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Pilots threaten to stop service if kept unarmed
Union Leader ^ | 10/05/01 | KATHRYN MARCHOCKI

Posted on 10/04/2001 9:38:13 PM PDT by kattracks

Commercial airline pilots will be asked to suspend air service if they cannot have trained, armed pilots in the cockpits, a New Hampshire pilot said.

A resolution that will be circulated among the various councils of the 67,000-member Air Line Pilots Association this month asks federal regulations be changed to allow for the voluntary arming of flight crew members, Robert Giuda, a United Airlines captain of Warren said.

“Had we had armed pilots on Sept. 11, we wouldn’t have the horrific tragedy that we’re dealing with at this point,” Giuda said of the four hijacked jetliners.

Pilots would first get training in firearms by the FBI and would use their weapons only to defend against an attempted breach of the cockpit, the resolution said.

The resolution also calls for federal licensing of pilots to carry concealed weapons and for the government to indemnify air carriers and their employees against the legitimate use of a firearm.

If those steps are not carried out, the resolution calls for “a national suspension of air service, at such times and in such manner as is deemed appropriate by the leadership of the Air Line Pilots Association.”

“We’re hearing members of Congress say they don’t want a bunch of armed hooligans running around,” said Giuda, a New Hampshire state representative.

He said there was “no more professionalized, highly-scrutinized group of people in the world than airline pilots.”

The security of the flight deck cannot depend solely on armed sky marshals, he said.

Sky marshals can be picked out of a crowd and, if overpowered, would provide a hijacker with a weapon, Giuda said.

“It’s time to throw the gauntlet to the mat. We are going to get politicized into unarmed cockpits and then we’ll get shot with the guns the marshals used because they will be taken away from them,” he added.

Arming pilots introduces the element of “risk, fear and doubt” into the mind of a potential hijacker, he said.


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To: Torie
I think they should be fired if they refuse to fly. Who elected them to make these policy decisions?

They have a right not to fly in unsafe conditions. It's called freedom.

They are 10 folks who would be eager to take the place of each of them

Yeah, if you want 500-passenger 747s flown by 23-year-olds who earned their multi-engine commercial pilot ratings flying cargo on fifty-year-old prop planes.

until the public square deemed it prudent.

Right now, judging from ticket sales, the 'public square' doesn't deem it prudent to fly with unarmed pilots.

221 posted on 10/05/2001 1:23:40 PM PDT by 537 Votes
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To: editor-surveyor
I doubt that has ever happened.

Well, Mr. editor, numerous news reports have said that it did happen September 11.

There was a fake "pilot" in the cockpit of at least one of the planes that crashed. There were Middle Eastern guest "pilots" on at least 12 planes that were grounded. There have been no reports about whether these men were detained when the planes went back to the gates, but I doubt that they were because at that point no one had connected the attacks to the Middle East.

There have been numerous reports of stolen airline pilot uniforms (Muhammed Atta left two from Lufthansa in his baggage that never made it on the plane)and falsified "pilot licenses" in the possession of the terrorists.

Let me ask you, if faking the persona of an airline pilot to gain admittance to the cockpit was not part of the plot -- why did they need to steal the uniforms, why were Middle Eastern men sitting in those courtesy seats, and why did they have to falsify pilot's licenses?

Do you still doubt that this happened?

222 posted on 10/05/2001 1:28:33 PM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
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To: FreedomPoster
Re: APAP. I want my charter membership card. I will picket Hartsfield if it comes to this.

BTW, I got on Neal Boortz today and informed him about this Pilot in NH, And got 5 minutes or so to make my points that Pilots should be armed. Check it out anyone who gets delayed Boortz.

223 posted on 10/05/2001 1:30:32 PM PDT by RobFromGa
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To: Poohbah
a sky marshal in the cockpit jump seat. Said sky marshal would be trained at least as well as Delta Force or SEAL Team

You really expect that there are enough people out there of Delta Force/SEAL caliber that are going to take a job for any amount of money where they fly around on airplanes all day. TALK ABOUT MIND-NUMBING WORK and low JOB SATISFACTION.

I say, make sure that either the PILOT or the CO-PILOT is armed, they've got to be there anyway. And, once the bad guys know they have guns, there will be NO MORE HIJACKINGS. So, it won't really matter if the pilots can actually shoot accurately (I think they can) anyway.

It's called a deterrent.

224 posted on 10/05/2001 1:36:24 PM PDT by RobFromGa
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To: RobFromGa
Like I said earlier, a Delta Force/SEAL Team 6 person is expert at a LOT of things.

And this guy only needs to be good at one. A much easier task.

But you're once again applying rational deterrence theory to a bunch of crazies. I want someone there who can cap the SOB with a double-tap, for real, no foolin', because a "DETERRENT" only works against people as sane as me and thee.

225 posted on 10/05/2001 1:41:25 PM PDT by Poohbah
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To: Torie
Yeah, cooler heads (in Congress, who can take armed guards with them on domestic flights or hitch a ride with a corporate sponsor on his private Gulfstream) can decide whether or not the hoi polloi can be protected. After all, the pilots can just call 911 like you do from home, right?

Unarmed "citizens" who don't value a right because you choose not to exercise that right personally shouldn't express disapproval of the rest of us. I don't see those of us who support the right of pilots to carry their own arms to be hotheads as that response of yours implies.

226 posted on 10/05/2001 1:58:03 PM PDT by Twodees
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To: MeneMeneTekelUpharsin
I'm not Ron, but I got an email from him. I have a pilot nephew, and I often admire Ron's positions, so I encourage all here to back his bill, H.R. 2896, which he has introduced, that allows pilots with training to carry if they choose. It will be a leg up for concealed carry elsewhere. Some one on this thread points out that on cargo flights, pilots have no air marshal protection, another good point. A suggestion or two I have is that we carry stun guns if not CCWs on buses, and that drivers have goggles, in case they are sprayed with red pepper or mace, as one at least one of the hijackers did on downed plane.
227 posted on 10/05/2001 2:14:54 PM PDT by boltfromblue
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Comment #228 Removed by Moderator

To: ChemistCat
You're giving them full control of something already proven incredibly deadly--a plane loaded with fuel. What the H*LL is the problem with trusting their judgment with a little ol' handgun???????

Your logic is impeccable but allowing pilots to have a handgun could be construed as supporting the Second Amendment. Better is to take risk and shoot the plane in case it is being hijacked.

229 posted on 10/05/2001 3:32:23 PM PDT by A. Pole
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To: kattracks;torie
In the late 40`s & early 50`s I worked for one of the largest air carriers. All of the pilots that I was aquainted with carried a pistol in their flight bag. Several were my neighbors, most all packing. I challenge either of you to find any unlawful activities or bad incidents caused by these pilots who were packing side arms/...... It seems to me that we now have in our country too many folks that do not understand the need for equalizers; firearms, when it comes to confronting criminals, Terrorists and any other types that want to take away our FREEDOMS. I am 100% for the APA and the right for pilots to have a side arm in the cockpit. The Captain of a plane is the LAW, The Captain of a ship is the LAW too. I am packing, azskip
230 posted on 10/05/2001 4:04:29 PM PDT by azskipGLOCK 17
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To: EricOKC
> "We are going to get politicized into unarmed cockpits and then we’ll get shot with the guns the marshals used because they will be taken away from them,” he added."

>> This is the most cogent statement that I have yet encountered on the subject.

Did you forget the >/sarcasm< tag? or are you smoking something you should be sharing?

One important principle of self-defense with a firearm is that you need to keep some distance between yourself and your attacker. Weapons retention when an attacker is practically on top of you is apt to be a dicey proposition at best.

Unfortunately, there's no way to move around in a plane without being scant inches from other people. If a group of terrorists has one member create a disturbance worthy of a sky marshal's attention while other members lay low, the rest of the terrorists will then know who and where the sky marshal is. A second staged disturbance in another part of the plane can then be used to get the sky marshal to go over there, past a couple of terrorists one of whom can attack him while the other trips him. At that point, the only hope is that the number of brave passengers on the plane exceeds the number of rounds of ammo the sky marshal had on him.

If the terrorists take this approach, they might need more than four people per airplane, but they wouldn't even need box cutters. While the odds might favor the sky marshal if the terrorists were unarmed, the terrorists would still have a significant likelihood of success.

231 posted on 10/05/2001 6:22:32 PM PDT by supercat
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To: bvw
You can't secure the cockpit completely -- the crew can be tricked or blackmailed into coming out of the cockpit.

The toughest part of an armed pilots' training would probably be drilling in the fact that their first and foremost goal is to keep control of their 100-ton missle, even if knife-wielding terrorists are slaughtering passengers in the cabin (i.e. no matter what the terrorists are doing in the cabin, don't leave the cockpit!)

232 posted on 10/05/2001 6:52:16 PM PDT by supercat
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To: supercat
A honeypot can also draw the bear out of cave.
233 posted on 10/05/2001 7:01:36 PM PDT by bvw
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To: bvw
A honeypot can also draw the bear out of cave.

What sort of honeypot?

234 posted on 10/05/2001 9:33:36 PM PDT by supercat
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To: supercat
A crew member showing off for a new acquaintance, a new acquaintance feigning some distress to draw the pilot out to comfort her.
235 posted on 10/06/2001 8:14:32 AM PDT by bvw
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To: bvw
A crew member showing off for a new acquaintance, a new acquaintance feigning some distress to draw the pilot out to comfort her.

Yes, well that's what training is for--to resist such things.

236 posted on 10/06/2001 8:18:52 AM PDT by supercat
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To: supercat
The sexual attraction is designed to be very very difficult to resist.
237 posted on 10/06/2001 8:27:32 AM PDT by bvw
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To: supercat
The locked cockpit door is a single point of failure. One sky marshal is a single point of failure. Redundant systems, able to work even given one failure, two failures, three failures even, are preferred. The gist: arm the crews and secure the cockpit. That gives a protection layer from three-plus coincidental failures.
238 posted on 10/06/2001 8:32:13 AM PDT by bvw
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To: bvw
The locked cockpit door is a single point of failure. One sky marshal is a single point of failure. Redundant systems, able to work even given one failure, two failures, three failures even, are preferred. The gist: arm the crews and secure the cockpit. That gives a protection layer from three-plus coincidental failures.

Well, there's still a single-point-of-failure in the pilot and co-pilot; if one of those were a terrorist in disguise he could probably kill the other if they were equally armed or disarmed. If that occurred, the only way to prevent another 100-ton missle attack would be for the passengers on the plane to somehow force their way into the cockpit.

Indeed, one advantage IMHO of arming the pilot and copilot is that if they're armed the cockpit door only needs to be strong enough to ensure that they have time to take a defensive posture before it's breached. Admittedly you could have problems if there are more terrorists than bullets, but by the same token if terrorists do take over the cockpit (or start out there) the ability to break down the cockpit door could save people on the ground if there are more brave passengers than bullets.

239 posted on 10/06/2001 8:58:35 AM PDT by supercat
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To: A. Pole
I propose forming a volunteer air marshall corps from applicants with military or police training and background checks. There would be no direct monetary compensation for their services except during training. Instead, they'd be permitted to fly all they want for free, first come first serve, and receive hotel vouchers at their non-home destinations. There could be one or two pairs of seats made available to such on each flight, perhaps more if there's some special reason for concern. My husband and probably ten men and women I know, military retirees all, would jump at the chance, especially if they could bring along a significant other. A lot of retirees can't afford to do much travel. This would get people up in the air, believe me.
240 posted on 10/06/2001 10:07:54 AM PDT by ChemistCat
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