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I'd be curious to see how you could have read it several times already. If you look strictly at when NORAD was notified, they did a terrible job. For instance, in the last NORAD related hearing, the NORAD folks admitted they could have shot down Flight 77 if they acted sooner. Why didn't they reach Flight 77 in time?
From the Wall Street Journal, 4/1/04:
Once they got in the air, the Langley fighters observed peacetime noise restrictions requiring that they fly more slowly than supersonic speed and take off over water, pointed away from Washington, according to testimony before the commission. (Gen. Quenneville of the Massachusetts Air National Guard said the fighters from Otis Air Force Base ignored peacetime rules because the lead pilot concluded they faced an extraordinary situation.)
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And here, from today commission's staff report. It talks about them going over the ocean, but not about flying below supersonic, even though the supersonic mention in the WSJ came from testimony to the commission!:
At 9:36, the FAA’s Boston Center called NEADS and relayed the discovery about the aircraft closing in on Washington, an aircraft that still had not been linked with the missing American 77. The FAA told NEADS: “Latest report. Aircraft VFR six miles southeast of the White House. … Six, southwest. Six, southwest of the White House, deviating away.” This startling news prompted the Mission Crew Commander at NEADS to take immediate control of the airspace to clear a flight path for the Langley fighters: “Okay, we’re going to turn it … crank it up. … Run them to the White House.” He then discovered, to his surprise, that the Langley fighters were not headed north toward the Baltimore area as instructed, but east over the ocean. “I don’t care how many windows you break,” he said. “Damn it… Okay. Push them back.”
The Langley fighters were heading east, not north, for three reasons. First, unlike a normal scramble order, this order did not include a distance to the target, or the target’s location. Second, a “generic” flight plan incorrectly led the Langley fighters to believe they were ordered to fly due east (090) for 60 miles. The purpose of the generic flight plan was to quickly get the aircraft airborne and out of local airspace. Third, the lead pilot and local FAA controller incorrectly assumed the flight plan instruction to go “090 for 60” was newer guidance that superseded the original scramble order.
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And then if you look at the statements of the pilots themselves, they say they were tasked to go to New York City, not Washington, DC, something the commission doesn't even mention. The staff report concludes by suggesting that even if Flight 93 made it to Washington around 10:20, it's still not clear if fighters would have been alerted to shoot them down.
I sure don't see NORAD covered in glory.
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