Posted on 07/29/2015 9:08:07 AM PDT by chuck allen
MALAYSIA AIRLINES FLIGHT MH370 MISSING 36m Editor's note: Numerous tweets are noting the discovery of airline debris off the coast of La Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean and speculating about a possible link to the missing Malaysia jet MH370. Jon Ostrower, the Wall Street Journals aerospace reporter, says the debris appears to be an airline flap. - Tom
The airline debris found on Reunion Island was discovered on the coast of St. Andrew by trail maintenance workers - @clicanoore read more on clicanoo.re
MALAYSIA AIRLINES FLIGHT MH370 MISSING 9m Local report: Investigators say the debris found on Réunion Island had been in the water for some time and is being examined to determine its origin - @clicanoore read more on clicanoo.re
Darn it. . .you were first. . .drat.
Yup. . .and about three 777 jets went down in that area over the years.
Am I missing something here? Where’s the beach?
http://www.euroargo-edu.org/explore/img/map6.png
Trade winds map, Indian Ocean.
Really? I don’t remember them. Got any links?
Blown up near Diego Garcia and washed up there?
Possibly. Will we ever know. Like to see the currents.
Up just identifies piece of plane as from a ,Boeing 777
MALAYSIA AIRLINES FLIGHT MH370 MISSING
5m
Editor’s note: The Associated Press is citing an unnamed US official as saying the debris found on an island in the Indian Ocean belongs to same type of aircraft as the missing Malaysia plane MH370. We’re watching for more. - Tom
“Writing on his blog, Mr Tytelman said that the photos of the wreckage had aroused significant interest on the AvGeek website a closed forum for pilots.
He said that there was much discussion over a code part of the wreckage: BB670.
“The code is not that of a plane number plate, nor that or a serial number on machinery,” he wrote.”
BB670 code? Any ideas?
http://blog-peuravion.fr/2015/07/a-t-on-retrouve-les-premiers-debris-du-mh370/#more-1453
My source telling me this wing part found in Indian Ocean is consistent with 777. Very possibly Malaysia MH 370. - @GlennFarleyK5
see original on twitter.com
Most of the forums are reporting that is “1980 Beechcraft King Air 200 - sn BB-670 - N17VA - 11 by Corporate Flight Management, via Flickr”
It was found right where and when ‘they’ wanted it to be found. Not a ‘conspiracy theorist’, but things seem way outside of the box these days.
See #71. possible?
The Equatorial current could have put the piece on that island. It is possible.
No kiddin’.
They spent months searching the waters off Australia.
Editors note: The Associated Press is citing an unnamed US official as saying the debris found on an island in the Indian Ocean belongs to same type of aircraft as the missing Malaysia plane MH370. Were watching for more. - Tom
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The “unnamed US official” is probably General McInerney..the same dolt who stated that the flight was on the ground in Pakistan..tool.
I can’t believe it came back out of Black Hole CNN said the plane was sucked up into. Lol
If the ETs didn’t snag it, it went to China. China enslaved or just “debriefed” and then “disposed” of the engineers and then... “got rid” of the rest of the passengers and plane. All they’d have to do is make a deal with Vietnam ATC, easy enough. And China itself is just a giant black hole into which it would vanish without a trace.
Which means, of course, Western satellites and radar nets picked all this up and are staying mum.
777s don’t “disappear.” Even if they try. Maybe especially if they try.
How did the debris escape the black hole?
Actually, MH370 is the only 777 to go down in that area of the world.
South African Airways 295 was a 747-200 that went down in 1987 near Mauritius due to an onboard fire. 195 killed.
Ethiopian Airlines Flight 961 was a Boeing 767-200ER, that was hijacked on 23 November 1996 and crashed near the Comoros Islands.
Yemenia 626 was an Airbus A310 that crashed in 2009, on landing into the Comoros after the crew stalled the aircraft.
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