BALTIMORE, Maryland March 14, 2014 (8:40 am) - With the realization that the Missing Malaysian Jumbo Jet with 239 people on board has been literally stolen out of the sky, and now hidden from view at an unknown location, there is a rapidly growing concern that the Boeing 777, replete with the most advanced flight systems on the face of the Earth, may be used for a purpose that is nothing short of evil.
If, in fact, this is the case, Governments around the world had best be ready with contingency plans in the event that this jet suddenly turns up approaching a nation or target, loaded with lethal explosives or othffffer equally malevolent cargo - and the missing 239 passengers - thereby confronting those in charge with an unforgiving choice of destroying the plane and its passengers, or allowing the plane and its incendiary cargo to enter its airspace, thereby risking unimaginable destruction.
A respected military analyst this morning stated that he is convinced the plane has been hijacked and landed at any one of hundreds of possible places. The analyst, Retired Air Force Lieutenant General Thomas G. McInerney, appeared on Fox and said he has come to this conclusion because it is one of the few logical ones when all of the facts are plugged in. McInerney said the fact that the data transmitting systems on the plane were shut off in sequence, with several minutes in between each shut-down, and the fact that the plane continued sending off the hourly engine data readings for up to six additional hours after it disappeared from all radar, leads to the obvious conclusion that what happened was both intentional and well-planned. The hijackers did not take the plane to crash it in the ocean, he said. He believes the Malaysian Jet was targeted because of the relatively soft security afforded those boarding the plane. Investigators learned almost immediately that two passengers boarded the plane using stolen passports, and the co-pilot had a history of inviting passengers into the cockpit during a flight. As for the destination of the plane, McInerney said that were he heading the search, he would start in Pakistan or Eastern Iran. The Indian Government announced overnight that they will immediately begin an air search of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, an archipelago in the Bay of Bengal between India and Burma. Many of these small islands are heavily protected environmental preserves with tree canopies that have never been harvested. Many are uninhabited. It is the first acknowledged land search conducted by any of the dozen countries that have committed boats and planes to the search.
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