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'U.S. military shot down MH370

Saifullah Sani

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'U.S. military shot down MH370 because they thought it had been hacked and was about to be used in terror attack', claims former airline boss
  • Marc Dugain says U.S. Navy in Indian Ocean attacked the plane
  • He claims that islanders saw the plane fly close to a U.S. base
  • Also alleges that a spy told him to back away from his probe into MH370
A former airline boss and writer claims the U.S. downed Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 because the military feared it had been taken over by hackers and was about to be used in a 9/11-style attack.
Marc Dugain, the former chief executive of now-defunct Proteus Airlines, said the jumbo jet was shot down near a U.S. military base on the remote island of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean after it was hacked.
He told Paris Match that islanders in the Maldives near Diego Garcia told him they saw the missing aircraft flying low.
Dugain spoke of a fisherman on a small island who spoke of a 'huge plane' in Malaysie Airline's colours on March 8.

2438937800000578-2883651-image-a-9_1419256333308.jpg

Marc Dugain, the former chief executive of now-defunct Proteus Airlines, said Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 was shot down near a U.S. military base
The former airline exec told Paris Match that islanders in the Maldives near Diego Garcia told him they saw the missing aircraft flying low.

He also said islanders had found an empty fire extinguisher from the plane in the water near Baarah island.

The Senegal-born Frenchman, who is now a successful novelist, also told a radio station he was warned not to investigate MH370 by an intelligence source, who spoke of 'risks' and counselled him to 'let time do its work'.

Last week grieving family members of Chinese passengers from a missing Malaysia Airlines flight protested outside the foreign ministry in Beijing Friday accusing the government of failing to provide them with regular updates on the search for the aircraft.
About 30 people, many of them elderly, gathered at the gates of the ministry with temperatures approaching freezing and were confronted by a line of police.

The U.S. Navy Support Facility at Diego Garcia, British Indian Ocean Territory. Dugain claims the U.S. feared the plane was about to be used in a terror outrage

They demanded to speak to government officials in a bid to get more information on the search for flight MH370. Police manhandled and pushed protesters that attempted to enter the gate and warned passersby to leave the area immediately.
'My son is alive and I want to know what the government is doing to find him,' said Liu Dianyun, the mother of one of the passengers.
Some drove for two hours to attend the demonstration, despite acknowledging that their efforts were unlikely to produce results.
Chinese passengers account for about two-thirds of the 239 people who were aboard the Boeing 777, which vanished on March 8 en route from Kuala Lumpur to China's capital.
Dozens of their relatives were reportedly beaten and arrested earlier this year.
Australia has been spearheading the hunt for the plane, which is believed to have crashed in the southern Indian Ocean off western Australia.

'US military shot down MH370' claims former Proteus Airlines boss | Daily Mail Online


Read more: 'US military shot down MH370' claims former Proteus Airlines boss | Daily Mail Online
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US shooting down of MH370 'perfectly plausible': Daniel Patrick Welch

An American political commentator says it is “perfectly plausible” that the United States shot down a passenger plane that went missing for several months.

In an interview with Press TV on Tuesday, Daniel Patrick Welch said, “what certainly is not plausible at all is that a plane can disappear from the face of the earth and no one knows what happened to it. The official story always seems to be just complete crap.”

He made the remarks after Marc Dugain, a former French airline boss, said there was a cover-up in the mysterious disappearance of Malaysian Flight MH370 earlier this year.

He claimed that the aircraft was likely hijacked and possibly shot down by the US.

Dugain, who is the former head of Proteus Airlines and a well-known author, presented his theory on Friday in an article published in the French weekly, Paris Match.

According to witness reports, Dugain is convinced the Malaysian Airlines passenger plane crashed near the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia, a British territory encompassing a military base leased to the US.

Dugain also believes that the plane might have been hijacked by remote control and steered toward Diego Garcia. He added that the plane was then shot down by the US as it feared an attack against military base on the island.

One of the author’s main arguments is based on the fact that he sees it nearly impossible that the US that is “equipped with the best technology in the world” could have lost track of a 63-meter-long object.

“There are satellites all over the place. The military intelligence satellites certainly know exactly what happened at that point and they don’t typically tell each other because they don’t want to reveal the kind of the coverage that they have,” Welch said.

“You have one party acting as judge, jury, and executioner and we can’t know, we’re not allowed to know, we don’t have a right to know what happened.”

“There is no questioning this system. If the system decides that you are an enemy or they are afraid of you for any reason or you are a threat, they have the right to pull the trigger with no questions asked,” he said.

PressTV - US shooting down of MH370 'perfectly plausible': Daniel Patrick Welch
 
No, I think it was another operational test of the infamous HAARP weapon gone wrong. Those stupid Murrikans cannot even use their weapons properly. Obviously.
 
If the US shot it down, there should be debris which can't be hidden from the Chinese satellites.

Horus, IF we had shot it down, we would claimed it as a mistake.

It would've lit up the whitehouse boards, emails and conversations among the civilian government heads, and something so big would not have remained a secret.

There would be no need for Chinese satellites revealing it. America would have owned up to it because it could not have been kept as a secret. Really as simple as that.
 
Horus, IF we had shot it down, we would claimed it as a mistake.

It would've lit up the whitehouse boards, emails and conversations among the civilian government heads, and something so big would not have remained a secret.

There would be no need for Chinese satellites revealing it. America would have owned up to it because it could not have been kept as a secret. Really as simple as that.

Sir its much more basic than that. If a 777 had been shot down, there would be an evidence. The US Navy shot down an Iranian Jet Liner and did claim it. They stated that they mistook it for an Iranian P-3C.
 
Pentagon: Claim U.S. shot down MH370 'ridiculous'

Pentagon: Claim U.S. shot down MH370 'ridiculous'
By Jeff Schogol, Staff writer 3:36 p.m. EST December 23, 2014

A former French airline executive is speculating that the American military downed a civilian Malaysian Airlines flight in March because the plane was headed to a remote U.S. base in the Indian Ocean.

Much like the commander of the 101st Airborne Division during the Battle of the Bulge, the Pentagon's response to these claims is to the point: Nuts!

"This claim is too ridiculous to deserve a serious response," Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm. John Kirby said Monday when asked about the story.

MH370 disappeared while on a March 8 flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. Ships and planes from the U.S. Navy's 7th Fleet spent weeks looking for the missing airliner carrying 239 passengers and crew members, but search efforts ended in late April without locating the plane.

However, the search efforts did produce a cottage industry of so-called aviation analysts, who have provided cable networks and other media outlets endless amounts of speculation about what could have happened to the doomed flight.

Most recently, Marc Dugain wrote in a Dec. 22 article for "Paris Match" that a fire could have broken out on the plane, causing the aircraft's autopilot to reroute it to the U.S. Navy base at Diego Garcia. But the U.S. military could have thought MH370 was trying to attack the base and shot down the plane down, he wrote.

The only evidence Dugain offers is a fire extinguisher from a Boeing aircraft was found in the Republic of the Maldives, south of Diego Garcia, where villagers apparently told local authorities they saw a large airplane on March 9. One villager said the plane was flying very low and then he saw red and blue streaks come from it.

The U.S. has used the Navy base at Diego Garcia to launch airstrikes against Afghanistan and other targets since Sept. 11, 2001. In December 2001, a B-1B Lancer crashed into the Indian Ocean about 60 miles from the base while returning from Afghanistan.

Diego Garcia is cut off from much of the world. The website for the base's Navy health clinic describes Diego Garcia as a "very isolated island located in the Indian Ocean." At the beginning of operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, service members stationed on Diego Garcia called it "Gilligan's Island with guns," according to media reports.
 
US shooting down of MH370 'perfectly plausible': Daniel Patrick Welch

An American political commentator says it is “perfectly plausible” that the United States shot down a passenger plane that went missing for several months.

In an interview with Press TV on Tuesday, Daniel Patrick Welch said, “what certainly is not plausible at all is that a plane can disappear from the face of the earth and no one knows what happened to it. The official story always seems to be just complete crap.”

He made the remarks after Marc Dugain, a former French airline boss, said there was a cover-up in the mysterious disappearance of Malaysian Flight MH370 earlier this year.

He claimed that the aircraft was likely hijacked and possibly shot down by the US.

Dugain, who is the former head of Proteus Airlines and a well-known author, presented his theory on Friday in an article published in the French weekly, Paris Match.

According to witness reports, Dugain is convinced the Malaysian Airlines passenger plane crashed near the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia, a British territory encompassing a military base leased to the US.

Dugain also believes that the plane might have been hijacked by remote control and steered toward Diego Garcia. He added that the plane was then shot down by the US as it feared an attack against military base on the island.

One of the author’s main arguments is based on the fact that he sees it nearly impossible that the US that is “equipped with the best technology in the world” could have lost track of a 63-meter-long object.

“There are satellites all over the place. The military intelligence satellites certainly know exactly what happened at that point and they don’t typically tell each other because they don’t want to reveal the kind of the coverage that they have,” Welch said.

“You have one party acting as judge, jury, and executioner and we can’t know, we’re not allowed to know, we don’t have a right to know what happened.”

“There is no questioning this system. If the system decides that you are an enemy or they are afraid of you for any reason or you are a threat, they have the right to pull the trigger with no questions asked,” he said.

PressTV - US shooting down of MH370 'perfectly plausible': Daniel Patrick Welch

Well if it was hijacked as claimed. Then the Iranians the only one that did it. After all they professed that capability by hijacking a high tech drone and the only ones to do it. Not even the Russians and the Chinese could do what Iran did.
 
I wouldn't be surprised. The US has a phd in deception.
 
Horus, IF we had shot it down, we would claimed it as a mistake.

It would've lit up the whitehouse boards, emails and conversations among the civilian government heads, and something so big would not have remained a secret.

There would be no need for Chinese satellites revealing it. America would have owned up to it because it could not have been kept as a secret. Really as simple as that.

not if it (hypothetically) -- flew anywhere near or in the trajectory of Diego Garcia....but AGAIN as another member here said - Chinese sats wouldve found imaging of debris even if the aircraft was pulverized

what REALLY needs to be repeatedly asked, why oh why were the transponders turned off.....and as far as i know there are no "black hole" areas wheres comms would go dead even for a few seconds, the way it does over parts of the Amazon
 
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Waiting for this "alternative reality" movie to be released. Would make a good read when I am bored.
there are a lot of Satellite/Radar/SIGINT stations that could have detected a missile/Fighter Aircraft taking off from a US base "if" they did that.
I was going to ask @Horus the honorable to stop threads like these and delete this one. But he participated in the discussion. so I am guessing this is going into one of the many pointless threads opening left right and center these days on PDF.
 

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