agreed that the incident was simply a tragic
misunderstanding. The KAL flight had veered into a course that was close to one
being simultaneously flown by a U.S. spy plane; perhaps Soviet radar operators
mistook the two. In the Soviet Union, several of the military officials
responsible for air defense in the Far East were fired or demoted. It has never
been determined how the KAL flight ended up nearly 200 miles off course.
https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/korean-airlines-flight-shot-down-by-soviet-union
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.