Siste: kl. 1055 norsk tid. Alt fungerte som det skulle idet flyet forsvant fra radaren. Ingen motordata er sendt til Rolls Royce eller Boeing etter det tidspunkt, sies det fra en pressekonferanse akkurat nå i Kuala Lumpur.
Missing Airplane Flew On for Hours
Engine Data Suggest Malaysia Flight Was
Airborne Long After Radar Disappearance, U.S. Investigators
Say
By ANDY PASZTOR
U.S.
investigators suspect that Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 stayed in the air for
about four hours past the time it reached its last confirmed location, according
to two people familiar with the details, raising the possibility that the plane
could have flown on for hundreds of additional miles under conditions that
remain murky.
Aviation investigators and national security officials
believe the plane flew for a total of five hours, based on data automatically
downloaded and sent to the ground from the Boeing Co. 777's engines as part of a
routine maintenance and monitoring program.
That raises a host of new
questions and possibilities about what happened aboard the widebody jet carrying
239 people, which vanished from civilian air-traffic control radar over the
weekend, about one hour into a flight to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur.
Six
days after the mysterious disappearance prompted a massive international air and
water search that so far hasn't produced any results, the investigation appears
to be broadening in scope.
U.S. counterterrorism officials are pursuing
the possibility that a pilot or someone else on board the plane may have
diverted it toward an undisclosed location after intentionally turning off the
jetliner's transponders to avoid radar detection, according to one person
tracking the probe.
The Tricky Science of Radar Tracking
Airliner
Didn't Reappear on Vietnamese Radar
The investigation remains fluid, and it
isn't clear whether investigators have evidence indicating possible terrorism or
sabotage. So far, U.S. national security officials have said that nothing
specifically points toward terrorism, though they haven't ruled it
out.
But the huge uncertainty about where the plane was headed, and why
it apparently continued flying so long without working transponders, has raised
theories among investigators that the aircraft may have been commandeered for a
reason that appears unclear to U.S. authorities. Some of those theories have
been laid out to national security officials and senior personnel from various
U.S. agencies, according to one person familiar with the matter.
WSJ has
confirmed that the pilot had the ability to manually turn off the transponder on
Flight MH370. A mid-air catastrophe could have destroyed it.
At one
briefing, according to this person, officials were told investigators are
actively pursuing the notion that the plane was diverted "with the intention of
using it later for another purpose."
As of Wednesday it remained unclear
whether the plane reached an alternate destination or if it ultimately crashed,
potentially hundreds of miles from where an international search effort has been
focused.
In those scenarios, neither mechanical problems, pilot mistakes
nor some other type of catastrophic incident caused the 250-ton plane to
mysteriously vanish from radar.
The latest revelations come as local
media reported that Malaysian police visited the home of at least one of the two
pilots.
Admiral Le Minh Thanh at a media briefing on Phu Quoc Island,
Vietnam. Reuters
A Malaysia Airlines official declined to comment. A Boeing
executive who declined to be named would not comment except to say, "We've got
to stand back from the front line of the information."
The engines'
onboard monitoring system is provided by their manufacturer, Rolls-Royce RR.LN
-1.71% PLC, and it periodically sends bursts of data about engine health,
operations and aircraft movements to facilities on the ground.
"We
continue to monitor the situation and to offer Malaysia Airlines our support," a
Rolls-Royce representative said Wednesday, declining further
comment.
"The disappearance is officially now an accident and all
information about this is strictly handled by investigators," said a Rolls-Royce
executive who declined to be named, citing rules of the International Civil
Aviation Organization, a United Nations agency.
As part of its
maintenance agreements, Malaysia Airlines transmits its engine data live to
Rolls-Royce for analysis. The system compiles data from inside the 777's two
Trent 800 engines and transmits snapshots of performance, as well as the
altitude and speed of the jet.
Those snippets are compiled and
transmitted in 30-minute increments, said one person familiar with the system.
According to Rolls-Royce's website, the data is processed automatically "so that
subtle changes in condition from one flight to another can be
detected."
The engine data is being analyzed to help determine the flight
path of the plane after the transponders stopped working. The jet was originally
headed for China, and its last verified position was half way across the Gulf of
Thailand.
A total flight time of five hours after departing Kuala Lumpur
means the Boeing 777 could have continued for an additional distance of about
2,200 nautical miles, reaching points as far as the Indian Ocean, the border of
Pakistan or even the Arabian Sea, based on the jet's cruising
speed.
Earlier Wednesday, frustrations over the protracted search for the
missing plane mounted as both China and Vietnam vented their anger over what
they viewed as poor coordination of the effort.
Government conflicts and
national arguments over crises are hardly unique to the Flight 370 situation,
but some air-safety experts said they couldn't recall another recent instance of
governments' publicly feuding over search procedures during the early phase of
an international investigation.
China and Vietnam venting their
frustration with the slow progress of the mission and what they view as poor
coordination of the effort to find Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. Allison Morrow
reports on the News Hub. Photo: Getty Images.
Authorities on Wednesday
radically expanded the size of the search zone, which already was proving a
challenge to cover effectively, but the mission hadn't turned up much by the end
of the fifth day.
Also on Wednesday, a Chinese government website posted
images from Chinese satellites showing what it said were three large objects
floating in an 8-square-mile area off the southern tip of Vietnam. The objects
were discovered on Sunday , according to the website, which didn't say whether
the objects had been recovered or examined.
Ten countries were helping to
scour the seas around Malaysia, including China, the U.S. and Vietnam. Taiwanese
vessels are expected to be on the scene by Friday, with India and Japan having
also agreed to join the search soon.
In all, 56 surface ships were taking
part in the search, according to statements issued by the contributing
governments, with Malaysia providing 27 of them. In addition, 30 fixed-wing
aircraft were also searching, with at least 10 shipboard helicopters available,
mostly in the waters between Malaysia and Vietnam.
China's government was
especially aggrieved. More than 150 of the 239 people on board are Chinese, and
family members in Beijing have at times loudly expressed their frustration over
the absence of leads.
More than a dozen Chinese diplomats met with
Malaysian authorities in Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday as tension grew over the
search.
"At present there's a lot of different information out there.
It's very chaotic and very hard to verify," foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang
said in a regular press briefing. "We've said as long as there is a shred of
hope, you can't give up."
The day before, Beijing pointedly pressed
Malaysia to accelerate its investigation, which has been hampered by false leads
on suspected debris and conflicting reports on radar tracking.
Vietnam on
Wednesday suspended its search flights after conflicting reports from Malaysia
that authorities had tracked the plane to the Strait of Malacca before it
disappeared.
Gen. Rodzali Daud, Malaysia's air force chief, denied saying
he had told local media that military radar facilities had tracked the plane
there, saying they were still examining all possibilities. Vietnam later resumed
normal search sweeps.
You can help search for the missing Malaysia
Airlines plane, thanks to a website called Tomnod.com. It allows anyone to comb
the area where rescue workers are searching using satellite images. The WSJ's
Deborah Kan speaks to DigitalGlobe's Luke Barrington.
Malaysian
authorities divided the search area into several sectors on either side of the
country, as well as areas on land.
The challenge, said Lt. David Levy, a
spokesman for the U.S. Navy's Seventh Fleet, isn't so much coordination as the
sheer size of the area involved. The search grids are up to 20 miles by 120
miles, and ships and aircraft employ an exhaustive methodical pattern "like
mowing your lawn" in their search for the plane, he said.
U.S. defense
officials sought to play down any suggestion that the Malaysian government was
doing a poor job with the search.
"It is not unusual for searches to take
a long time, especially when you are working with limited data," one official
said.
Aviation experts say the absence of an electronic signal from the
plane before it disappeared from radar screens makes it difficult to pin down
possible locations. Some radar data suggested the Boeing 777 might have tried to
turn back to Kuala Lumpur before contact was lost, a detail that prompted a
search for the plane on both sides of the Malaysian peninsula.
A member
of Singapore's military looks out of a transport plane over the South China Sea
to search for the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 on Tuesday. Reuters
A
U.S. Navy P-3C Orion maritime patrol aircraft has been searching the northern
Strait of Malacca, west of Malaysia, while destroyers USS Kidd and USS Pinckney
have been deploying helicopters in the Gulf of Thailand to the east.
So
far the U.S., like other nations taking part in the search, has had no success.
Many aviation experts are concluding that searchers may not have been looking in
the right places. Even if the plane broke up in midair, it would have left
telltale traces of debris in the ocean. The cracks now emerging between some of
the participants in the search could make it even more
difficult.
Diplomatic feuds over air disasters have generally erupted
over the conclusions of the investigations, long after the initial search is
over.
The results of the 1999 crash of an Egyptair Boeing 767 en route to
Egypt from New York, which killed 217 people, spawned a dispute between
Washington and Cairo that strained ties for years. The National Transportation
Safety Board concluded the plane's co-pilot purposely put the twin-engine jet
into a steep dive and then resisted efforts by the captain to recover control
before the airliner slammed into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Nantucket.
Egyptian authorities insisted the evidence indicated mechanical
failure.
Earlier, Washington and Paris butted heads over the
investigation into the 1994 crash of a French-built American Eagle commuter
turboprop near Roselawn, Ind. The French objected to the NTSB's conclusions that
French regulators failed to take actions that could have prevented the
accident.
Earlier this week, Malaysian investigators said they were
expanding their investigation to encompass the possibility of hijack or
sabotage, and possible personal or psychological problems of the crew and
passengers. But Malaysian officials haven't discussed transmissions regarding
engine operations or offered any explanation for the primary and backup
transponders' not working
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