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The Military Transportation

3 Decades Later, Finnair Pilots Report Dramatic Close Encounter With a Missile 138

jones_supa (887896) writes It has come to light that a Finnair-owned McDonnell Douglas DC-10 passenger jet narrowly avoided being shot down by a missile while en route to Helsinki 27 years ago, claimed the Finnish newspaper Helsingin Sanomat on Sunday. The two co-pilots, Esko Kaukiainen and Markku Soininen, describe how the event happened during a routine flight back to Helsinki from Japan in December 1987. When the plane was crossing the Arctic Ocean, a missile appeared in the distance. The crew thought it was a Russian weather rocket on its way into space, but the missile began heading straight towards the aircraft. Just 20 seconds away from a collision, the missile exploded. The captain, who was resting at the time of the incident, never officially reported the event. The question of who fired the missile has never been definitively answered. But the pilots believe it was launched from either the Soviet Union's Kola Peninsula or a submarine in the Barents Sea. They speculate that the missile could have been a misfire or that the plane was used as training target.
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3 Decades Later, Finnair Pilots Report Dramatic Close Encounter With a Missile

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  • Nice timing (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    It's probably coincidence that they remember it at this time.

    • Re:Nice timing (Score:4, Informative)

      by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Sunday September 07, 2014 @03:58PM (#47847857)

      The article implies this incident was already known to some people for quite some time, but had been kept from higher ups in the government. It recently came out because a newspaper did some digging (the timing of which isn't too surprising).

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Are you suggesting that you should have come forward when Russia was invading Georgia? Or when Russia was threatening countries in Eastern Europe with being targeted by nuclear missiles? Or when Russia was making threats against Western Europe?

      With Russia it seems there are too few good opportunities to bring this sort of thing forward without questioning "the timing." Why is that?

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward
        Lets not forget it would have been poor timing to mention it at any point in the previous two decades while Russia was propping up Moldovan separatists in Transnistria.

        In fact what's happened in Moldova is a good foreshadowing of what's happening now in Ukraine; Russia uses "separatists" in the east of the country to foment unrest, then props them up whilst denying all involvement. This neatly keeps the country unstable and weak and turns it into a bargaining chip; Moldova won't be able to join the EU unt
      • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

        With Russia it seems there are too few good opportunities to bring this sort of thing forward without questioning "the timing." Why is that?

        Because the rubes taking CIA propaganda at face value (you guys learned NOTHING from the Iraq war) have a slight [youtube.com] problem with throwing stones from within glass houses. [businessinsider.com]

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 07, 2014 @03:14PM (#47847591)

    There are people who recommend Finlandization as a policy. They are terribly misguided. It's a form of moral debasement. It leads to secrecy and lies. It's not a valid policy. If it had continued for a few decades longer, we'd probably have joined the Soviet Union voluntarily. It was a form of slow national suicide.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 07, 2014 @04:19PM (#47847991)

      I have no idea why this comment was modded down since it's directly related to the incident. The pilots actually referred to Finlandization being the reason why the incident wasn't made public by the higher officials. Finlandization was an era of extreme Soviet ass licking on Finland's part and every Finn acknowledges it.

      During the era of Finlandization most anything negative that was directly related to the Soviet Union was censored.

      • by CptPicard ( 680154 ) on Sunday September 07, 2014 @04:59PM (#47848179)

        There really seems to be something going on about that comment, I don't know what it is. It's probably the "national suicide" formulation that is a negative trigger for some people who do not understand the background; but national suicide really was what the USSR about for its constituent peoples. If it wasn't forced relocation, it was branding anything "Fascist" that wasn't pro-Soviet enough.

        There were certainly positives to our ability to keep the Soviets at bay and maintain our democracy during the Cold War; President Kekkonen in his younger days was a remarkable diplomat and statesman, and being overtly uppity would have just triggered "help" from Moscow. But I can well understand the deep frustrations of those people who just wanted to call a spade a spade when it came to our "friend" to the East.

        The really bad part is that Finlandization works across generations in a culture; we're still sheep, scared of the displeasure of those we consider our superiors, and all too afraid of and eager to participate in the collective shoutings-down by people who believe they're superior because they're in the ideological in-crowd. The Stalinists won at least when it comes to that.

        • The really bad part is that Finlandization works across generations in a culture; we're still sheep, scared of the displeasure of those we consider our superiors, and all too afraid of and eager to participate in the collective shoutings-down by people who believe they're superior because they're in the ideological in-crowd. The Stalinists won at least when it comes to that.

          Really, sounds like half the internet these days.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by jhol13 ( 1087781 )

        You and GP are so wrong. There is no chance Finland would have "voluntarily" joined Soviet Union. I am willing to bet at least 70% of the population would have rather went to fight in a war than join SU. Sure a lot though the best policy for Finland is to have very close political and economical ties to SU, but joining ... no way.

        Then there were no cencorship, none at all. Sure the press, and especially government owned YLE, did have a strong bias and they did suppress bad publicity, but there was no censor

        • by ShaunC ( 203807 )

          Then there were no cencorship, none at all. Sure the press, and especially government owned YLE, did have a strong bias and they did suppress bad publicity, but there was no censoring done by the government.

          So the government did not actually ban books and films [wikipedia.org] that were seen as pro-Soviet? Or that just isn't viewed as censorship in Finland?

          • by jhol13 ( 1087781 )

            Sure, there were censoship after the war, but the GP was talking about -80s. If public libraries did not purchase something, it is hardly censorship, is it? One library decided not to buy Donald Duck though it was widely available in shops. Buying or selling any book was not illegal, not even "Mein Kampf". (Offtopic: I hope every neo-nazi reads the book, 'cause it is bullshit).

            OK, I'll give that the classification board can be considered censorship, though it could not prohibit import or private viewing (th

    • Your thesis is substantiated by another dramatic close encounter with a missile happened more than 3 decades ago in Italy, and to this day we don't know who killed all those people, source [wikipedia.org], and if the trail of suicides-bad luck that oppressed the witnesses is entirely casual.

    • by Nimey ( 114278 )

      On the other hand, it kept Finland independent and non-Communist, unlike most of the USSR's immediate neighbors. It was probably about the best the Finns could have done under the (shitty) circumstances.

      • What I was going to say. How much could they exercise their morals if they were conquered by the USSR?

        As usual it's a question of idealism vs. pragmatism

    • This is still going on. Finland’s foreign minister Tuomioja is strongly of the opinion that Finland should never do or say anything that could even remotely be construed as being antagonistic to Russia.
      • by zyzko ( 6739 )

        This is simply not true. Just by using Google translate on his home page (www.tuomioja.org) you can see that on his analysis on the situation at Ukraine he puts Russia as supplier of weapons and as part of the ongoing armed conflict. A fact which official Russia (and their supporters) still firmly deny. I can understand your ...umm...criticism with Tuomioja because of his background, but what you say is simply not true.

        • On 3 September, Tuomioja went on record saying that he opposes creating NATO bases in the Baltic states since supporting it could be perceived as a hostile act towards Russia. ‘[---] It could be justified and is understandable with respect to these countries, but we don’t want our territory to be used for support bases that Russia could see as hostile.’ Source: http://yle.fi/uutiset/fm_tuomi... [yle.fi]. So he may have assessed the situation in Ukraine correctly, but it does not mean that he's not
          • by zyzko ( 6739 )

            This is still pretty far-fetched from your original assertion of saying as his opinion that Finland should never do or say anything that could be construed as being antagonistic to Russia. If that would be the case, he would not assess the situation against what Kremlin says the situation is, would he?

            Saying that he doesn't support stronger and more permanent NATO bases in Baltic countries is a very different thing. Finland still has politicians and public figures who think that the best way would be the of

  • can we get the truth about (KAL 902) and KAL 007?
    now as well?

  • Defies credulity (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Rick Zeman ( 15628 ) on Sunday September 07, 2014 @03:30PM (#47847667)

    Much as I'm disliking the Hitlerian Russian government now, I can't believe a) anyone wouldn't have reported it (the pilot) or b) not talked about it loudly for 25+ years.

    It doesn't add up.

    • by MikeMo ( 521697 )
      The Finnish are not famous for making things up.
    • Re:Defies credulity (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 07, 2014 @05:13PM (#47848277)

      Obviously you've never met a Finn.
      Talking isn't part of their vocabulary.

      Besides, the flight crew probably didn't think that much about it anyways. Being next to Russia you see some pretty crazy things on a regular basis.

      • by Vanders ( 110092 )

        Obviously you've never met a Finn.
        Talking isn't part of their vocabulary

        This. Mika Hakkinen is the true master of it. [youtube.com]

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Swedish Joke about the Fins:

        Two Fins are sitting in a bar, drinking.
        The first one lifts his beer and says "Skoll!"
        The second one: Are we here to drink or to talk?

    • Finlandization... (Score:5, Informative)

      by Savage-Rabbit ( 308260 ) on Sunday September 07, 2014 @06:49PM (#47848725)

      Much as I'm disliking the Hitlerian Russian government now, I can't believe a) anyone wouldn't have reported it (the pilot) or b) not talked about it loudly for 25+ years.

      It doesn't add up.

      It does if you know anything about Finnish history. Pissing off the Soviets was may have been an American national sport during the cold war period but for the Finns it was not at the top of their agenda. Finland spent the cold war balancing on a razor's edge they were bound by post WWII treaties to have a military of a fixed (and rather small) size and of course to remain neutral. For this reason the Finns painstakingly split their military procurement exactly down the middle. Half the air force jets, half the army's tanks and half the navy's ships were bought in the Soviet bloc and the other half in the West and it was a very successful strategy (which is why its now being suggested as a solution to the Ukraine crisis). The Finns may have wiped the floor with the Soviet army during the Winter War but it was still not an experience the Finns cared to repeat in the nuclear era. Since the aircraft wasn't actually harmed no purpose would have been served by deliberately embarrassing the bad tempered 16 foot tall, 3000 pound grizzly bear sitting on their eastern border by advertising the ineptitude of the Soviet air defenses so the sensible strategy was just to play it down.

      • Much as I'm disliking the Hitlerian Russian government now, I can't believe a) anyone wouldn't have reported it (the pilot) or b) not talked about it loudly for 25+ years.

        It doesn't add up.

        It does if you know anything about Finnish history. Pissing off the Soviets was may have been an American national sport during the cold war period but for the Finns it was not at the top of their agenda. Finland spent the cold war balancing on a razor's edge they were bound by post WWII treaties to have a military of a fixed (and rather small) size and of course to remain neutral. For this reason the Finns painstakingly split their military procurement exactly down the middle. Half the air force jets, half the army's tanks and half the navy's ships were bought in the Soviet bloc and the other half in the West and it was a very successful strategy (which is why its now being suggested as a solution to the Ukraine crisis). The Finns may have wiped the floor with the Soviet army during the Winter War but it was still not an experience the Finns cared to repeat in the nuclear era. Since the aircraft wasn't actually harmed no purpose would have been served by deliberately embarrassing the bad tempered 16 foot tall, 3000 pound grizzly bear sitting on their eastern border by advertising the ineptitude of the Soviet air defenses so the sensible strategy was just to play it down.

        No, that was exactly why I read TFA expecting to see that the Finnish government was the one who buried it. They weren't. Seems to...defy credulity that 2 ordinary citizens would be making a political decision like that. The government yes, 2 copilots no.

        • by Savage-Rabbit ( 308260 ) on Sunday September 07, 2014 @07:44PM (#47848963)

          Much as I'm disliking the Hitlerian Russian government now, I can't believe a) anyone wouldn't have reported it (the pilot) or b) not talked about it loudly for 25+ years.

          It doesn't add up.

          It does if you know anything about Finnish history. Pissing off the Soviets was may have been an American national sport during the cold war period but for the Finns it was not at the top of their agenda. Finland spent the cold war balancing on a razor's edge they were bound by post WWII treaties to have a military of a fixed (and rather small) size and of course to remain neutral. For this reason the Finns painstakingly split their military procurement exactly down the middle. Half the air force jets, half the army's tanks and half the navy's ships were bought in the Soviet bloc and the other half in the West and it was a very successful strategy (which is why its now being suggested as a solution to the Ukraine crisis). The Finns may have wiped the floor with the Soviet army during the Winter War but it was still not an experience the Finns cared to repeat in the nuclear era. Since the aircraft wasn't actually harmed no purpose would have been served by deliberately embarrassing the bad tempered 16 foot tall, 3000 pound grizzly bear sitting on their eastern border by advertising the ineptitude of the Soviet air defenses so the sensible strategy was just to play it down.

          No, that was exactly why I read TFA expecting to see that the Finnish government was the one who buried it. They weren't. Seems to...defy credulity that 2 ordinary citizens would be making a political decision like that. The government yes, 2 copilots no.

          It is hard to believe that a near miss by a SAM would be given less attention by the captain than a malfunctioning coffee maker and even harder to believe that this incident was not reported. If a SAM exploded 20 seconds away from my DC-10 full of passengers whose lives I'm responsible for that would sure as shit get my attention if I was the captain and you can bet your bottom dollar I would report it to somebody. The original article simply says the captain refused to report the incident, it does not say he didn't try so it's entirely possible that he actually did try to report it and was told in no uncertain terms to shut the f*** up about it.

          • ...

            It is hard to believe that a near miss by a SAM would be given less attention by the captain than a malfunctioning coffee maker and even harder to believe that this incident was not reported. If a SAM exploded 20 seconds away from my DC-10 full of passengers whose lives I'm responsible for that would sure as shit get my attention if I was the captain and you can bet your bottom dollar I would report it to somebody....

            It really is hard to believe, yes. For example, let's say it is the inclination of the pilot to day "we're okay" let's just forget about it. Does he know the airplane suffered no damage at all? How? When the plane goes in for maintenance are there going to the mysterious fragment holes in the tail or wings? These might endanger plane safety, and even if not the unreported incident that created them would end his career. Is he and the copilor going to bet that the plane really is unscathed?

            What about the pa

      • by jhol13 ( 1087781 )

        I call bullshit.
        What would have happened is the same as what happened with the Lake Inari missile, except less press. USSR would have said it was a practice, the estimate to hit would have been changed from 20 seconds to few minutes, "no real danger", and the Finnish government and Army would have completely agreed.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      If only Linus T. had been in the cockpit, there might've been some interesting commentary afterwards.

    • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

      Much as I'm disliking the Hitlerian Russian government now

      Because what you took from the Iraq invasion was that hilariously bad government propaganda should be believed at all times?

  • 20 seconds away? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Ihlosi ( 895663 ) on Sunday September 07, 2014 @03:31PM (#47847683)
    Even for a very slow (Mach 1) missile, that's several miles flight time. For a missile flying a reasonable speed, it's ten or more miles.
    • Airplanes don't fly stationary. I assume it was flying away from the missile, so "20 seconds away" would've been calculated using the missile's speed minus the airplane's speed. Which means the missile could've been much closer.

      • I assume it was flying away from the missile

        That seems like an unlikely assumption given that the crew saw the missile from the cockpit.

      • by Urkki ( 668283 )

        Airplanes don't fly stationary. I assume it was flying away from the missile, so "20 seconds away" would've been calculated using the missile's speed minus the airplane's speed. Which means the missile could've been much closer.

        Closer sure, but not much closer. The speed of the missile might be 4 times the speed of the passenger plane, so for example 20 km becomes 15 km. The missiles are designed to hit supersonic military aircraft, after all.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The original article says the missile was 20-25 kilometers away when it was blown up.
      Original link (in Finnish)
      http://www.hs.fi/sunnuntai/LentÃfjÃft+kertovat+Ohjus+oli+osua+Finnairin+koneeseen+1987++tÃfystuho+20+sekunnin+pÃfÃfssÃf/a1409895098937

  • Since it's most probably a russian missile, this proves that they have a self-destruct mode that can be activated before they could hit their target.

    This implies that the plane shot down by a russian missile in Ukraine was destroyed on purpose, since the missile could have exploded before hitting its target.

    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday September 07, 2014 @05:53PM (#47848479)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by mpe ( 36238 )
      Since it's most probably a russian missile, this proves that they have a self-destruct mode that can be activated before they could hit their target.
      This implies that the plane shot down by a russian missile in Ukraine was destroyed on purpose, since the missile could have exploded before hitting its target.


      The capabilities of thus unknown, but most likely sea or air launched, missile tell you nothing about those of an SA-12.
      It also gives no indication if whoever shot MH17 down knew that it was a neutral
    • by wonkey_monkey ( 2592601 ) on Sunday September 07, 2014 @06:05PM (#47848551) Homepage

      This implies that the plane shot down by a russian missile in Ukraine was destroyed on purpose, since the missile could have exploded before hitting its target.

      I don't think anyone was in much doubt that it was deliberately shot down. What they thought they were shooting down is another matter.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      Really, I stopped paying attention to the BBC after too many incomplete and inaccurate reports on news. I don't know why they do it, maybe it is just ineptitude, but if it is, they need to re-learn journalism.

  • else it might have been teenage me shooting off my home-made rockets.

    / yep, I'd be in gitmo nowdays for half the crap I did as a teen
  • So know we know not to fly Finnair ever again or any Finnish airline for that matter. Not because an airplane was targetted by Russia which could happen to any airline but because they have kept this information hidden for 27 years even to this day. This means that the Finnish Transport Safety Agency is corrupt and cannot be trusted which doesn't bode well for their aviation safety.

  • I wonder how many "UFO" close encounters reported through the years might be something like this: something very rare, and almost unthinkable to the common people (a passenger jet as target practice for missiles?!), but totally explainable.

  • Then it's a good thing the remote detonation worked this time.

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