Four people in particular who boarded the missing Malaysian plane are being investigated, two for stolen passports and two other passport-related suspects.
Those four suspects plus twenty people on board involved in cutting
edge electric technology. some used for defense purposes, raise
a question with this reporter about electronic weaponry hiding the plane.
Added to the
tragic mystery is why not one country checked databases for information
about stolen passports used to board the Malaysia Airlines flight.
New
electronic weapons allow jamming, blinding, deafening and more, so that a
plane could possibly vanish from radar detection and security systems
would not be activated. Basic radar Electronic Counter-Measure strategies used
in electronic warfare (EW) are: 1) radar interference, 2) target
modifications, and 3) changing electrical properties of air.
For example, a U.S. intelligence assessment described to The Daily Beast
by current and former U.S. intelligence officials, concluded any
Israeli attack on Iran would go far beyond fighter plane airstrikes and
would likely deploy EW against Iran’s electric grid, Internet, cellphone
network, and emergency frequencies for firemen and police officers.
“For example,
Israel has developed a weapon capable of mimicking a maintenance
cellphone signal that commands a cell network to “sleep,” effectively
stopping transmissions, officials confirmed. The Israelis also have
jammers capable of creating interference within Iran’s emergency
frequencies for first responders.”
In a 2007,
“the Syrian military got a taste of this warfare when Israeli planes
‘spoofed’ the country’s air-defense radars, at first making it appear
that no jets were in the sky and then in an instant making the radar
believe the sky was filled with hundreds of planes.”
Last year, it
was announced that new stealth technology makes airplanes invisible not
only to radar, it also renders them hidden to the human eye as well —
“just like an invisibility cloak in a Hollywood sci-fi thriller,” reported Military.com.
China had
just touted its work on a “cloaking” technology using a hexagonal array
of glass-like panels to bend light around an object, obscuring it from
view, as though hidden by an invisibility cloak. Experts confirmed that the technology was legit — and not unlike American and European projects from the past few years.
“The general public … might not hear about
how far the U.S. has really come, because it is and should remain
classified,” firearms expert Chris Sajnog, a former Navy SEAL, told
FoxNews.com. “Other countries are still playing catch-up — but they’re
closing the gap.”
Military.com stated, “But while classified
work progresses, several public projects from universities and military
supply companies show just how real this futuristic technology is.”
“Major arms
developers such as BAE Systems readily acknowledge work on this kind of
technology, such as the Adaptiv program, which aims to hide armored
vehicles.”
“The U.S. military is among many who have
expressed interest in Adaptiv, which could be transferred to other
platforms, such as ships and helicopters,” said Mike Sweeney, a
spokesman for BAE.
On the other hand, some experts dispute these new technologies can work at all.
“Invisibility
cloak is a poorly chosen term,” Thomas Way, associate professor of
computing science at Villanova University, wrote to FoxNews.com in an
email. “Invisible to what? We already have stealth aircraft that are
invisible to radar (usually), but there is absolutely no way given our
current understanding of physics that something could be made invisible
to the naked eye… If that’s what they are claiming, it’s a hoax.”
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