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US probe of EgyptAir crash: media brands Arab doubts as "wild
speculation"
By Martin McLaughlin
24 November 1999
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this version to print
Last Friday morning the two leading US daily newspapers, the
New York Times and the Washington Post, carried
virtually identical articles about the Egyptian reaction to claims
in the American media that a suicidal pilot had caused the EgyptAir
Flight 990 crash.
Public opinion in Egypt was refusing to give credence to the
evidence and was searching wildly for some alternative theory,
both papers reported. This reaction was fueled, they implied,
by a propensity of people in the Middle East to believe in conspiracy
theories where the United States was concerned.
The Times article, written by Douglas Jehl and headlined
"Conspiracy Theories Cripple Probe," declared that "conspiracy
theories are circulating wildly in Egypt, troubling both US and
Egyptian officials. Some have blamed Israel's intelligence service
for the crash; others have suggested the US investigators are
covering up for Boeing, the plane's manufacturer."
The Post article, by Howard Schneider and Lee Hockstader,
noted the widespread rejection of the suicide theory, not, they
claimed, on the basis of examining the evidence, but "from
the simple conviction that an Egyptian would not do such a thing."
The article continued: "That has left much of the Cairo
press scrambling for an alternative theory. Writers have come
up with everything from 'laser rays' to sabotage by Israel's Mossad
intelligence service to a US government plot designed to avoid
exposing Boeing Co. to liability."
State Department spokesman James P. Rubin denounced what he
called "wild conspiracy theories" in the Arab press.
"We're appealing for calm, and calm can only come if there
is a minimum of speculation about conclusions in this country,
and a minimum of wild, exaggerated, unfounded conspiracy theories
in other media in the Middle East."
But before the day was out, National Transportation Safety
Board (NTSB) Chairman James Hall acknowledged that American officials
had leaked false information about the contents of the cockpit
flight recorder tapeinformation that seemed to substantiate
US claims that copilot Gamil Batouti deliberately crashed the
plane.
Hall called a press conference Friday afternoon to denounce
published accounts of taped conversations on the cockpit recorder.
He criticized "reckless" media reports which were "just
flat wrong." His agency wanted the truth, he said, and "we
won't get there on a road paved with leaks, speculation, supposition,
and spin."
While he would not single out the specific distortions, it
was generally assumed he was referring to the alleged statement,
"I have made my decision," widely reported to have been
made by Batouti just before the plane began its sudden dive. After
a team of Egyptian officials was allowed to listen to the tape,
it emerged that these words were simply not to be found.
Hall said that any misinformation given out by unnamed government
sources came from agencies other than his own. "We have not
released specific information from the cockpit voice recorder,"
he said, "and any so-called verbatim information you have
heard about that recorder is unauthorized, second-, third- or
fourth-hand."
The agency most likely responsible for releasing the false
information is the FBI, which has been seeking to take over the
investigation into the EgyptAir crash for the past two weeks.
FBI Director Louis Freeh himself may be the source of many of
the leaks to the media attributed to "high Justice Department
officials" or "anonymous government sources."
The American media was unfazed about its role as a conduit
for such disinformation. Not one of the newspapers or television
networks which falsely reported the contents of the cockpit voice
recorder tape has publicly admitted that it was lied to or identified
the "anonymous" and "senior" officials who
supplied the false information.
As for the alleged affinity of Egyptians and Middle Eastern
Arabs generally for "wild conspiracy theories," there
are no more grounds for dismissing out of hand suspicions of US
bias in favor of Boeing or fears of CIA or Israeli intrigue than
there are for ruling out the possibility of pilot suicide. Up
to this point, no convincing evidence has been brought forward
to warrant a supposition of either mechanical failure, pilot responsibility,
or some other explanation for the disaster.
What is disturbing is the evident haste on the part of American
investigators, and the eagerness on the part of the media, to
prematurely rule out mechanical failure and, on the basis of meager
evidence at best, declare the probe a criminal investigation and
turn it over to the FBI.
As both Arab and non-Arab commentators have noted, it seems
unlikely, from a psychological standpoint, that a long-serving
pilot, about to leave his job for a comfortable retirement, would
suddenly take his own life and the lives of 216 other people.
On the other hand, theories suggesting a terrorist attack,
directed either at the Egyptian regime in general or the 33 Egyptian
military officers on board the flight, cannot be discounted. This
includes the possible role of the Israeli secret service Mossad,
working either directly or through agents in Islamic fundamentalist
organizations. Such provocations have taken place in the past.
Nor can the US missile theory be simply dismissed as ludicrous.
The US government has shot down at least one passenger airliner
in the Middle East, the IranAir jet which was destroyed over the
Persian Gulf in 1987. According to a current Italian judicial
investigation, an Alitalia jet was shot down in 1980 over the
Mediterranean by US warplanes pursuing a Libyan MiG in international
watersa shoot-down which has been concealed from the American
public for nearly 20 years, but is widely known about in the Arab
world.
It is, moreover, absurd to label the suspicion that US authorities
are seeking to protect Boeing, the largest American aircraft exporter,
as a wild conspiracy theory. This is exactly what
the US government and Boeing did for more than a year after the
explosion of TWA Flight 800 in 1996, pursuing claims of sabotage
and terrorism until forced to admit that the disaster was caused
by a design flaw in the fuel tank of the Boeing 747.
This is not only a matter of the huge potential liability should
the deaths of 217 people be attributed to a failure of the company.
Boeing is locked in an increasingly difficult struggle with the
European aircraft manufacturing consortium Airbus Industries,
and a series of highly publicized disastersTWA Flight 800
now followed by EgyptAir Flight 990could tip the balance
and lead to the loss of multibillion-dollar orders.
Transferring the case from the NTSB to the FBI would mean a
curtailment, or even a virtual halt, to the expensive recovery
effort in the Atlantic. As a result, whatever evidence there might
be of mechanical failure might be left to lie at the bottom of
the ocean.
See Also:
WSWS readers comment on EgyptAir
Flight 990 disaster
[24 November 1999]
Why
the rush to judgment in the crash of EgyptAir Flight 990?
[19 November 1999]
Many
questions raised by Egyptair Flight 990 crash
[2 November 1999]
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