Kenny wrote:Did anyone watch this last night?
I thought it was fascinating and still sends a tingle down my spine
pbeardmore wrote:On another note, why is it that transponders can be turned off? Why would you not want them on all of the time?
pbeardmore wrote:
On another note, why is it that transponders can be turned off? Why would you not want them on all of the time?
Sussexlad wrote:pbeardmore wrote:
On another note, why is it that transponders can be turned off? Why would you not want them on all of the time?
I think the point the programme was trying to make was that the hijackers could have turned the transponder off or forced the crew to.
pbeardmore wrote:Good point re the transponder,
re hindsight, is it unreasonable to expect to have a plan in place for a highjacked airliner within US airspace? and, as soon as a hijack is established, the plan is put into operation. Obviously , no plan works perfectly and there is always room to learn, but it was the lack of a plan from the start that I found surprising.
Documentary exploring a 2006 terror plot that aimed to detonate bombs simultaneously on several US airliners departing from Heathrow, which if successful could have killed more than 2,000 people. The programme reconstructs the MI5 investigation that prevented the attack, and reveals how American intervention forced British security services to make premature arrests that might have jeopardised the operation. Featuring interviews with the then home secretary John Reid, former US Homeland Security secretary Michael Chertoff and Michael Hayden, former head of the CIA.
Users browsing this forum: elderforest, MicrolightDriver, PeterR and 12 guests