First ... Let's say we have a neighbor lost their Boeing. They said that jet flew toward China then they asked for radar record along the east coast of Thailand. We looked into it, did not find anything. Do we have to tell them that there are also unidentified jet in the other regions. Like, hey we got 7 unidentified jets above China, 20 above North Korea, bla bla, bla Do you think how many unidentified jet fly around per day plus it is not Thailand's territory. It could be neighbor's military jet or something they do not want to tell. (1) It was in neighbor's territory. (2) Why did they say anything? (3) Is it good for a neighbor to be nosy for something in someone else territory? If your neighbor asked you that you see his cat. Do you reply them that you did not see his cat, but saw his son pee in his pool, huh? It is "MILITARY" information, and it should not be disclose unless the information will help finding the missing jet.
Second... There are two kinds of "RADAR", (1) primary (2) secondary. The "PRIMARY" radar is the old school one that will bounce the wave back to the radar station. If the "OBJECT" is not big enough to bounce the wave, or bounce the wave away from the station, it will be UNDETECTABLE. The "SECONDARY" radar is like GPS enabled cellphone. It will send location, aircraft information, and other "STUFFS" back to the station via radio frequency. It will work as long as the machine on the aircraft is power-on, and the machine want to disclose itself to the radar station.
The radar that detect the jet is PRIMARY RADAR. There are no information about the aircraft. Just a big flying object in neighbor's territory OUTSIDE THE SEARCHING AREA.
After Malaysia tell the true that the missing aircraft is actually not going toward China, but return to Malaysia and probably flying through the southern border of Thailand, then we start to look for the record of unidentified jets in the ASKED AREA.
Close your eyes, think for a second, and tell me who should be blamed.
First ... Let's say we have a neighbor lost their Boeing. They said that jet flew toward China then they asked for radar record along the east coast of Thailand. We looked into it, did not find anything. Do we have to tell them that there are also unidentified jet in the other regions. Like, hey we got 7 unidentified jets above China, 20 above North Korea, bla bla, bla Do you think how many unidentified jet fly around per day plus it is not Thailand's territory. It could be neighbor's military jet or something they do not want to tell. (1) It was in neighbor's territory. (2) Why did they say anything? (3) Is it good for a neighbor to be nosy for something in someone else territory? If your neighbor asked you that you see his cat. Do you reply them that you did not see his cat, but saw his son pee in his pool, huh? It is "MILITARY" information, and it should not be disclose unless the information will help finding the missing jet.
Second... There are two kinds of "RADAR", (1) primary (2) secondary. The "PRIMARY" radar is the old school one that will bounce the wave back to the radar station. If the "OBJECT" is not big enough to bounce the wave, or bounce the wave away from the station, it will be UNDETECTABLE. The "SECONDARY" radar is like GPS enabled cellphone. It will send location, aircraft information, and other "STUFFS" back to the station via radio frequency. It will work as long as the machine on the aircraft is power-on, and the machine want to disclose itself to the radar station.
The radar that detect the jet is PRIMARY RADAR. There are no information about the aircraft. Just a big flying object in neighbor's territory OUTSIDE THE SEARCHING AREA.
After Malaysia tell the true that the missing aircraft is actually not going toward China, but return to Malaysia and probably flying through the southern border of Thailand, then we start to look for the record of unidentified jets in the ASKED AREA.
Close your eyes, think for a second, and tell me who should be blamed.
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