In my original post on the subject, "The Downing of TWA Flight 800," on July
23, I said the normal procedure for personnel who have received intelligence
training (in this case Syria-trained terrorists) would have been to fire the
missile from a small boat off shore. In subsequent posts, "Bill Clinton's
Choo-Choo" and "The Phosphorus-Headed Missile and TWA Flight 800", I clarified
that the missile was targeted at the center, or belly, fuel tank. A couple of
months later, the Post now comes belatedly comes to the same conclusion:
And why was the elevated end, or head, of the missile glowing? As I
previously reported, the ordinary head of the Stinger had been replaced with two
small attachments--the first one containing a different guidance system that
allowed the missile to lock-in on the center fuel tank, the second one being a
phosphorus head that was designed to blow up fuel tanks in a violently effective
manner.
The post article follows.
New York Post
September 22, 1996
TWA Probers: Missile Witnesses
"Credible"
By MURRAY WEISS
Criminal Justice Editor
More than 150 "credible" witnesses -- including several scientists --
have told the FBI and military experts they saw a missile destroy TWA Flight
800, The Post has learned.
Sources provided startling new details from the frustrating two-month
probe -- persuading agents to acknowledge that the witnesses' accounts point
toward a missile:
The FBI interviewed 154 "credible" witnesses -- including scientists,
schoolteachers, Army personnel and business executives -- who described
seeing a missile heading through the sky just before Flight TWA 800
exploded.
"Some of these people are extremely, extremely credible," a top federal
official said.
Sources said the witnesses lived or were vacationing along Long Island's
South Shore in Nassau and Suffolk counties when they saw the object heading
toward the sky.
"When we asked what they saw and where they saw it, the witnesses out
east pointed to the west, and the people to the west pointed to the east ,"
one source said.
FBI technicians mapped the various paths -- points in the sky where the
witnesses said they saw the rising "flare-like" object -- and determined
that the "triangulated" convergence point was virtually where the jumbo jet
initially exploded.
Struck by the number and confidence of the witnesses, the FBI sat down
many of the witnesses with U.S. military experts, who debriefed them and
independently confirmed for the FBI that their descriptions matched
surface-to-air missile attacks.
"The military experts told us that what the witnesses were describing was
consistent with a missile," a federal official acknowledged. "They told us,
"You know what they are describing is a missile.' "
Law-enforcement sources said the hardest evidence gathered so far
overwhelmingly suggests a surface-to-air missile -- with the sophisticated
ability to lock on the center of a target rather than its red-hot engines --
was fired from a boat off the Long Island coast to bring down the airliner
July 17.
That theory would have the attackers launching their missile from a boat
and fleeing north into Canada during the confusion immediately after the
explosion. Investigators are reviewing an anonymous threat received after
the Oct. 1, 1995, conviction of radical sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, a
law-enforcement source said.
The threat was that a New York area airport or jetliner would be attacked
in retaliation for the prosecution of the sheik, convicted of plotting to
blow up major New York City landmarks.
Investigators have been unable to find definitive evidence proving any of
their three key theories: missile, bomb planted in the plane or a mechanical
malfunction.
On Friday, the bomb theory took another tumble when the FBI revealed the
plane had carried explosives within a year of the crash as part of a
training exercise for drug-sniffing dogs.
That revelation could explain how traces of explosives were found on
wreckage of the downed Boeing 747.
The overriding obstacle for investigators probing the missile theory has
been the fact that Flight 800's engines show no signs of missile damage.
But military experts told the FBI several modern heat-seeking
missiles -- in the hands of terrorists in Africa and available to their
Middle East counterparts -- target a plane's "central mass."
These missiles -- launched from a shoulder harness or a small pad --
different from the Stinger missiles that Afgani freedom fighters used
against the Russians -- are equipped with a super-sophisticated heat-
seeking device and are able to reach higher targets.
TWA 800 exploded at 13,700 feet -- the upper limit for the newest of
these portable-type missile systems.
Military experts pointed the FBI to man-portable missiles such as the SA
-14 Gremlin, SA-16 Gimlet and SA-18 Grouse -- equipped with "proportional
convergence logic" systems that are "sensitive enough to home in on airframe
radiation" once it nears its target, rather than isolated hot spots.
Copyright 1996, N.Y.P. Holdings Inc.