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Originally posted by Zaphod58
Oh, I'm sorry. I wasn't aware that trying to show that "Do the orders still stand" didn't AUTOMATICALLY MEAN THAT THEY STOOD THE FIGHTERS DOWN. I forgot that if it goes against your beliefs then it's completely irrelevant and stupid to post it.
Originally posted by Zaphod58
Damnit, I lost that entire post.
The weapons supervisor and the wing commander disagree with you, but you're telling me that you know better than them? And I spent many years living around AF bases where I never saw more than a couple of fighters sitting with A missile on the rail, IF THAT. We had 2-4 alert fighters at Hickam that were armed, but NONE of the other kept a single missile on a rail.
Originally posted by Zaphod58
Oh, I'm sorry. I wasn't aware that trying to show that "Do the orders still stand" didn't AUTOMATICALLY MEAN THAT THEY STOOD THE FIGHTERS DOWN. I forgot that if it goes against your beliefs then it's completely irrelevant and stupid to post it.
Originally posted by Zaphod58
Because before he edited his post and removed it, the question was asked as to how the USAF which had fighters at Andrews couldn't possibly have launched them and shot the plane down at the Pentagon, unless they were stood down. I didn't bother quoting it though because it was the post right above mine. Then after I posted it, I saw where he edited and removed that portion of the post. At the time of posting it WAS relevant.
WASHINGTON – U.S. civil aviation authorities failed to warn the military that a Cessna plane had been stolen until it had already been crashed into a Tampa, Fla., bank building after buzzing a military airbase, officials said Monday.
Instead, the North American Aerospace Defense Command heard about the crash on Federal Aviation Administration radio traffic and scrambled fighter planes near distant Miami to fly protective missions over the Tampa area, NORAD spokesman Maj. Barry Venable told United Press International Monday.
By that time, the Cessna, piloted by a 15-year-old boy on an apparent suicide mission, had buzzed MacDill Air Force Base, home to U.S. Central Command and Gen. Tommy Franks, who is running the U.S. war in Afghanistan.
Student pilot Charles Bishop stole the Cessna from St. Petersburg-Clearwater International Airport, where he was preparing for a flying lesson at 4:50 p.m., and flew about 14 minutes before hitting the building, National Transportation Safety Board spokesman Paul Schlamm said. His flight path included about a minute of flying over MacDill‘s airfield at an altitude of about 100 feet, news reports said.
Schlamm said the NTSB was still putting together an accurate timeline.
It is already clear that NORAD, which has responsibility for protecting the United States from air attack, did not know about the incident until 5:13 p.m., nearly 10 minutes after the crash. At 5:16, NORAD‘s southeast air defense sector branch alerted fighters at Homestead Air Reserve Base, about 270 miles away from Tampa. They took off at 5:21 and established a "combat air patrol" over Tampa by 5:45, Venable said. The CAP ended about 30 minutes later.
"We didn‘t know about it until after it had crashed," Venable told UPI. Schlamm said the plane hit the Bank of America building around 5:04 p.m. One detail that remains unclear is how soon after Bishop took off did St. Petersburg airport notify the FAA of the problem. FAA spokesman Les Dorr said he does not yet have an accurate timeline.
Originally posted by roadgravel
The fighters at Ellington field near Houston, Tx were said to be able to take-off and be at some alltitude of 1000s of feet in 5 minutes. Not sure whats goes on now a days, but with 911 behind us, and the WOT, one would think having planes ready again is back in fashion.
From the external ref:
"At 5:16, NORAD‘s southeast air defense sector branch alerted fighters at Homestead Air Reserve Base ... They took off at 5:21"
5 minutes there.
I tend to trust what military person says over the news or speculation. At least they have experience to base thoughts on.
Just throwing in my .02, which is not worth much.
Originally posted by Zaphod58
If you have fighters already armed and ready to launch then yes, you can have them airborne in 5 minutes. The problem on 9/11 was that most bases DIDN'T have them armed and ready to launch.