Shot Down — KAL Flight 007 and Seven Other Deadly Airliner Attacks

A Soviet Su-15 similar to this one brought down KAL Flight 007 in 1983. The incident sparked outrage world-wide.
A Soviet Su-15 similar to this one brought down KAL Flight 007 in 1983. The incident sparked outrage world-wide.

“While the incident captured the world’s attention, it wasn’t the only instance in which civilian passenger planes had fallen victim to military aircraft.”

IN SEPTEMBER of 1983, the word was rocked by news that Soviet fighter jets had shot down a Korean Air 747 over the Sea of Japan.

The flight, designated KAL007, was on the final leg of a journey from New York to Seoul — via Anchorage, Alaska — on Sept. 1 when it was struck by an air-to-air missile fired by a Russian Su-15 interceptor.

Two hundred and sixty-nine passengers were aboard, including 22 children and even one member of the U.S. Congress: Larry McDonald, a United States Representative from Georgia. There were no survivors.

The incident, which the Soviet Union officially denied had even occurred for a full week, enraged Western powers and signalled a new low in already-worsening relations between Moscow and Washington.

The deadly encounter began before dawn, as the ill-fated Jumbo Jet inadvertently strayed from its planned flight path due to a navigational equipment failure. Unbeknownst to the crew, KAL007 had drifted 300 km off course and was skirting along the east coast of the U.S.S.R on a route that took it into Soviet airspace

Americans were indignant as this Time magazine cover shows. Interestingly enough, former U.S. president Richard Nixon had nearly been onboard the ill-fated jet. His plans to attend a conference in South Korea had changed at the last minute.
Americans were furious at what they perceived to be criminal aggression on the part of the U.S.S.R. as this Time magazine cover shows. Interestingly enough, former U.S. president Richard Nixon had nearly been onboard. His plans to attend a conference in South Korea had changed at the last minute.

Soviet air controllers monitored the 747 believing the aircraft to be an American RC-135 long-range reconnaissance jet on a spy mission. U.S. planes had recently been probing Russian air defences in the area and patience on the ground had worn thin. Believing this to be yet another challenge, Soviet commanders diverted three Su-15s and a MiG-23 to intercept, engage and destroy the intruding aircraft. It took nearly an hour for the jets to reach the target. When they did, the 747 was over Sakhalin Island.

Cockpit voice recordings recovered later supposedly captured the two Korean pilots chatting idly as the Russian jets jockeyed into firing positions behind the Boeing.

As KAL007 was about to leave Soviet airspace, one of the Russian pilots, Major Genadi Osipovich, locked onto the target and released a missile. The warhead sped towards the airliner and exploded just aft of the tail section sending a hail of shrapnel tearing through the plane’s thin fuselage, wounding passengers and severing control lines. The pilots fought to keep the stricken jet in the air for another ten minutes before the plane finally slammed into the Pacific.

While the incident captured the world’s attention, it wasn’t the only instance in which civilian passenger planes had fallen victim to military aircraft. Consider these cases:

A Ju-52 aircraft similar to this one was brought down by Soviet aircraft during the Second World War.

The Kaleva Encounter

The Soviets were also responsible for one of history’s earliest attacks on a passenger plane. Three months after the 1940 Russo-Finnish Winter War ended, two Soviet Illyushin bombers downed a civilian Junkers Ju-52 passenger plane flying between Tallinn, Estonia and Helsinki. The incident occurred mere minutes after takeoff. The June 14 attack is believed to have been ordered as a prelude to the Red Army’s invasion of Estonia, which was launched only days later. The plane’s passenger list included a number of businessmen and diplomats, including envoys from Sweden, France and the U.S. Finland, eager to avoid further conflict with Russia, lodged no official protest.

(Image source: WikiMedia Commons)

Flight 777

A British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC) DC-3 Dakota airliner flying between Lisbon and Bristol fell victim to the Luftwaffe in the case of Flight 777. Shortly after noon on June 1, 1943 the twin engine transport plane was intercepted and destroyed by a formation of German Ju-88s over Bay of Biscay. Among those killed in the crash was the well-known British actor Leslie Howard, best known for his role as Ashley Wilkes in Gone With the Wind. Theories persisted over the motivation for the attack. Some claimed that the Nazis believed the airliner was carrying none other than Winston Churchill, while others asserted that Howard was in fact the target. After all, his loss was a blow to civilian morale. Later research revealed that the German aircraft actually stumbled across the Dakota entirely by chance and had no idea who was aboard when they attacked it.

An air-sea rescue plane searches for survivors following the destruction of a DC-4 passenger liner in 1954. (Image source: WikiMedia Commons)

DC-4 Shootdown

A Cathay Pacific C-54 Skymaster was destroyed over the South China Sea by La-7 fighters of the Chinese air force on the night of July 23, 1954. The flight, which was carrying 19 passengers between Bangkok and Hong Kong, was destroyed only minutes before landing. The airliner’s pilot, a British national, attempted to evade the attacking fighters in the darkness but was unable to keep the plane airborne after its engines were crippled by gunfire. Ten died in the crash – the survivors were plucked from the water by an American patrol plane. Beijing claimed that its pilots believed the aircraft to be Nationalist Chinese and considered it a legitimate target, however, the two aviators responsible were reportedly executed following the attack. In the days following the incident, two American fighters from the carriers Philippine Sea and Hornet splashed a pair of Chinese air force fighters close to the scene of the attack, possibly in retaliation.

(Image source: WikiMedia Commons)

El Al Flight 402

It was a pair of Bulgarian MiG-15s that destroyed an Israeli Lockheed Constellation travelling between Vienna and Istanbul on July 27, 1955. Sofia claimed that the fighters warned the airliner, which had accidentally strayed over Bulgaria, to clear the area by firing bursts of warning shots. Subsequent investigations suggested that the MiGs had no intention of letting the plane get away and actually raced to catch and destroy the Constellation before it could cross into Greece. Seven crew members and 51 passengers perished in the crash.

Wreckage of Itavia Flight 870 at the Museum for the Memory of Ustica, Bologna, Italy. (Image source: WikiMedia Commons)

The Flight 870 Mystery

No one knows for sure who downed the Italian Aerolinee Itavia Flight 870 on June 27, 1980. The DC-9 was carrying 77 passengers between Bologna and Sicily when air traffic controllers detected an unknown aircraft approaching the jetliner. Minutes later the passenger plane vanished on radar over the Mediterranean. Italy’s prime minister has since blamed the French navy for the disaster, claiming that its jets downed the aircraft by mistake during a NATO training exercise. Another theory holds that Flight 870 was struck in error during a joint U.S., Italian and French operation aimed at assassinating Muammar Gaddafi. The Libyan dictator was supposedly returning from a state visit to Warsaw and was expected to pass through Italian airspace in his own DC-9 around the time of the incident. For years, the Italian media has suggested a massive cover-up of the disaster, which is now known as the Ustica Massacre after a small island near where the plane was lost. An Italian court ruled in 2013  that the government must compensate victims’ families in excess of 100 million Euros for failing to safeguard the passengers of the doomed plane.

Dutch and Australian investigators recover wreckage from MH17. (Image source: WikiMedia Commons)

MH17

It was a Russian-built surface-to-air missile that claimed the lives of 283 passengers and 15 crew members of a Malaysia Airlines passenger liner over Ukraine on July 17, 2014. Flight MH17 was travelling from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur when the Boeing 777’s flight path took it over a part of the Donetsk Oblast that was controlled by pro-Russian-factions. International investigators later concluded that the jet was downed by a mobile Buk SAM supplied to rebels by the Russian military. Among the victims were 193 Dutch citizens, 43 Malaysians, 27 Australians, 12 Indonesians and 10 from the United Kingdom. In 2019, the Netherlands issued arrest warrants for four individuals wanted in connection with the downing of MH17 — three Russian citizens and one Ukrainian. All will be tried in absentia at the Hague in March, 2020.

The USS Vincennes launches SAMs. (Image source: WikiMedia Commons)

Iran Air Flight 655

On July 3, 1988, an American guided missile cruiser patrolling the Persian Gulf mistook an Iranian civilian passenger plane for a hostile enemy fighter with tragic consequences. After reportedly trying to make radio contact with what was thought to be an IRIAF Grumman F-14 Tomcat on an intercept course, the crew of the USS Vincennes launched two SM-2MR surface-to-air missiles. One of the projectiles struck the plane, which turned out to be an Iran Air Airbus A300 travelling from Tehran to Dubai, while it was still over its own airspace. Iranian officials claimed that the aircraft’s IFF transponder was functioning properly, signalling the aircraft’s designation as an unarmed civilian aircraft at the time. Two-hundred and ninety people, including 66 children, died in the incident. Amid an international outcry, the White House issued a complete apology. In 1996, the United States compensated the victims’ survivors to the tune of $62 million.

5 thoughts on “Shot Down — KAL Flight 007 and Seven Other Deadly Airliner Attacks

  1. Interesting stuff once again… and nicely written. I had no idea KAL007 managed to stay aloft for ten minutes after the missile strike. Hopefully, the passengers had died from decompression for the most part. I can’t imagine having been on that flight… What happened to the pilot?

    I take it the downing of the Iranian flight by the US Navy was omitted as it was a ship to aircraft missile? Regardless, that was tragic.

    1. I was focusing on air to air incidents, yes. Thanks for the note. As far as the Russian pilot is concerned, I don’t know what happened to him, although i don’t think any punishment was in order. He described the incident during a number of Russian media interviews in the post-Soviet era. As far as I know, the orders to fire came from the top and filtered down through the chain of command.

  2. There is-I believe-good reason the Germans shot down Leslie Howard’s plane, & it had little or nothing to do with his minor WW2 spy efforts in Portugal or his film work, but instead, due to his WW1 spy work..

    That he was a spy in WW1 has long been laughed off as fantasy but a bit of research makes it look more & more probable.

    And Howard appears as a ridiculously Romantic figure. Those that served under him last saw him at the Battle of the Somme in the last of all British Cavalry charges. The heavy hand of British Intelligence seems to show here as records show he never served overseas & yet he was dismissed for shell shock.

    Amusingly enough, after his marriage to what his parents considered a totally inappropriate match, after an unsuccessful dash by his father to prevent it & ensure marriage to his fiancee, Howard then deposits his bride at his parents house as he goes off to France & war!

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