EgyptAir
Flight 804
Facts
An
airplane en route from Paris to Cairo went missing in the early hours
of this morning (Thursday)
What
we know:
*Egypt
Air Flight 804 crashes into the Mediterranean
*Reported
that there are 66 passengers and crew
*Cause:At
this moment unknown
*Distress
beacon signal confirmed (media reports)
*Survival
time in Mediterranean water:Estimated between 4- 40 hours
dependant on health and body condition (media report)
10
Hours Later Not A Single Civilian Rescue Plane Has Even Arrived On
The Scene – and this is in the Mediterranean not off the coast of
some backward remote third world country (!)
DIY
Rescue
If
we cannot even get military nor civilian rescue craft to any point
within the Mediterranean in a 10 hour window in the year
2016, then what a sad and sorry state it is – and it speaks volumes
about the organization, structure, and limits (including financial)
of Western Europe's logistical long-haul airlift rescue capabilities
in emergency situations.
What
If It Was Air France or Lufthansa?
Why
bother to pay for NATO when in a crises where it could be usefully
deployed with its logistical capabilities in the Mediterranean
it simply sits on its *ss because it has no mandate nor directive to
assist in emergency civilian situations?
I
get reams of literature from NATO every month telling me what a great
job it is doing.
I
don't use one iota of it because I have yet to see NATO respond in
any meaningful manner to a real emergency – be it in the Ukraine,
in The Eastern Mediterranean or in any other designated North
Atlantic zone.
The
literature I receive covers Afghanistan, piracy and The Horn of
Africa, West Africa, Australia, The Pacific, The South China Seas,
the Philippines and the Far East. All are vital trading sea lanes
(some in dispute) and I do not doubt their strategic value.
Deja
Vu?
In
a situation where a civilian airline has gone missing, after 9/11, I
ask myself, 'have absolutely no lessons been learned which are
applicable to the North Atlantic zone?'
It
would appear not.
The
Mediterranean, The Ukraine and The Baltic and Nordic areas are
certainly part of this North Atlantic Treaty zone.
How
are we to know that this 'disappearance' is not a 'dry run' for
something else?
Are
we only prepared to shoot down civilian airlines which stray off
course over land - and give no thought to emergency rescue – as an
'exercise' in 'rapid deployment' for where (and when) real
emergencies occur?
Egypt
has neither the military capability nor the incentive to prevent
Europe rescuing its citizens - even if the airline has crashed (or
blown up) within the territorial boundaries of Egypt.
Hear
No Evil See No Evil?
With
all on it's plate, perhaps Europe would rather the Egyptian
authorities 'take care' of this matter rather
than have to deploy yet another military force (further scarce
resources) to 'combat' ISIL in the Southern Mediterranean?
It's an
embarrassment for the Egyptian government because there were also non-Arab nationals on board flight 804
and their governments do want answers as to why the plane went
down. If they were all Arab nationals on board, the priority would not be so high to discover the likely cause of the crash - especially if it involved an act of terrorism.
EgyptAir
804 - Where NATO Can Assist
In
a crisis involving 66 lives on EgyptAir, there is simply no
'political capital' to be gained by utilizing long-haul humanitarian
rescue capabilities – which NATO has (or at least the literature I
have been receiving tells me it has.)
I
would like to use a similar analogy as in my previous blog:
when
flesh and blood of 66 victims is weighed on the scale against any
political capital to be made, in such an instance, there are no gains
for NATO – so a 'do nothing' policy exists under the banner or
cloak of 'no mandate' to assist with civilian emergency rescue
operations within the North Atlantic zone.
NATO
has been telling us of its 'humanitarian intervention role' for
almost a decade – yet it cannot even deploy a civilian-assist
rescue mission in it's own backyard, because it has no mandate.
What
Should Happen In the Future?
Lessons
For Learning
In
such a situation, where a plane has gone missing within such a vital
strategic area (or cruise liner has been hijacked) such as the
Mediterranean for NATO not to immediately deploy a search and rescue
aircraft (or tactical team) as a natural humanitarian support to
civilian authorities is a damning indictment.
Indeed
at least one aircraft and one ship should be on permanent standby
(with a dual function) 24/7 365.25 within the North Atlantic zone
with a permanent directive to aid and assist civilian authorities of
the NATO zone member countries as and where directed.
And
where any regime tells NATO and The European Union not to act to aid and assist with an immediate
search and rescue, with immediate deployment inside or on the borders of territorial boundaries and there are EU or U.S. nationals lives in peril, a system should be in
place to publicly shame and humiliate such countries in the open
societies of Christendom.
©Patrick
Emek, May 2016
http://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/incidents/egyptair-disappearance-points-to-bomb-says-terrorism-expert/news-story/86eefb38f365927a5300eea1c55e143b
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/20/world/middleeast/egyptair-flight-804.html?_r=0
http://www.airliners.net/aviation-forums/general_aviation/read.main/6699699/
http://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/incidents/egyptair-disappearance-points-to-bomb-says-terrorism-expert/news-story/86eefb38f365927a5300eea1c55e143b
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/20/world/middleeast/egyptair-flight-804.html?_r=0
http://www.airliners.net/aviation-forums/general_aviation/read.main/6699699/