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![]() "Paul J. Adam" wrote... In message , Dave Kearton writes IMHO Lt Osborn made all the right decisions under very trying circumstances. He kept the plane aloft, long enough for all the sensitive gear to be destroyed, Well, the last above line is the critical question! Did you read the original cite http://readersupportednews.org/off-s...-online-threat The Online Threat Should we be worried about a cyber war? by Seymour M. Hersh Read more http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2...#ixzz13l1jc4sV and find it unconvincing? he KEPT HIS CREW ALIVE and what was left of the plane was flown back to the US after the Chinese were done with it. If you think worst-case, ditching or baling out offers the Chinese a nasty option. "We picked up nine of the crew, here they are. Mission Supervisor Snuffy, who knows all about what the aircraft can do and what its mission was? No, haven't found a trace of him, but we're still searching..." And who's to know different? Once the crew lose sight of each other, there's no way to know whether Supervisor Snuffy died during the bailout, drowned in the ocean, is on a slow fishing boat with no comms on his way to port, or is being forcibly persuaded to be detailed and explicit about EP-3 capabilities in a Beijing basement. Very interesting valid point of view, thanks. I certainly admit that I do not know what 'equipment' and software was destroyed and what was still discoverable. I'm also not sure how knowledgable the crew was! For example, in WWII it was policy that nobody who had knowledge of important secrets should ever be allowed in areas where it might be possible to be captured. For example, anyone who even knew that we were able to decipher the Japanese messages (MAGIC) was not to be in harms way *. The crew are the real prize which could compromise the capability: Are you really sure about that? Knowing how to use a computer program, does not at all mean, you know the program. Or the equipment that runs the program. * Leatherneck: Star-Crossed Translator Story by Dick Camp Second Lt Merle Ralph Cory was an expert cryptanalyst, who, ---- joined the Corps and went to war. His comprehensive knowledge of the American code-breaking successes caused many to second-guess the decision that allowed him to risk capture by the Japanese. ((It was no "decision", he just slipped through the cracks.)) ((he had gone on a 'patrol', and was killed)) Ralph Cory should never have been ---- at Guadalcanal. It was government policy that anyone connected with MAGIC was expressly prohibited from combat or duty that put them in close proximity to the enemy. He slipped through the cracks ---. 2004 Leatherneck Magazine. All rights reserved. |
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