August 1 2014
MH-17 Cockpit riddled: Shot by two jet fighters?So, where is it, the missile launch pad? Who has it and who doesn't? The separatists? The Russians? The Ukrainian forces? Or all together? A nice biased trial. According to the flight captain Peter Haisenko and his convincing hints it's a wrong track: MH-17 was not downed by a missile but by two fighter jets...visitors can't see pics , please
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loginA plausible version of the downing of MH-17 is starting to come up. According to manufacturing data on debris it really was flight MH-17 (9M-MRD) in Ukraine and not flight MH-370 (9M-MRO, disappeared on March 8 2014). It was also not the 9M-MRC machine.
Recently a real expert of aviation examined the photos of the debris: the former flight captain Peter Haisenko. He concludes: flight MH-17 was downed by two fighter jets.
What everyone believes is not always true... But doesn't the whole world say the plane got shot by a missile? Yes it does - but what the whole world is saying must not always be true.
Quite the contrary. This missile thing just has the advantage to keep the separatists involved. There is at least the theoretical possibility that flight MH-17
could have been downed by the separatists. This is inherently wrong (for example because of lacking training and radar vehicles) but well...
This suitable possibility would of course be instantly invalid if MH-17 was shot by a fighter jet. All this beautiful logic would be void since the "rebels" don't have fighter jets. And that Russia's forces entered Ukrainian territory 60km wouldn't even come to a Spiegel journalist's mind. ["Der Spiegel" = German, massively anti-Russian newspaper]
But let's come to Peter Haisenko. In his biography it's said that he has 30 years flight experience with plane types B727, DC 8, B747, B737, DC 10 and A 340. [...]
Cockpit riddledIn the case of MH-17 he firstly wondered about how few photos of the debris are findable via Google. Every photo is in low resolution apart from one: A fragment of the cockpit beneath the windows of the captain. But this picture is really shocking.
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loginThe cockpit shot to piecesBy looking closely at the enlargement you can conclude that it was really riddled. "I'm not talking about speculation, I'm talking about clear facts.", Haisenko writes: "The cockpit shows marks of shelling." He is basically differentiating the holes into two [three] groups:
- small holes, round and clean, ~30mm caliber, edges bent inwards
- bigger, frayed holes, edges bent outwards
- small cuts, all bent outwards
These holes are obviously bullet holes. Bullets went in at the small holes and came out at the bigger ones. According to Haisenko, these cuts are caused by slivers which flew through the cockpit and exited it. These different kinds of bullet holes indicate that this single fragment was shot from two sides.
While the cockpit is riddled this way, there are no bullet holes like these visible on the rest of the plane - apart from one big scratch caused by a graze shot. The rest of the plane was not shot like this but fell apart into many puzzle pieces - i.e.: it bursted asunder at its weakest points. "All the debris of the parts behind the cockpit are broadly undamaged if you keep in mind that these fragments were once one big thing. Only the cockpit is massively destroyed. Conclusion: This plane was not hit by a missile in the middle, the destruction is only limiting to the cockpit."
What might have happened?"So what might have happened", Haisenko asked. According to Russian radar recordings there was at least one Ukrainian SU-25 fighter jet with MH-17. This corresponds with the statement of a disappeared spanish controller who claimed to have seen "two Ukrainian warplanes directly near MH-17". The SU-25 was equipped with a double-barreled 30mm gun, type GSh-30-2. The ammunition consists of tank-incendiary projectiles[?] and splinter-explosive projectiles[?] "which were placed in a clearly defined order."
"If this kind of order consisting of tank-incendiary projectiles and splinter-explosive projectiles - which are even able to destroy a tank - hits the cockpit", the tank-incendiary projectiles would "partly even go through the cockpit and exit it at the other side slightly deformed since their penetrating power is designed for solid armor."
The splinter-explosive projectiles instead would "explode inside the cockpit by themselves" - like in other vehicles. "Due to the high fire rate of the GSh-30-2 gun, there were many explosions inside the cockpit."
Bursted like a balloon?Because the interior of an airliner is "sealed air-tight", the pressure inside rapidly rose and the plane "bursted like a balloon". With this explanation Haisenko can conclude: The cockpit was shot by two fighter jets while the sections in the back fell apart at its weakest points: "The picture of the wide field of fallen debris and the brutally damaged cockpit fit to this." Not to forget the wing with the graze shot "which goes to the cockpit - if visually lengthened."
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loginGraze shot on one wingAnd why all this? Haisenko is bringing in statements from Washington about a possible mistake. Haisenko reminds of Putin's airplane which was on its way only a few hundred km away. And his airplane is painted quite similar to MH-17. So did someone want to shoot Putin here? Not really.
Because firstly pilots should be able to set Putin's plane IL-96 apart from a Boeing 777. Putin's Ilyushin has a short and thickset fuselage, the Boeing 777 a long and slim fuselage. And of course the liveries: "Malaysian" and "Rossiya" (in kyrillic). So are there already blind pilots working in the Ukrainian airforce? The evidence mentioned above shows that the Boeing 777 was surrounded by two jets [or only one]
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loginConfusion improbable: Ilyushin-96 and Boeing 777Furthermore shooting the Russian president Putin would contradict the logic of warfare and it would psychologically be a really wrong point to wage war against Russia. This would lead to global indignation and to an enormous psychological build-up in all the pro-Russian states. Even on the psychological homefront of the West there would be chaos.
So the aggressor always has to start a war as the defender. The downing of the passenger plane by pro-Russian forces fits best in the concept. So in my opinion it is something like the
Operation Northwoods: MH-17 was "given" to the pro-Russian forces to blame them and their big Russian friend - a classical start of a war...