Pilot furious at U.S. for silence on bomb

futurepilot1

Well-Known Member
http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/01/05/danyluk.pilot.complaint/index.html

Editor's note: Steve Danyluk is an international first officer for a major U.S. airline and president of The Independence Fund, a nonprofit that supports troops wounded in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
(CNN) -- Following the attempt to bomb a passenger jet on Christmas Day, President Obama said that "once the suspect attempted to take down Flight 253, it's clear Homeland Security and Aviation Security took all appropriate actions."
I am a commercial airline pilot who was deep over the Atlantic flying from St. Kitts and Nevis for nearly six hours on Christmas Day following the attempted bombing on Flight 253.
I only learned about the incident after landing when I looked at the CNN Web site on my iPhone. I'm justifiably furious that I was not notified while airborne.
Our government clearly dropped the ball. President Obama has ordered a review into the intelligence failures leading up to the attempted Christmas Day bombing by Umar Farouk AbdulMutallab, but an equally important review needs to be made into how events were handled once AbdulMutallab attempted to carry out his plan.
Specifically, why weren't the actions the Transportation Safety Administration outlines in our aviation manuals initiated, and what took place inside the federal Domestic Events Network in the immediate aftermath of the terror attempt?
Following the 9/11 review, the DEN was given the task of instituting new procedures for controllers on how to communicate information about suspicious aircraft throughout the system.
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<!--endclickprintexclude-->The Washington-based DEN Operations Center is supposed to allow federal agencies with jurisdiction over the security of U.S. airspace to communicate information in real time. So why, after eight years and billions of dollars, was the information concerning the incident available to me only on my iPhone?
Like many commercial pilots, I flew in the military. There, each squadron maintains something called a pre-mishap plan. Basically, it's a three-ring binder with a series of actions the watch officer is supposed to take when a mishap happens.
It's a very useful tool -- but only if the officer who is assigned to carry out the plan is familiar with the binder's contents. Good commanding officers run simulated mishap drills within their squadrons to ensure their junior officers effectively execute the plan.
I'm left with the sickening sense that after 9/11, the government spent horrific amounts of money to create the "mother of all" pre-mishap plans, but never effectively tested it. Why? Because unlike the military, where commanding officers rise up through the ranks based on professional competency, our government operates on a different model.
How else does one explain the failed governmental response to natural disasters like Katrina, or man-made disasters like the Christmas Day bombing attempt?
The silver lining is that AbdulMutallab's failed attempt gave us that test of the response system. It can only be attributed to luck that unlike 9/11, this was not a coordinated attack involving multiple aircraft.
Now that the gaping holes in our response have been exposed, let's do a thorough review of what took place on Flight 253 and ensure we have professionals in decision-making positions who will execute the plan if this happens again.
The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Steve Danyluk.
 
Either way, I'm all for a system test. Yeah, but just like a checkride we need to find out what needs to be changed or adjusted so that we can be notified. (Yes? or No?)
 
I am a commercial airline pilot who was deep over the Atlantic flying from St. Kitts and Nevis for nearly six hours on Christmas Day following the attempted bombing on Flight 253.

Not quite sure if he had SATCOM or not, but SELCAL'ing a couple hundred aircraft one by one over the Atlantic would have taken hours.

I only learned about the incident after landing when I looked at the CNN Web site on my iPhone. I'm justifiably furious that I was not notified while airborne.

By whom?

Our government clearly dropped the ball. President Obama has ordered a review into the intelligence failures leading up to the attempted Christmas Day bombing by Umar Farouk AbdulMutallab, but an equally important review needs to be made into how events were handled once AbdulMutallab attempted to carry out his plan.

That's between you and your dispatcher. He most likely had access to the information and did not forward it.

Specifically, why weren't the actions the Transportation Safety Administration outlines in our aviation manuals initiated, and what took place inside the federal Domestic Events Network in the immediate aftermath of the terror attempt?

Umm, arooOooOoO?! I guess I'd better change my aviation manuals for the umm, Domestic Events Network. Man, I don't think my FOM is that far out of date! Perhaps it is...

Following the 9/11 review, the DEN was given the task of instituting new procedures for controllers on how to communicate information about suspicious aircraft throughout the system.

I'll give him a pass here because I have no clue with a "Domestic Events Network" even is apart from what he says here.

The Washington-based DEN Operations Center is supposed to allow federal agencies with jurisdiction over the security of U.S. airspace to communicate information in real time. So why, after eight years and billions of dollars, was the information concerning the incident available to me only on my iPhone?

Cellphone coverage?

Like many commercial pilots, I flew in the military. There, each squadron maintains something called a pre-mishap plan. Basically, it's a three-ring binder with a series of actions the watch officer is supposed to take when a mishap happens.

I really don't need any more manuals. I hope he isn't the guy who suggests formation takeoffs to alleviate runway congestion because "Well, minimum intervals worked great back on the 'BUFF'!"

It's a very useful tool -- but only if the officer who is assigned to carry out the plan is familiar with the binder's contents. Good commanding officers run simulated mishap drills within their squadrons to ensure their junior officers effectively execute the plan.

I'm not sure we need a brand new layer of bureaucracy to say, "Hey dispatch, ACARS your flight crews if there's a situation that might be relevant when it comes to safety".

I'm left with the sickening sense that after 9/11, the government spent horrific amounts of money to create the "mother of all" pre-mishap plans, but never effectively tested it. Why? Because unlike the military, where commanding officers rise up through the ranks based on professional competency, our government operates on a different model.
How else does one explain the failed governmental response to natural disasters like Katrina, or man-made disasters like the Christmas Day bombing attempt?

Any of our veterans want to handle this one? :)

The silver lining is that AbdulMutallab's failed attempt gave us that test of the response system. It can only be attributed to luck that unlike 9/11, this was not a coordinated attack involving multiple aircraft.

Sure.

Now that the gaping holes in our response have been exposed, let's do a thorough review of what took place on Flight 253 and ensure we have professionals in decision-making positions who will execute the plan if this happens again.
The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Steve Danyluk.

In progress?
 
I would think a notice to all US flights would not be out of the question to raise awareness in the cabin that it is not just another day. The lax attitude Obama has shown (not connected, loan wolf, extremist (not jihadist) nothing connecting Al-Quaeda) in the first days shows he had little clue until a tsunami of info flooded his desk. And then he was quick to reassure us he would not tolerate such lapses. Lapses all the way up included?
 
Any of our veterans want to handle this one? :)



Oh yes please!

....buuuutttttt, seeing as we have some upstanding, fine officers on this board, I'll only say that just because you have shiny things on your shoulders or beret, does not, in fact make you the best thing since Audie Murphy (Who was actually enlisted by the way....SUCK IT!)
 
Any of our veterans want to handle this one? :)

"Rise up the ranks based on professional competency"

LOL......maybe up through about O-4, possibly O-5. Then on, its based on the amount and flavor of Kool-aid you decide to drink.

Eff-up, move up.
 
"Rise up the ranks based on professional competency"

LOL......maybe up through about O-4, possibly O-5. Then on, its based on the amount and flavor of Kool-aid you decide to drink.

Eff-up, move up.

It's the Dilbert Principal. Those who cannot do the job are systematically promoted into a spot where they can do the least amount of harm.

Management.

For example, I'm waiting for a manager to give me a call here for a phone interview. She was supposed to call me at 8:00, and it is now 8:13. If I showed up at the interview late like that, I'd be in trouble. But for her, no worries.
 
"Rise up the ranks based on professional competency"

LOL......maybe up through about O-4, possibly O-5. Then on, its based on the amount and flavor of Kool-aid you decide to drink.

Eff-up, move up.

I don't know man... it seemed to me any moron could get promoted to at LEAST O-4. Heck, O2 and O3 are automatic and in the Army O-4 was at something like an 85% promotion rate and O5 was in the 70s.

It's based on staffing levels and little else. I remember as a kid my Dad sweating promotion to Major and wondering what he'd do in the civilian world if he missed the cut. The promotion rate was only 30-40ish% to Major back then.
 
I don't know man... it seemed to me any moron could get promoted to at LEAST O-4. Heck, O2 and O3 are automatic and in the Army O-4 was at something like an 85% promotion rate and O5 was in the 70s.

It's based on staffing levels and little else. I remember as a kid my Dad sweating promotion to Major and wondering what he'd do in the civilian world if he missed the cut. The promotion rate was only 30-40ish% to Major back then.

Dude they even make MikeD a major, and that guy's a serious hack!
 
I don't know man... it seemed to me any moron could get promoted to at LEAST O-4. Heck, O2 and O3 are automatic and in the Army O-4 was at something like an 85% promotion rate and O5 was in the 70s.

It's based on staffing levels and little else. I remember as a kid my Dad sweating promotion to Major and wondering what he'd do in the civilian world if he missed the cut. The promotion rate was only 30-40ish% to Major back then.

Similar in the USAF. O-5 is now where the big cut is (and even then the rate is above 50%).
 
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