RickH wrote:
I still can't believe that jets from Cape Cod were scrambled to protect New York. Sending jets from Langley to protect Washington DC, especially when the DC ANG was sitting at Andrews just a couple of miles from the Pentagon was unbelievable.
First off, realize that outside the designated interceptors,
no fighter aircraft are sitting around on ramps with live ordnance on board. A live-loaded jet is completely unuseable for training, which is 99% of what CONUS-based fighters do on a daily basis. The Andrews Vipers could have taken off, but with no live ordnance on board, what good would it have been?
In addition, I can tell you from personal experience that the idea of shooting down hijacked airliners NEVER came up in any training I did prior to 9/11. It wasn't on the minds of NORAD, either, since the typical methodology for hijacking pre-9/11 was to let the airliners go where the hijackers wanted and appease them to get the pax off safely.
Even if the Andrews jets had been able to get airborne, I GUARANTEE you that the pilots would not have shot down the airliners.
So...
It's nice to say that "coulda, shoulda" in hindsight, but you have to remember that the paradigms were all different 5 years ago.
Now, with respect to the current air defense posture, I can also tell you from personal experience that the current NOBLE EAGLE posture will allow an easy intercept should the scenario occur again today. In addition, there have been procedures established and training for the trigger-pullers in the cockpit about how to conduct a hijacked airliner intercept and, if necessary, shoot it down.