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Did Navy sub missile hit TWA 800?

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The impending release of a new documentary has dramatically revived media  interest in the destruction of TWA Flight 800, the Paris-bound plane that blew  up off the coast of Long Island in July 1996.

Although producers Tom Stalcup and Kristina Borjesson do not name names or  point fingers, the video leads the viewer to believe that the U.S. Navy  accidentally shot the plane down.

The video features a half-dozen truth tellers from within the investigation,  and the news of it has inspired several more to step forward, including one who  talked with WND about the disaster Friday.

Mack, not his real name, cautioned that his information was limited, but his  insights had merit nonetheless. Mack was a crewmember on the sub, the USS  Albuquerque.

This was one of three subs acknowledged by FBI spokesman James Kallstrom as  being in the “immediate vicinity” of the crash site. The other two were the USS  Trepang and the USS Wyoming.

Several days before the Flight 800 incident, Mack was involved in loading  what he was told were “experimental missiles” aboard the sub. “This was not your  normal load out,” said Mack.

The sub was heading for the testing area off the coast of New Jersey and  south of Long Island. Mack did not go on that cruise.

He was driving with his wife when the news first broke of Flight 800′s  demise. Before the government got hold of the narrative, there was considerable  reporting about a missile or missiles.

“Do you think it was a terrorist?” his wife asked.

Read  the evidence about TWA Flight 800.

“God, I hope so,” said Mack. He explained that “his boat was out there.” If  it wasn’t a terrorist, it was likely a Navy accident.

FAA radar had captured four unidentified tracks “consistent with the speed of  a boat” within three to six miles of Flight 800′s course at the time of its  midair breakup.

The fact that three of the radar tracks disappeared right after TWA 800  crashed argues strongly that these were the submarines Kallstrom had identified,  the Albuquerque among them, and that they submerged almost immediately.

One “surface vessel” less than three miles from the crash scene headed away  from the area at 30 knots. In response to questions from a congressional  subcommittee, the FBI’s No. 2 man on the investigation, Lewis Schiliro, claimed  that the “the FBI first noted the presence” of this ship in January 1997, an  astonishing five months after the disaster.

Although the FBI was allegedly unable to identify this ship, Schiliro added  the meaningless disclaimer that “based on our investigative efforts, we are  confident it was not a military vessel.”

According to the FBI, this surface vessel had a “speed between 25 and 35  knots, is believed to be at least 25-30 feet in length, approximately 2.9  nautical miles from the position of Flight 800 at the time of the initial  explosion.”

Radar, however, is unable to judge the length of the ship. That detail was  added to suggest a pleasure craft and not a Navy ship whose length might be  measured in the hundreds of feet.

In any case, the ship was fleeing the scene. When questioned, Kallstrom  identified this vessel as “a helicopter.”

By the time of its final press conference in November 1997, the FBI knew that  all of the stories that the Navy had previously offered about the USS Normandy  being the closest asset of consequence at 181 miles away were patently  false.

At this juncture, all information about any aspect of the case from any  source should have been considered suspect.

“We left no stone unturned,” Kallstrom claimed when the FBI withdrew from the  case. “In fact, we looked under every rock multiple times.”

But Kallstrom never bothered to explain these numerous discrepancies or  shifting stories. The crew of the sub were not in a position to add much  clarity.

Even if they had been allowed to talk, as Mack explained, very few of his  colleagues, if any, would have known exactly what happened that night. Later,  when he inquired, he got no straight answers. He has been troubled by it ever  since.

Said Mack, “I’d be willing to bet dollars to donuts that we shot the plane  down.”

original story here

 

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