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WSWS : News
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Disasters
Concordeits history and tragedy
By David Walsh
28 July 2000
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Tuesday's crash of an Air France Concorde outside Paris seized
the attention of people all over the world. Anyone who viewed
the broadcast images of the tragedy could not but help feel horrified
and saddened, first and foremost at the thought of the passengers'
terrible fate, but also by the impact of such an event on the
livingthe stricken human beings, workmen and local residents
standing near the smoking wreckage in Gonesse. It was a chastening
and sobering sight.
The way Concorde has been thrust onto television screens and
into the headlinesunder such dreadful circumstancesimpels
one to consider the conditions under which the airplane came into
being, and how much the world has changed since then. At least
some of the shock and horror that accompanied the July 25 crash
is bound up with the origins of the jet and its place in history.
The emergence of supersonic air travel as a serious possibility
dates to the late 1950s and early 1960s, and seems to parallel
the development of the American and Soviet space programs. British
designer Sir Archibald Cox, according to the Washington Post,
wrote down his preliminary Concorde specifications on a
scrap of paper in 1959, two years after the launching of
the USSR's Sputnik I and a year after the establishment of the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) by the US
government.
The US, France and Britain were all originally interested in
the development of supersonic flight, but the costs of the project
obliged British Aerospace and France's Aerospatiale to join forces
in 1961. Boeing, the giant aircraft builder, began research, with
government help, on an American supersonic transport (SST) at
that same time. The US project seems never to have been forcefully
pursued. The media ascribe its eventual demise to environmental
and other kinds of opposition. While these may have been factors,
it is difficult to believe they would not have been overcome had
the government and the corporate sector seen the SST as profitable
and commercially viable.
The British and French governments, with their greater ability
or willingness to offer state support to the aircraft industry,
did pursue Concorde [Harmony], as it became known. The two powers
had a considerable stake in demonstrating that while the US and
the Soviet Union could fire men into space, they at least could
hurtle human beings around the globe faster than anyone else.
The Concorde made its first test flight in March 1969, only four
months before the first man, an American, walked on the moon.
(The USSR canceled its own supersonic flight program after its
TU-144 crashed at the Paris Air Show at Le Bourget airport in
1973.)
While the space race and the effort to develop a supersonic
commercial jet were obviously bound up with the Cold War and European-American
and other political and economic rivalries, there was more to
these achievements than that. It was widely felt at the time that
these astonishing accomplishments, raising human beings to heights
and speeds hitherto unimaginable, would somehow contribute to
the human condition, that they would inevitably bring progress,
however vaguely envisioned, in their wake. The period generated
all sorts of futuristic visionsincluding space commuters
shuttling to the moon, as people currently did from one city to
another. This optimism now seems almost quaint.
By the time of the Concorde's first commercial flight, in January
1976, the world had already undergone a considerable change. The
American supersonic project had fallen by the wayside (its federal
subsidies cut off by Congress in March, 1971), along with the
Project Apollo moon program (following the Apollo 17 mission in
December, 1972)victims of a budget crisis exacerbated by
the Vietnam War. The quadrupling of oil prices in 1973-74 had
an impact as well on the future of an aircraft that burned vast
quantities of fuel.
The mood in the US had changed. The earlier hopefulness had
given way in large measure to popular disillusionment and even
cynicism, nourished by the Nixon presidency and its denouement
in scandal and resignation.
Although British Airways and Air France have maintained their
Concorde flights for nearly a quarter of a century, the airplane
has a peculiar lame-duck aura about it. The twelve
remaining Concordes are the only supersonic commercial jets in
existence. No Concordes have been produced since 1980, and a few
of the planes are held in reserve and cannibalized to provide
replacement parts for those that fly.
A year ago, Boeing and NASA stopped development of a new type
of hypersonic transport. Boeing wanted to build a
larger plane, one that carried as many as 300 people, to render
flights more profitable. But making the craft larger conflicted
with the effort to make it lighter and more fuel-efficient. A
new design, according to experts, would cost around 10 billion
dollars to develop, an amount requiring global financing, highly
unlikely under present circumstances. At this point there is no
supersonic plane under development anywhere in the world.
The French and British kept flying the Concorde not only because
the flights made money. It had come to be accepted as a symbol
of British and, perhaps even more strongly, French national pride.
As one press account noted: In France, the disaster of flight
F-4590 was more than the crash of an aircraft. It was the end
of a symbol. Concorde was conceived in France. Its first test-flight
from Toulouse on 2 March 1969 came in the dying days of the government
of General de Gaulle, and seemed to represent the country's re-launch
into a modern, technological future. Test-pilot André Turcat
became a national hero. French President Valery Giscard
d'Estaing made history during the 1970s by flying on a Concorde,
with considerable fanfare, to Guinea, one of the country's former
African colonies.
However, the efforts to keep the Concorde or the supersonic
idea alive today seem futile. The technology, so to speak,
withered on the vine, and the jet never truly emerged as much
more than a symbol of luxury. As it turned out, billions of dollars
in public fundingwhich the British and French governments
will never recouphave gone to provide air travel for a relatively
small number of people. As remarkable an aircraft, and as imposing
a human achievement, as the Concorde is, the plane has proved
to have little meaningful impact on people's lives. Rather, in
its own way, the Concorde has become yet another reminder of the
social chasm dividing the moneyed elite from everyone else.
One might say that although the Concorde has remained in service
for the past two decades, it long ago lost its purpose. The technologyrequiring
international cooperation on research and development to sustain
itand the social ethos never came together. They diverged
more and more with the passage of time, as state intervention
in the economy was scaled back and the immediate whims of the
market became the new idol to be worshipped. The Concorde survived,
but as an artifact. Anyone excluded from the charmed circle of
those who frequently flew the airplaneexecutives, jet-setters,
film stars and the likecould be forgiven for not knowing
it was still in operation.
And now this tragedya horrible, all too visible event.
The terrible images of an airplane consumed in flames! Made more
sad and poignant by the fact that most of the victims were taking
the trip of their lives. Some were wealthy, but there
were also, for example, two retired postal employees, husband
and wife, who had saved for years. Traveling on a charter flighta
method of filling the planes that Air France and British Airways
have increasingly turned tothe ill-fated Concorde passengers
were reportedly paying less than half the regular fare.
One is drawn to the televised images. The cynics will say:
another proof that we are all voyeurs! It goes without saying
that the media will appeal to the worst instincts, but the impact
of the tragedy cannot be primarily attributed to the baser motives.
People are genuinely saddened by lives cut short and families
devastated.
An Associated Press reporter interviewed a bystander: Jean-Claude
Ramathon raced to a small hotel in a wheat field to help frantic
guests trapped in the flaming rubble of an Air France Concorde.
Telling his story hours later, his hands still trembled. We
ran up and got up to two meters away from the hotel but had to
stop because of the smoke,' Ramathon said Tuesday. He is 39, a
workman in blue overalls, but he said little about himself before
hurrying away.
Residents of Gonesse spoke too of the pilot, who they are convinced
steered the plane away from the center of the town, perhaps saving
hundreds of lives. The pilot knew what was going on. He
was a pilot who saved the lives of the people of Gonesse,
said the manager of a Shell station, Madame Turpin.
The tragedy brings out the best in people. For an instant,
human beings act like human beings, not economic units. There
is a sense of solidarity with the doomed passengers; many of us
also fly. There is a common grief, a sentiment that rarely finds
widespread expression. This is a moment when empathy finds an
outlet.
Life returns to normal for the rest of us, and the images fade.
Airplanes roar overhead and no one thinks twice about it. How
can that empathy for others, which for a moment found an outlet,
become a more common feature of daily life? We need to remind
ourselves that no less terrible than the deaths of these 113 people
is the fate of thousands each day who die, not only in accidents
resulting from appalling social conditionsin India, the
Philippines, Indonesiabut from preventable conditions like
starvation, disease, war and the eruption of butchery.
There is a need for elementary empathy and concern for others
to be widened, and elevated by a scientific insight into the underlying
causes of so much of humanity's distress. That would represent
a true leap in consciousness. Is that too much to hope for?
See Also:
Safety concerns raised in aftermath of
Concorde crash
[28 July 2000]
Airline
Disasters
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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