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673 lines
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From: John Lepingwell <jwrlep@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu>
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I received a few expressions of interest in my KAL article, and I have
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received approval from the copyright holders for posting it on the
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sci.military newsgroup. I believe it is appropriate for this group,
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for while it is not completely technical, it does try to untangle the
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story as much as is possible. The second part, on the implications
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for theories as to why KAL was in Soviet airspace, is more
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controversial. While this may venture slightly out of sci.military's
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bounds I hope it does not do so too much.
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[I'll go with it since its very thorough and well documented,
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and it provides insight into Soviet air defense. --CDR]
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NEW SOVIET REVELATIONS ABOUT THE KAL-007 SHOOTDOWN
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John W.R. Lepingwell
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Department of Political Science
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University of Illinois at
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Urbana-Champaign
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361 Lincoln Hall
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702 S. Wright St
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Urbana, IL 61801
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Copyright 1991 RFE/RL Inc.
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[AUTHOR'S NOTE AND DISCLAIMER: This is a preliminary draft of an
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article published in "Report on the USSR" by the Radio Free
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Europe/Radio Liberty Research Institute. Any citations should be made
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to the final, published work, which appeared in "Report on the USSR"
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Vol. 3, Number 17 (April 26, 1991). This article is provided for the
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information of Internet and Usenet users who may not have ready access
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to "Report on the USSR." It is copyright 1991 by RFE/RL Inc, and this
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posting is not to be considered a repudiation of copyright rights.
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"Report on the USSR" is a weekly publication of the RFE/RL Research
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Institute that provides timely analysis of current affairs in the
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Soviet Union. It is only available by subscription. For information
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write to RFE/RL Inc, 1775 Broadway, New York, NY 10019.
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My disclaimer: I am an occasional contributer to "Report on the USSR"
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and a frequent reader of it. I do not, however, work for Radio
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Liberty or the U.S. Government. The opinions expressed in this
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article are solely those of the author, and do not reflect the views
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of RFE/RL Inc. or the U.S. government.
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N.B. This article was written in March 1991. There were no major
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developments between March and late May 1991 (the date of posting)
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that would lead me to reconsider the main arguments in the article.
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Unfortunately, Gorbachev did not address the issue in any detail
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during his trip to S. Korean in mid-April.]
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Despite the recent rollback in glasnost', the Soviet newspaper
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Izvestiya has published a remarkable series of articles on the
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shootdown of Korean Air Lines flight 007 in September 1983.1 The
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revelations in the series shed light on one of the most critical
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events in U.S.-Soviet relations of the past decade and resolve a
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number of questions concerning the shootdown. In general, the new
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Soviet reports tend to strengthen the argument that KAL-007 strayed
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accidentally into Soviet airspace, while weakening the claims that it
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was a deliberate intrusion.
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Background: Events and Interpretations
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There is little disagreement about the basic facts of the KAL
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tragedy. On September 1, 1983, a Korean Air Lines Boeing 747 deviated
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from its planned flightpath from Anchorage to Seoul by hundreds of
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miles, flying over the Kamchatka peninsula and then Sakhalin Island.2
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Soviet air defenses tracked KAL-007 over Kamchatka, finally intercepting
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it over Sakhalin Island, where it was shot down by a Soviet Su-15
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interceptor just before exiting Soviet airspace.
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Interpretations of the facts vary widely. The U.S. government
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maintained that KAL-007 had inadvertently strayed from its flightpath,
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that the Soviets had intercepted and identified the aircraft as a
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civilian airliner, and destroyed it nonetheless. According to the U.S.,
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the aircraft was not on an intelligence mission, and was not coordinated
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with other U.S. operations in the area that night.3 President Reagan
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called the shootdown a "barbaric act" and imposed limited sanctions on
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the Soviet Union.4 Several years later, however, the Reagan
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administration quietly backed away from its initial assertion that the
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Soviets had positively identified the aircraft as a civilian airliner,
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and admitted that the Soviets might have believed it was a U.S.
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reconnaissance aircraft.5
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The Soviet interpretation of the shootdown was very different. It
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emerged slowly, over a few days, but eventually stabilized into a
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detailed theory that laid the blame for the tragedy squarely on the
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United States. Soviet officials charged that the airliner was part of a
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deliberate "provocation" by the U.S. and South Korea, intended to force
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the Soviets to reveal valuable information about their Far Eastern
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defenses, and to provoke a new round in the cold war. According to this
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view, KAL-007 deliberately left its assigned flightpath, and in
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collaboration with a nearby U.S. RC-135 reconnaissance aircraft
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proceeded to penetrate Soviet airspace. Responding to this intrusion,
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the Soviet Air Defense Forces (Voyska protivovozdushnoy oborony--VPVO)
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activated their entire radar and communications network, allowing the
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U.S. to gain valuable intelligence.6
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A key component of the Soviet argument was that KAL-007 tried to
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evade Soviet air defenses, both by changing its flightpath to avoid
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surface-to-air missile (SAM) sites, and by taking evasive action when a
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Soviet interceptor tried to force the airliner to land. The standard
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Soviet account claimed that the aircraft was flying "blacked out"
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without its normal air navigation lights, that it was warned with tracer
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fire from the Soviet interceptor, and that it was repeatedly hailed
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(with no response) on the international emergency radio frequency. When
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the aircraft allegedly ignored the warnings and took evasive action, the
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Soviets decided to destroy it. According to the Soviet view, the KAL
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incident was provoked by the U.S., and particularly the CIA, and the
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U.S. should bear the responsibility for the deaths of the 269 people
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on board.
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Prompted by the apparent inconsistencies and unresolved questions
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in official versions of the event, several authors have published
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lengthy studies of the KAL-007 tragedy. Some of these studies have
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expounded theories suggesting that the KAL flight was the result of a
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conspiracy, rather than an accident or error.7 The evidence uncovered
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by the Izvestiya investigation undermines a number of previous Soviet
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assertions, and weakens the conspiracy theories. Among the revelations
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are the following:
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1) KAL-007's air navigation lights were on throughout the
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interception.
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2) The interceptor pilot did not fire tracer rounds to alert the
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KAL airliner, because his aircraft was armed with only armor-piercing
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rounds.
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3) The Soviets did locate the wreckage of the airliner, and
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mounted a campaign to keep U.S. forces away from the area.
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4) The "black boxes" containing cockpit voice recordings and
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flight data were found, and reportedly sent to Moscow for analysis.
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This information tends to confirm the argument that the KAL-007
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crew was unaware of the interception attempt. The implications of these
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revelations for a more complete and accurate understanding of the KAL
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tragedy are examined below.
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The Intercept and Shootdown
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It is often forgotten that the KAL-007 incident was the tragic
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culmination of a number of interceptions of unidentified aircraft in
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Soviet airspace. In earlier interceptions the standard rules of
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engagement were clear: intruders must be forced to land, or destroyed.
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In some instances these rules led to attacks on civilian aircraft as
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well as military aircraft that strayed into Soviet airspace.8 That this
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policy was a reaction to U.S. U-2 overflights in the 1950s is likely,
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but the fact that the policy remained in force until the late 1970s or
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early 1980s signals a preoccupation with security and defense of Soviet
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borders that seems far out of proportion to the threat posed by one
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aircraft.
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The background to the shootdown, then, is one of Soviet
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determination to prevent any incursion into Soviet airspace, combined
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with longstanding U.S. and NATO attempts to probe Soviet air defenses in
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an attempt to gain intelligence information.9
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Most of the revelations come from an Izvestiya interview with
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Gennadiy Nikolayevich Osipovich, the pilot of the Su-15 that shot down
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KAL-007.10 Osipovich confirms Hersh's assertion that VPVO forces in the
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Far East Military District were on high alert during the summer of 1983
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due to an April 1983 overflight of Zelenyy Island by U.S. aircraft.11
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After the intrusion, VPVO units were criticized for their laxity,
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further increasing tension. But despite this criticism, and the
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possibility of further air activity near the Kuriles, Soviet interceptor
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pilots were not provided with sufficient fuel to allow them to conduct
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air combat in the region, and return home. Their commanders were
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reportedly concerned that a full fuel load would allow pilots to reach
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Japan, raising the possibility of defection.12 Soviet pilots were
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warned that after air combat, they would be directed to a land area over
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which they could eject. This high alert level continued through the
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summer, but by late August the tension had diminished. Nevertheless,
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the pressure on the VPVO to react decisively against any intruder was
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very great.
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The restriction on aircraft range severely hampered Soviet
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interceptor operations against the KAL-007 flight. The initial Soviet
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interception of KAL-007 over the Kamchatka peninsula was broken off
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because the interceptor did not have sufficient fuel to follow the
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aircraft.13 But Soviet air defenses in the area were put on high alert
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levels, and remained on alert as KAL-007 left Soviet airspace over
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Kamchatka, and continued on a course for Sakhalin Island.
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Lieutenant Colonel Osipovich was the most experienced pilot on
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alert duty that night, and was ordered to his aircraft at 4:30 am local
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time, although he did not take off until approximately 6:00 am.14 This
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long time lag implies that Osipovich was alerted while KAL-007 was still
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over Kamchatka.15 In his interview, Osipovich noted that he was
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surprised to be alerted at that time of day, since RC-135 missions
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usually occurred after 11:00 am. Osipovich was presumably referring to
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the Rivet Joint RC-135 electronic intelligence missions, which were
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normally, but not always, conducted during daytime.16 The timing of the
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alert would therefore have been unusual, but not unprecedented.
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Nevertheless, it might have raised some questions not only amongst the
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pilots but the ground controllers and commanders as well.
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Osipovich's account of what happened that morning differs
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significantly from the Soviet reports of the time. Indeed, Osipovich
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was shown the transcript made by the U.S. of Soviet air to ground
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communications during the interception, and he confirmed their general
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accuracy.17 Soviet transcripts were reportedly "doctored" to conform
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with the official story, even though they were never released.18 In
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interviews immediately after the shootdown, Osipovich was told what to
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say, in order to bolster the Soviet case.19 In his interview with
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Izvestiya, Osipovich confirms that when he sighted the aircraft its air
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navigation lights were on, as alleged by the U.S. in its interpretation
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of the transcript. At Osipovich's range from KAL-007, the aircraft only
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appeared 2-3 centimeters across. In the dark this would have made
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visual identification extremely difficult.
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After making the intercept, KAL-007 and the interceptor entered a
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region where there was no ground-based radar coverage.20 This blind
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spot may have delayed the intercept, and perhaps forced the endgame to
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proceed at a more rapid pace.
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As KAL-007 crossed into Soviet airspace, and before any serious
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attempt to identify it had been made, Osipovich was ordered to destroy
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it. But before he could carry out the order, it was rescinded.21
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Instead, Osipovich was ordered to force the aircraft to land. Here, the
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divergence from the old Soviet story are striking. According to
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previous Soviet accounts, the Su-15 interceptor fired tracer rounds and
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tried to contact KAL-007 on the international emergency frequency.22 As
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Osipovich admits in his interview, he did neither. His aircraft was not
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armed with tracer rounds, but only armor-piercing shells that could not
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be observed. Nor did he try radio contact on the emergency frequency,
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because there was no time to do so, and he would have had to break off
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contact with his ground controller in order to tune to the emergency
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frequency.23
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Osipovich maintains that the KAL-007 crew saw his "flashing" but it
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is unclear from the interview whether Osipovich flashed his landing
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lights or simply was referring to his standard strobe and navigation
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lights. To see the Su-15's lights would have been difficult, since the
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interceptor was apparently below the aircraft at the time.24
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Osipovich's reason for asserting that the KAL crew saw his
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interceptor is that KAL-007 allegedly took evasive action, gaining
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altitude and slowing as it did so. This is a weak argument. First, it
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is unlikely that a 747 pilot would consider it possible to evade a
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highly maneuverable interceptor. Second, if the KAL pilot was
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attempting evasive action, his actions were quite mild. Osipovich makes
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no suggestion that the pilot engaged in more extreme maneuvers, other
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than a gradual climb of a few thousand feet. Presumably, a pilot
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concerned that he was under attack would "jink" and change course and
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altitude more dramatically. Third, the ascent to higher altitude
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appears to have been a fuel economy maneuver, and the copilot calmly
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reported the altitude change to Japanese air traffic control.25 In
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retrospect, it appears that Osipovich may have been "rationalizing" the
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aircraft's actions, reading intentionality into an action that may have
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been completely unrelated to the attempts at interception.
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Nevertheless, Osipovich became convinced, and remains convinced, that
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the KAL crew was trying to escape him.
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At no time during the interception did Osipovich identify the
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aircraft as a civilian airliner. He apparently was never closer than 2
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kilometers to KAL-007, and claims not to have been familiar with the
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silouhette of the 747. Osipovich recalls that only after firing two air
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to air missiles did he begin to wonder what kind of aircraft it was, for
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it seemed larger than an Ilyushin-76 (a large Soviet transport
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aircraft), and roughly resembled a Soviet Tu-16 bomber. An indicator of
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Osipovich's concern (if not confusion) is that his first question for
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his commander upon returning to base was whether he had downed a Soviet
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aircraft.26
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Osipovich confirms that the two missiles hit the aircraft on the
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left wing and rear fuselage. KAL-007 immediately began to lose
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altitude, and there seems to have been some confusion amongst the
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decisionmakers on the ground as to what was happening. Soviet ground
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controllers apparently ordered the MiG following Osipovich's aircraft to
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try and track KAL-007 on the way down, but the MiG pilot was unable to
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make visual contact.27
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The account of the interception thus matches that provided by the
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U.S. in many ways. The interception was clearly hurried, with the
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ground controllers uncertain as to what they were trying to intercept.
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The attempts to contact the crew of KAL-007 were performed hastily, and
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without much concern for their effectiveness. There is no evidence that
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Osipovich identified the "target" as a civilian aircraft. Hersh
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maintains that in 1983 the Soviets violated their own rules of
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engagement, requiring a positive identification of the aircraft before
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attack.28 Indeed, even had Osipovich identified the aircraft as
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civilian it is not certain that the Soviet response would have been any
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different. In 1978 a KAL airliner had been clearly identified as
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civilian, yet the pilot was ordered to destroy the aircraft.29
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Similarly, in the aftermath of the Rust affair, the tone of the articles
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implied that the VPVO's main error had been in not stopping the
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intrusion.30
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After the Shootdown: The Search for the Black Boxes
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In the wake of the tragedy, both the U.S. and Soviet Union mounted
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massive search operations in the Sea of Japan. The Izvestiya series
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discusses Soviet efforts to find the wreckage in some detail. The
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account states that the Soviet Navy did not have sufficient equipment
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and trained personnel, and had to rely on a ship, divers, and diving
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equipment assigned to the task by the Ministry of the Gas Industry.31
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Soviet forces did their best to hamper U.S. and Japanese efforts to
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locate and retrieve the black boxes. According to the account, the
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Soviet Navy placed a false black box with a "pinger" in a deep part of
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the sea (620 meters), to divert the U.S. search effort. This may have
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triggered a mistaken U.S. assertion that the black boxes had been
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located, an assertion that was later dropped.32
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Soviet forces did finally locate the wreckage 11 miles off Moneron
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Island at a depth of 160 meters, sometime in late September or early
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October.33 A special drilling ship, able to stabilize its position
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above the wreckage, was brought in to support the diving and retrieval
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operations. For almost a month divers searched the area for parts of
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the aircraft and the black boxes.34
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According to Izvestiya's interviews with the diving team, little
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was left of the aircraft, which apparently broke up upon hitting the
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water's surface. The largest pieces found were only about a meter in
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size. The divers were also surprised to find few human remains,
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discovering instead primarily clothes and personal effects. As the
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articles speculate, the decomposition of the bodies apparently was very
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rapid, leaving little for the divers to find.35 No evidence of
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espionage equipment was found amongst the wreckage.
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In addition to the diving team borrowed from the Ministry of the
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Gas Industry, a submersible from the Academy of Sciences was brought to
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the scene. It was this submersible that allegedly recovered one of the
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two black boxes found by the Soviets.36 The black boxes were reportedly
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sent to the mainland, and thence to Moscow for analysis.37 The
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retrieval of the black boxes was a closely held secret and the results
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of the analysis have never been revealed.
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The reluctance of the Soviets to announce their retrieval of the
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black boxes raises questions as to their contents. The black boxes
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would contain cockpit voice recordings and other data that are
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critically important to understanding the last moments of KAL-007 and
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how it came to be over Sakhalin.
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Implications and Explanations
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The case of KAL-007 has been debated in a highly charged
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atmosphere. The string of errors and coincidences that might have led
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the aircraft to its destruction appears incredible, and many authors
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have therefore concluded that KAL-007's flight was not accidental. But
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evidence for the KAL-007 flight being a planned intrusion into Soviet
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airspace is dubious at best, and many of the arguments that it was
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intentional are based on weak suppositions.38
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How do the new Soviet revelations affect the balance of evidence
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between accident and premeditation? While there is little new material
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on the origins of KAL-007, the account of the interception and the
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recovery operation contradicts some portions of the conspiracy theories.
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Both Pearson and Johnson find fault with U.S. reports of the
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interception, reinterpreting the transcripts and arguing that the Soviet
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pilot had indeed attempted to communicate with KAL-007 by the emergency
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radio channel, firing tracers, and possibly blinking his lights.
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Furthermore, they question the U.S. assertion that KAL-007's navigation
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lights were on.39 According to the conspiracy theories, the failure of
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the KAL-007 crew to respond to Soviet attempts to communicate strongly
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supports the hypothesis that they were on a spy mission, and tried to
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evade the Su-15.40 Indeed, they suggest that Soviet radars were being
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jammed by U.S. electronic warfare assets, with Johnson explicitly
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pointing to the "blind zone" that the Su-15 entered, and that this
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jamming caused one of the two missiles launched (a radar-guided missile)
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to miss KAL-007.41
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These assertions are falsified by the new Soviet information. KAL-
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007's lights were on, the Su-15 fired cannon shells that could not have
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been seen by the crew of KAL-007, and the pilot made no attempt to
|
||
|
contact the aircraft on the emergency radio frequency. There is no
|
||
|
evidence in the interview with Osipovich of jamming or interference with
|
||
|
the Soviet intercept operation. The "blind spot" in radar coverage was
|
||
|
apparently a previously existing weak link in the Soviet air defenses
|
||
|
about which the pilots had never been informed. Osipovich also confirms
|
||
|
that both missiles hit the aircraft, causing extensive damage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The new account of the recovery operation also punctures some of
|
||
|
the assumptions of the conspiracy theorists. Early reports indicated
|
||
|
that the U.S. may have detected a black box "pinger" in mid-September,
|
||
|
but the reports soon disappeared. These reports have led to allegations
|
||
|
that the U.S. found the black boxes and covered up the retrieval
|
||
|
operation in order to suppress evidence implicating U.S. intelligence
|
||
|
services.42 The information that the wreckage and black boxes were
|
||
|
found in Soviet waters explains the failure of U.S. recovery efforts,
|
||
|
and the decoy black box planted by the Soviets apparently triggered the
|
||
|
mistaken U.S. claims. Furthermore, it is quite likely that U.S.
|
||
|
intelligence was aware of the arrival and positioning of the Soviet
|
||
|
drilling ship, and may have recognized that the Soviets had located the
|
||
|
wreckage and black boxes. This, in turn, may have led to the U.S.
|
||
|
decision to call off further searches in November 1983.
|
||
|
These new revelations, and confirmations of old data, seriously
|
||
|
weaken some of the conspiracy theory arguments, even if they do not
|
||
|
constitute a complete refutation.43 The key question, how KAL-007 went
|
||
|
off course, cannot be satisfactorily resolved without access to the
|
||
|
black box information that the Soviet Ministry of Defense may hold.44
|
||
|
The evidence does clearly show that the Soviets were confused about
|
||
|
the intrusion, and that they reacted without making a positive
|
||
|
identification of the aircraft. But there is no indication that the
|
||
|
crew of KAL-007 was ever, or even could have been, aware of the Su-15
|
||
|
interceptor, let alone that KAL-007 took evasive action. On balance the
|
||
|
evidence makes it seem far less likely that KAL-007 was serving any
|
||
|
intelligence agency.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Current Soviet Defense Debates and KAL-007
|
||
|
While the KAL-007 tragedy is now history, its reexamination is
|
||
|
taking place during a period of debate concerning the role and fate of
|
||
|
the Soviet air defense forces (the VPVO), and against a backdrop of
|
||
|
improving Soviet--South Korean relations.
|
||
|
Questions have already been raised in the Soviet press over the
|
||
|
need for maintaining a separate air defense service, and the Izvestiya
|
||
|
revelations do little to boost the image of the VPVO.45 Current
|
||
|
military reform plans call for 18-20 percent cuts in VPVO personnel
|
||
|
levels--the largest cut being planned for any of the military
|
||
|
services.46 The new information on VPVO performance in 1983 may
|
||
|
therefore play a role in the upcoming debate on military reform, perhaps
|
||
|
significantly weakening the VPVO's claim to remain a separate service.
|
||
|
The KAL-007 affair also has direct implications for the current
|
||
|
Commander in Chief of the VPVO, General Ivan Tret'yak, a relatively
|
||
|
conservative military officer. Tret'yak was commander of the Far East
|
||
|
military district in 1983, and almost certainly played a role in the
|
||
|
decision to shoot down KAL-007. His rise in the military, culminating
|
||
|
in his appointment to the VPVO after the Rust incident, indicates that
|
||
|
the KAL-007 affair did not harm his career. The new questions being
|
||
|
raised might therefore reflect badly not only on the VPVO, but also
|
||
|
directly on its Commander in Chief.
|
||
|
That the Izvestiya revelations were unwelcome news for the military
|
||
|
is also clear. The reports indicate a substantial disinformation
|
||
|
campaign on the part of the senior Soviet military leadership of the
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
time. This revelation may serve to further inflame tensions between
|
||
|
the media and the military. In fact, the General Staff attempted to
|
||
|
dissuade the reporters from publishing the series on KAL-007, and
|
||
|
refused access to documents concerning the case.47
|
||
|
Finally, the series appears when Soviet--South Korean relations are
|
||
|
warming rapidly, with the possibility of a visit by President Gorbachev
|
||
|
to South Korea some time in the near future. A move
|
||
|
to release more information about KAL-007, and perhaps even to accept
|
||
|
blame and issue a formal apology, might play a significant role in
|
||
|
improving relations between the two countries. Indeed, during South
|
||
|
Korean President Roh's recent visit to the Soviet Union, Soviet Foreign
|
||
|
Minister Shevardnadze reportedly expressed his "regret" over the
|
||
|
shootdown. The South South Korean Foreign Minister reportedly accepted
|
||
|
the comment as an apology.48
|
||
|
Given the sensitivity of the issue, and the ongoing debate over
|
||
|
the future of Soviet strategic air defenses, it is unlikely that the
|
||
|
last word on KAL-007 has been said.49 Izvestiya is also publishing a
|
||
|
series based on research in the U.S., and other publications may try
|
||
|
to get their own "scoops." In addition to the mystery of the black
|
||
|
boxes there remain a number of unanswered questions on the Soviet
|
||
|
side, particularly concerning the decisionmaking process within the
|
||
|
VPVO. Answering these questions may finally clear up the aura of
|
||
|
mystery surrounding the tragedy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
NOTES
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
1 The ten part series is the result of investigative reporting
|
||
|
by Izvestiya correspondent Andrey Illesh, published under the
|
||
|
title "Tayna Koreyskogo "Boinga-747" in January 1991. Not all
|
||
|
of the original Russian language articles were available to the
|
||
|
author. Where possible, citations are to the Russian originals
|
||
|
published in the Izvestiya Moscow evening edition. Other
|
||
|
citations are based on the collected translation published in
|
||
|
the Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Report FBIS-SOV-
|
||
|
91-025 (February 6, 1991), pp. 3-27. An update to the series,
|
||
|
based on new evidence, was published in FBIS-SOV-91-031-S, pp.
|
||
|
1-4. A later series written by Izvestiya's New York
|
||
|
correspondent, investigating the U.S. side of the tragedy, is
|
||
|
not covered in this report.
|
||
|
2 The most detailed, and plausible, account of the KAL-007
|
||
|
tragedy is "The Target is Destroyed" What Really Happened to
|
||
|
Flight 007 and What America Knew About It (New York: Random
|
||
|
House, 1986) by Seymour M. Hersh, a well-known investigative
|
||
|
reporter. An earlier analysis that concentrates more on the
|
||
|
internal Soviet decisionmaking process and background is
|
||
|
Alexander Dallin, Black Box: KAL 007 and the Superpowers
|
||
|
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1985).
|
||
|
3 For the official U.S. view see U.S. Information Agency, The
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Shootdown of KAL 007: Moscow's Charges--and the Record
|
||
|
(Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Publishing Office, 1983), and
|
||
|
U.S. Department of State, KAL Flight #007: Compilation of
|
||
|
Statements and Documents (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of
|
||
|
State, 1983).
|
||
|
4 Reagan's remarks on the shootdown are reported in Kal Flight
|
||
|
#007 p. 3.
|
||
|
5 The intelligence assessment indicating that the Soviets had
|
||
|
not identified the aircraft wasn't released until January 1988,
|
||
|
after action by Congressman Lee H. Hamilton. See Young and
|
||
|
Launer, Flights of Fancy, p. 202.
|
||
|
6 The development of the Soviet version of events is critically
|
||
|
examined in Young and Launer, Flights of Fancy, pp. 137-167.
|
||
|
7 The best-known conspiracy theories are those of R.W. Johnson,
|
||
|
Shootdown: Flight 007 and the American Connection (New York:
|
||
|
Viking, 1986) and David Pearson, KAL 007: The Cover-Up (New
|
||
|
York: Summit, 1987). These conspiracy theories and the
|
||
|
propaganda wars surrounding the KAL shootdown are incisively
|
||
|
critiqued in Marilyn J. Young, Michael K. Launer, Flights of
|
||
|
Fancy, Flight of Doom: KAL 007 and Soviet-American Rhetoric
|
||
|
(Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1988). In adddition
|
||
|
to analyzing the rhetoric, the Young and Launer introduce some
|
||
|
new evidence and carefully dissect previously existing evidence.
|
||
|
8 Of particular note is the 1978 Soviet interception and attack
|
||
|
on a KAL flight that strayed far off course and over the Kola
|
||
|
peninsula. After much effort the target was intercepted, and
|
||
|
despite clear identification of its civilian nature, was fired
|
||
|
upon. The pilot managed to land the crippled aircraft, and even
|
||
|
though the Soviets had the opportunity to inspect the aircraft,
|
||
|
no evidence of espionage equipment was ever reported. See
|
||
|
Hersh, The Target is Destroyed pp. 3-15. Other incidents are
|
||
|
described in James E. Oberg, Uncovering Soviet Disasters (New
|
||
|
York: Random House, 1988), pp. 32-49. There have also been
|
||
|
claims that Soviet civilian airliners have also been shot down
|
||
|
by Soviet air defenses in cases of mistaken identity. For a
|
||
|
Soviet account of an intercept and near attack on a Soviet
|
||
|
civilian transport aircraft see V. Lavrinenkov, Bez voyny (Kiev:
|
||
|
Politizdat, 1982) pp. 215-217. In the wake of the Rust flight,
|
||
|
the VPVO revealed more information on attacks on intruding
|
||
|
aircraft, see "Bditel'nost i reshitel'nost'--Chest' i doblest'
|
||
|
voyna PVO," Vestnik PVO No. 8, 1987, pp. 3-6.
|
||
|
9 The Su-15 pilot reports that he flew more than 1000
|
||
|
intercepts over a ten year period, see Izvestiya January 23,
|
||
|
1991 p. 5. VPVO concerns over near incursions are reported in
|
||
|
A. Galunov, "V zone--strategicheskiy razvedchik," Krasnaya
|
||
|
zvezda September 10, 1988, p. 1; M. Lukyanin, A. Smolyanko, V.
|
||
|
Strel'tsov, A. Ladin, V. Khabarov, "Lyudi i nebo," Krasnaya
|
||
|
zvezda April 9, 1989, p. 1-2. For detailed information on U.S.
|
||
|
reconnaissance flights in the Far East see Hersh, The Target is
|
||
|
Destroyed pp. 35-43, 222-223.
|
||
|
10 Marshal Ogarkov, Chief of the General Staff in 1983, ordered
|
||
|
Izvestiya to misidentify the pilot responsible for shooting down
|
||
|
KAL-007, and consequently most Western accounts refer to him as
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Major Vassiliy Kasmin. See Johnson, Shootdown p. 20 for an
|
||
|
example. It does appear that a pilot by that name intercepted
|
||
|
the KAL aircraft over Kamchatka, however, see FBIS-SOV-91-025,
|
||
|
p. 6.
|
||
|
11 Izvestiya Jan. 23, 1991, p. 5; Hersh, The Target is
|
||
|
Destroyed pp. 18-22. Zelenyy Island is part of the disputed
|
||
|
Kurile chain (or Japanese Northern Territories). Hersh notes
|
||
|
that it remains uncertain whether the overflight was intentional
|
||
|
or not.
|
||
|
12 Soviet authorities were concerned over a possible repetition
|
||
|
of the incident in which Viktor Belenko, a Soviet pilot,
|
||
|
defected to Japan in his modern MiG-25 interceptor. Izvestiya
|
||
|
January 23, 1991, p. 5.
|
||
|
13 FBIS-SOV-91-025, p. 6.
|
||
|
14 Izvestiya January 23, 1991, p. 5. The local time on
|
||
|
Sakhalin is 9 hours different from Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) and
|
||
|
3 hours different from Japanese Summer Time (i.e. 3:00 am in
|
||
|
Japan is the same as 6:00 am on Sakhalin). Hersh uses Japan
|
||
|
time, while other sources use GMT. For a convenient summary see
|
||
|
Dallin, Black Box p. 1.
|
||
|
15 This contradicts some accounts of VPVO operations that night.
|
||
|
For example, Hersh, The Target is Destroyed p. 218, suggests
|
||
|
that the VPVO forces on Kamchatka may have kept information
|
||
|
concerning the overflight quiet, perhaps to prevent criticism
|
||
|
for not stopping it.
|
||
|
16 Izvestiya January 23, p. 5. Rivet Joint missions were RC-
|
||
|
135 missions flown over the Sea of Okhotsk and other areas in
|
||
|
order to monitor Soviet communications and air defense radars.
|
||
|
See Hersh, The Target is Destroyed pp. 8-11, 220.
|
||
|
17 One difference between the transcript compiled by the U.S.
|
||
|
and that published in Izvestiya is significant. In the U.S.
|
||
|
transcript, Osipovich is reported as commenting at 1819:08
|
||
|
(6:19:08 local time) after the initial intercept that "They
|
||
|
[KAL-007] do not see me." Dallin Black Box p. 24. The Izvestiya
|
||
|
report (January 23, 1991, p. 5) gives this as "vremya ne vyydet"
|
||
|
or "time is short." No explanation is given for this change, or
|
||
|
mistranslation, from the English. This statement comes before
|
||
|
Osipovich made his attempt to signal the aircraft, so it would
|
||
|
be wrong to construe it as indicating that Osipovich believed he
|
||
|
wasn't observed at any time during the intercept. The
|
||
|
transcript is reproduced in Dallin, Black Box pp. 22-25.
|
||
|
18 Izvestiya January 23, 1991, p. 5.
|
||
|
19 Izvestiya January 24, 1991, p. 7.
|
||
|
20 This seems to be the period from 1815 GMT to perhaps 1820.
|
||
|
Dallin, Black Box pp. 23-24.
|
||
|
21 This seems to be around 1820 GMT, judging from the
|
||
|
transcript. Dallin, Black Box p. 24. This account seems to
|
||
|
confirm that given in Hersh, The Target is Destroyed p. 233.
|
||
|
22 See the summary in Young and Launer, Flights of Fancy pp.
|
||
|
152-164.
|
||
|
23 Izvestiya January 24, 1991, p. 7.
|
||
|
24 On Osipovich's claim see Izvestiya January 24, 1991, p. 7.
|
||
|
It is possible that the crew might have been preoccupied with
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
work inside the cockpit. On the difficulty involved in getting
|
||
|
a pilot's attention, even with tracers, see Hersh, The Target is
|
||
|
Destroyed p. 233-234. Hersh also notes that the pilot (or co-
|
||
|
pilot) may well have been absent from the cockpit at the time
|
||
|
the Su-15 tried to signal the aircraft. See Ibid, pp. 205-208.
|
||
|
25 See Hersh, The Target is Destroyed p. 234.
|
||
|
26 Izvestiya January 24, 1991, p. 7. Osipovich's claim that
|
||
|
Soviet pilots were not familiar with foreign civilian aircraft
|
||
|
is amazing. The Boeing 747 is a distinctive design, and had
|
||
|
been prominent in the aviation industry for over a decade. That
|
||
|
Soviet pilots were ignorant of the Boeing 747 indicates very
|
||
|
tight constraints on their training. The comparison to a Tu-16
|
||
|
bomber is also puzzling, for the Tu-16 is much smaller than
|
||
|
either an Ilyushin 76 or a Boeing 747, and has quite a different
|
||
|
configuration. Clearly, there was some confusion as to what
|
||
|
kind of aircraft was being intercepted. Dallin, Black Box pp.
|
||
|
62-63, notes the difficulty in distinguishing between aircraft
|
||
|
in the darkness at that range.
|
||
|
27 Izvestiya January 24, 1991, p. 7. After the missiles hit
|
||
|
the air navigation lights went out, presumably because of a
|
||
|
power failure. This confirms Hersh, The Target is Destroyed p.
|
||
|
235.
|
||
|
28 Hersh, The Target is Destroyed p. 232.
|
||
|
29 Hersh, The Target is Destroyed pp. 12-14.
|
||
|
30 Other articles have hinted at VPVO authority to open fire
|
||
|
with surface-to-air missiles without any attempt to intercept
|
||
|
intruders first. A. Galunov, "V zone--strategicheskiy
|
||
|
razvedchik," Krasnaya zvezda September 10, 1988, p. 1.
|
||
|
31 Izvestiya January 25, 1991, p. 6.
|
||
|
32 FBIS-SOV-91-025, p. 26. The initial Izvestiya account was
|
||
|
later confirmed by a naval officer in a follow-up article. see
|
||
|
FBIS-SOV-91-031-S (February 14, 1991) p. 3-4.
|
||
|
33 Izvestiya January 25,p. 6; FBIS-SOV-91-025, p. 15, 18.
|
||
|
34 FBIS-SOV-91-025, p. 19.
|
||
|
35 Izvestiya January 29, 1991, p. 8; January 30, 1991, p. 5.
|
||
|
36 Izvestiya January 30, 1991, p. 5. The Izvestiya series
|
||
|
claims that 3 black boxes were found, even though only 2 were on
|
||
|
board the aircraft. See Izvestiya January 31, 1991, p. 7.
|
||
|
37 Izvestiya January 30, p. 5.
|
||
|
38 Peason's book is examined and critiqued in Young and Launer,
|
||
|
Flights of Fancy, while Johnson's Shootdown is reviewed in
|
||
|
Marilyn J. Young and Michael K. Launer, "007--Conspiracy or
|
||
|
Accident?" Commonweal pp. September 12 1986, pp. 472-473. One
|
||
|
example of a clear error by Johnson is his assertion that the
|
||
|
fuselage of KAL-007 could not have been hit by a Soviet air to
|
||
|
air missile because it would have caused a large hole and "all
|
||
|
the passengers and crew would have been irresistably sucked out
|
||
|
and flung into the freezing blackness." (pp. 27-28) There have
|
||
|
been recent cases of substantial damage to fuselages resulting
|
||
|
in rapid decompression, without having "all" the passengers and
|
||
|
crew sucked out. Furthermore, this groundless assertion is
|
||
|
belied by Osipovich's account.
|
||
|
39 Pearson's attempts at reinterpreting the transcript of the
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
shootdown are demolished in Young and Launer, Flights of Fancy,
|
||
|
pp. 83-96.
|
||
|
40 See Johnson, Shootdown pp. 19-28; David Pearson "K.A.L. 007
|
||
|
What the U.S. Knew And When We Knew It," The Nation August 18-
|
||
|
25, 1984, pp. 118-119.
|
||
|
41 Johnson, Shootdown p. 21, 27-28.
|
||
|
42 See, for example, Johnson, Shootdown pp. 200-207.
|
||
|
43 Refuting such an argument is extremely difficult, for new
|
||
|
layers of conspiracy may always be added. Furthermore, it is
|
||
|
easier to raise doubts about the facts than to answer them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
44 Hersh, in The Target is Destroyed gives perhaps the most
|
||
|
convincing scenario for accidental deviation from the
|
||
|
flightpath.
|
||
|
45 This debate was triggered by Aleksey Arbatov, "Skol'ko
|
||
|
oborony dostatochno?" Mezhdunarodnaya zhizn' No. 3, 1989, pp.
|
||
|
41-43. The initial VPVO response is Yu. Lyubimov, "O
|
||
|
dostatochnosti oborony i nedostatke kompetentnosti," Kommunist
|
||
|
vooruzhenykh sil No. 16, 1990, pp. 21-26.
|
||
|
46 "Kontseptsiya voyennoy reformy," Pravitel'stvenniy Vestnik
|
||
|
p. 7.
|
||
|
47 Izvestiya January 31, 1990, p. 7.
|
||
|
48 Far Eastern Economic Review December 27, 1990, p. 6.
|
||
|
Deputy Foreign Minister Igor Rogachev repeated this comment
|
||
|
during a visit to South Korea in January. See Report on the
|
||
|
USSR January 18, 1991, p. 34. For a review of improving
|
||
|
Soviet--South Korean relations see The Economist December 22,
|
||
|
1990, pp. 39-41.
|
||
|
49 As this article was being prepared for publication
|
||
|
the Air Defense Forces replied to the Izvestiya series with four
|
||
|
articles covering the KAL 1978 incident, KAL-007, and the Rust affair,
|
||
|
along with some lesser known intrusions into Soviet airspace. These
|
||
|
cases are compared to the destruction of an Iranian airbus by the
|
||
|
U.S.S. Vincennes. (See A. Dokuchayev, "O 'Boingakh', 'Tsessne', i
|
||
|
drugikh," Krasnaya zvezda March 13, 1991, p. 2; March 14, 1991, p. 2;
|
||
|
March 15, 1991, p. 2; March 20, 1991, p. .), The series sheds little
|
||
|
new light on the KAL- 007 incident, although it emphasizes that U.S.
|
||
|
air activity in the Far East in 1983 was "terrorizing" the Air Defense
|
||
|
Forces and raising tensions. The series plays up the Air Defense
|
||
|
Force's professionalism and expertise in the very difficult task of
|
||
|
intercepting and identifying intruding aircraft.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|