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  1. The Korean airliner eventually crashed into the sea near Moneron Island west of Sakhalin in the Sea of Japan, killing all 269 passengers and crew aboard, including Larry McDonald, a United States representative.

    • An Overview of The Tragedy
    • Planes Often Refueled in Alaska Before Crossing The Pacific
    • The Pilots of Flight 007 Did Not Know They Were Off Course
    • The Aircraft Involved
    • Mistakes Can Lead to Tragedy

    On a balmy summer's night at John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) in New York on August 31st, 1983, passengers boarded a Korean Air Lines flight to Gimpo International Airport (GMP) in Seoul, South Korea. However, the plane, a Boeing 747-230B with the registration HL7442 which took off at 23:50 EDT, would never arrive at its final destinatio...

    It is worth pointing out here that it was typical for aircraft flying to East Asia to land and refuel in Anchorage during the Cold War. With previously discussed airspace restrictions over the Soviet Union and China, early-generation widebodies would not have the range to traverse such large distances without stopping to reload on fuel. After take-...

    Still unaware that they were flying off course when flight 007 entered Soviet Airspace, four MiG-23 fighters, a mainstay of the Soviet combat fleet at the time, were scrambled to intercept what to them was an unknown aircraft, according to Britannica. Ten days earlier, high winds had knocked out a significant radar base on the Kamchatka Peninsula. ...

    As established, the aircraft shot down while operating Korean Air flight 007 was a Boeing 747-230B registered as HL7442. According to the Aviation Safety Network, it was 11 years and six months old at the time, having first flown in March 1972. Data from the AeroTransport Data Bankshows that it joined Korean Air in February 1979, having previously ...

    The international fallout from the incident was incredibly swift. Western world leaders were simply not going to accept the USSR shooting down civilian aircraft without serious consequences. When news of the shoot-down reached Washington, President Ronald Reagan called the attack a 'massacre' and a 'crime against humanity' with "absolutely no justi...

  2. Jan 1, 2013 · KAL 007 left behind little debris as evidence of its plunge into the cold ocean. A US Navy-led search for the wreckage, harassed by Soviet personnel, produced nothing.

  3. May 20, 2024 · The shootdown of Korean Air Lines flight 007 took the lives of 269 people and raised troubling questions on both sides of the Pacific. How could a trained flight crew make such a colossal...

  4. Jul 30, 2022 · In 1978 this Korean Air Lines Boeing 707 strayed into Soviet airspace. And a Su-15 Flagon attacked it forcing the airliner to crash land.

  5. Sep 1, 2023 · On August 31, 1983, Korean Air Lines (today known as Korean Air) Flight 007 left John F. Kennedy Airport (JFK) in New York, United States (US) bound for the East Asian capital city of Seoul. After refueling in Anchorage, Alaska, the Boeing 747 aircraft, carrying 269 people, passed the International Date Line, jumping forward to the fateful day ...

  6. AA-3 air-to-air missiles. One of them, proximity-fused, exploded behind the target, severing a crucial control line. The other hit the aircraft but its effect remains unclear. “The target is destroyed,” radioed Osipovich. But it had not been. The aircraft, Korean Air Lines 007, remained air-borne for at least 12 more minutes. Its

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