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In article , Jim Logajan says...
(Henry Spencer) wrote: In a combat zone, by international law, the onus is on civilians to identify themselves to military forces. The civilian flight crew in this case used all possible and internationally known means of making themselves known. It was the Vincennes, not the flight crew, who were culpable on this point: "Throughout its final flight IR655 was in radio contact with various air traffic control services using standard civil aviation frequencies, and had spoken in English to Bandar Abbas Approach Control seconds before the Vincennes launched its missiles. The Vincennes at that time had no equipment suitable for monitoring civil aviation frequencies, other than the International Air Distress frequency, despite being a sophisticated anti-aircraft warship."[1] So your assertion, even if true, does not appear relevant. Quite relevant. The legal requirement for someone who insists on flying a civil aircraft through an active combat zone, is to broadcast on Guard (i.e., the international air distress frequency), saying "For some strange reason, we want to fly our civil aircraft over your battlefield - please do not shoot us down." That's one of the things the frequency is for. If the crew of IR655 had met this legal requirement, their plane would probably not have been shot down. The crew of IR655 did not meet this legal requirement. Probably through incompetence or carelessness, not malice. And the crew of the Vincennes was also careless at very least and probably incompetent at the margin. But their carelessness and/or incompetence left them on the right side of the law, whereas that of the IR655 crew, and for that matter the Soviet air defense command in 1983, was criminal. Assuming anybody cares about trivialities like the law, which most people do not. -- *John Schilling * "Anything worth doing, * *Member:AIAA,NRA,ACLU,SAS,LP * is worth doing for money" * *Chief Scientist & General Partner * -13th Rule of Acquisition * *White Elephant Research, LLC * "There is no substitute * * for success" * *661-951-9107 or 661-275-6795 * -58th Rule of Acquisition * |
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John Schilling wrote:
The legal requirement for someone who insists on flying a civil aircraft through an active combat zone, is to broadcast on Guard (i.e., the international air distress frequency), saying "For some strange reason, we want to fly our civil aircraft over your battlefield - please do not shoot us down." That's one of the things the frequency is for. If the crew of IR655 had met this legal requirement, their plane would probably not have been shot down. The crew of IR655 did not meet this legal requirement. 1) You appear to be wrong with regard to frequency 121.5 - the flight was not required to transmit its intentions there. It was required to _monitor_ them, and history now shows that for reasons unknown the flight crew did not hear the challenges from the U.S. ships. (The problem of not hearing a challenge on 121.5 recently occurred in a recent violation of the ADIZ over Washington DC.) 1) There was no "strange reason" for the flight - it was a scheduled one and presumably should have been known to the Vincennes. 2) The aircraft's IFF transponder was transmitting the proper commercial flight code. 3) According to one reference I found (not authoritative, alas) the U.S. Navy's investigation found _no_ fault with any of the actions of the pilot of IR655. 4) Both a critic of Captain Rogers and Rogers himself "debate" the issue in reference [1]. (Rogers' section begins on page 14.) Rogers does not appear to address all of the accusations. Except for not hearing the challenges on 121.5, Captain Rezaian of IR655 did nothing wrong. The U.S. commanders and their ship's equipment and crew, on the other hand, appear to have made several (literally) fatal errors. Probably through incompetence or carelessness, not malice. And the crew of the Vincennes was also careless at very least and probably incompetent at the margin. But their carelessness and/or incompetence left them on the right side of the law, whereas that of the IR655 crew, and for that matter the Soviet air defense command in 1983, was criminal. Assuming anybody cares about trivialities like the law, which most people do not. There is the "triviality" of whether the Vincennes was legally in Iranian waters. If you care about such things. (In [1] Rogers claims he was rightfully there. Lt. Colonel Evans believes he wasn't.) There is no debate from me that the incident was a tragedy - the only reason I even bothered to post on this issue is because Henry Spencer attempted to deflect all blame toward the local ATC! No account I could find seems to have mentioned any routing issues or that ATC should have been aware of any running battle. [1] http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~nava201/VCS/vincennes.pdf |
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John Schilling wrote:
Quite relevant. The legal requirement for someone who insists on flying a civil aircraft through an active combat zone, is to broadcast on Guard (i.e., the international air distress frequency), saying "For some strange reason, we want to fly our civil aircraft over your battlefield - please do not shoot us down." That's one of the things the frequency is for. What determines an "active combat zone"? Is it actually the case that if one Iranian gunboat gets buzzed by a helicopter and fires warning shots back at it, and the helicopter's ship shoots back, all airliners in the area, despite not having surface search radar, squawking mode III, flying on commercial routes, not flying attack profiles, flying over their own country's waters, etc., are legally obliged to announce their presence over 121.5 lest they be shot down? If the crew of IR655 had met this legal requirement, their plane would probably not have been shot down. Unless the crew of the Vincennes said "I don't know where this Airbus is, but as soon as we shoot down this F-14 about to Silkworm us, we'll take a look." -jake |
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"Jake McGuire" wrote:
What determines an "active combat zone"? According to Captain Rogers "Counterbattery" rebuttal in reference [1], there was a NOTAM to air crews in the area: "Annex 10 to the Convention on International Civil Aviation, to party, provides that commercial aircraft "shall continuously guard the VHF emergency frequency 121.5 MHZ in areas or over routes where the possibility of interception of aircraft or other hazardous situations exist, and a requirement has been established by the appropriate authority." The International Civil Aviation Organization confirmed that the Strait of Hormuz in 1988 was such an area and that a Notice to Aviators Class I warning had been promulgated in September 1987 advising that "failure to respond to warnings could place aircraft at risk by U.S. defensive measures. ICAO confirmed that "since 16 September 1986, Iran Air flight crews operating in the Gulf area...required to monitor frequency 121.5 MHZ...at all times." [1] http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~nava201/VCS/vincennes.pdf |
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