Thanks for that article. I think it is well thought out and written and very realistic of the situation.
Ditto re "Australia is the neutral guardian." Great article, jerseygirl.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Thanks for that article. I think it is well thought out and written and very realistic of the situation.
IMHO Australia has high credibility and exudes competence. Intentions are honorable, sharing is done for the good of the recovery efforts, and communications are transparent and forthcoming. When they don't want to share sensitive info, they say so. They don't profess ignorance, thwart efforts and hide important pieces of data. I'm very thankful they are leading these efforts...
There is no comparison to Malaysia.
JMO.
I'm actually curious why Australia is taking such a big role. I'm not against it or anything and I don't care if we are funding a large part of it. I think it's good. But I'm still curious why. Is it because we are the closest country? Is it because there were 6 Aussies on board? Is it strategic for our international relations? Is it because one of the themes in our countries history is 'lending a hand'? I could see gov't wanting to uphold that image. Is it good experience for all the departments and the crew involved? All or none of the above?
Who was the guy speaking via satellite from the UK?
Lol looks like we're not the only ones who think he's cute!
http://mobile.news.com.au/entertain...a-airlines-mh370/story-fn907478-1226862359007
There's about to be an "Anchorman" style news station throw down on CNN, whoa! Tempers are flaring!
I'm actually curious why Australia is taking such a big role. I'm not against it or anything and I don't care if we are funding a large part of it. I think it's good. But I'm still curious why. Is it because we are the closest country? Is it because there were 6 Aussies on board? Is it strategic for our international relations? Is it because one of the themes in our countries history is 'lending a hand'? I could see gov't wanting to uphold that image. Is it good experience for all the departments and the crew involved? All or none of the above?
Mhm...how are they all so darn cute? :blushing:
Lol. I'm Australian so the accents aren't a big thing for me....but those Air Force men....:heartluv: :hot:
I'm grateful to all the countries involved. It's a huge effort. After seeing the criticism piled on Malaysia though, I guess it worries me a bit that Australia will cop some flak if the plane isn't found. I'll wait and see though.
U.S. investigators say they aren't getting a full flow of information from the Malaysiansprompting some to complain to headquarters in Washington that they feel relegated to the margins, according to several people familiar with the matter. Malaysian investigators, meanwhile, are wary of information leaks they believe are occurring more regularly among their counterparts from Washington.
<respectfully snipped; enjoyed the reading.>
The embassy declined to comment on the level of cooperation between the two countries.
Boeing, without the full involvement of Malaysian investigators, has run some computer models of the last phase of the flight, highlighting another point of tension in the probe, two people familiar with the matter said. These so-called engineering simulations seek to lay out the most likely movements of the plane before and after it is presumed to have run out of fuel. Such work typically would be more closely coordinated with leaders of the overall investigations, according to these people.
Boeing on Friday re-emphasized that it continues to serve as a technical adviser to the NTSB.
The current tensions between U.S. and Malaysian investigators have roots in issues that appeared three weeks ago, people familiar the matter said, soon after the flight dropped off civilian radar March 8 en route to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur.
From the beginning, according to a U.S. government official and others, Boeing was upset that it took about three hoursmuch longer than would be typicalfor Malaysian authorities to inform company representatives the jet hadn't been heard from.
Boeing's team remains "quite frustrated and doesn't trust the process," according to one person familiar with the company's views.
FAA and NTSB officials didn't play a prominent role in briefing Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak just before his somber announcement Monday that Flight 370 "ended in the southern Indian Ocean." The analysis was based primarily on work done by satellite-operator Inmarsat ISAT.LN +0.07% PLC and the U.K.'s Air Accidents Investigation Branch, the NTSB's British counterpart. Officials in Kuala Lumpur and the AAIB have a long-standing relationship on safety matters.
I believe it is because it's Oz's waters?
Canada funded the SAR for Swiss 111, taxpayers got nabbed with the bill, but that's what we do. It is also good training for SAR.
I'm a bit confused but I think it's outside of Australia's territory. It's international waters and not in Australia's jurisdiction. But it is in our search and rescue zone. Don't get me wrong though, I think it's right what Australia is doing.
http://www.ga.gov.au/marine/jurisdiction/maritime-boundary-definitions.html
I think Anderson needs a hug...
I agree. I tought he was going to cry on that last story. I know I was. jmo