Radars cannot tell us aircraft status, particularly what goes on inside. Radars can only tell us location and other factors that make up 'location', such as altitude, direction, speed, etc...
A plane is going off track and not heading where it's intended. Hmm, I wonder that signals.
Wrong...It is only YOUR opinion that the number of fighters on alert is 'too low'. You are making serious reasoning error. If this figure is supposed to be kept 'secret' then how is it that we know about it?
Because the government is releasing fake figures to cover its ***.
That would pretty much give away the conspiracy as on one particular day of the year you have no planes on alert. 14 is a more calculated number I think.And if the US government is covering up something, strange that we would use '14', why not zero to further support the 'official' story that we were unprepared?
Fact is that the US was at a peacetime footing. The belief was that any enemy attack would be from a government hostile to US and that such a state of hostility would be indicative of an imminent armed conflict. Methods of attack would have been bombers or ICBMs, not hijacked airliners.
That's an unreasonable explanation. US was not completely at peace, and moreover even if it was, it would still have several bases on alert, just like any other country.
Wrong...Here is what the article actually said...
Transponders are not radars. I have said it many times before here and will repeat...In radar detection, NOTHING is invisible. But the problem is that detection is not identification. This is where gullible people like you got suckered. Notice what the paragraph said...That there were over 4000 other airborne targets. That is a huge identification problem. If you detect a flock of birds, that does not mean you can identify a sparrow from a warbler from a marlin. That is identification, distinct from detection. That is why transponders are useful. The transponder transmit a unique code containing the aircraft's speed, direction and altitude to assist the controller in identifying which target is which on his scope, making guidance easier. The controller's scope would look something like this...
Notice all the targets' names and positions.
So if the hijackers turned off the transponders, the controller may (or may not) still have the aircraft on his scope but no way to confirm identity. So if already you are making a serious technical error which led up to a flawed understanding of the day, why should anyone take you seriously?
If anyone is having problems here, it is you. On one hand, you have the article saying why the planes could not be identified and why there was nothing dispatched to intercept it. On the other hand, a plane that has already crashed is told to be heading towards a certain direction and is hijacked. A clear cut case of creating a smokescreen for why the planes were not intercepted and at the same time convincing the public that would could be done was done as regards to informing the military.
Moreover, this is not even the main argument (although it does counter the BS official story) as to the interception of the planes part. That is the exercises being done to stop the interception. And really, you're telling me that people who were supposedly learning to fly paper airplanes can be fly these jets?
Sorry...Another baseless assumption.
Again a childish and desperate argument. If there are no planes on alert, that has to be engineered by the government. Under normal protocol in any country with a decent airforce, much less US, there will always be planes on alert. Anyway that's not really a big deal as far as the overall conspiracy is concerned.
Missile bases would be on alert. Do you know how much it would cost to keep an armed fighter on alert, as you posit: 'to take off within a few seconds' ? Not every USAF base is a fighter base. Not every USAF base even have an active runway, such as Lowry AFB base by Denver, Colorado, for example. Lowry is a technical training base. So in order to keep armed fighters on 'few seconds' alert to provide coverage across continental US we would have to be a dictatorship, like the once USSR.
And I really hope no one else has bought these blatant lies. I do not know how much it costs, but regardless the US military budget allows that. Heck even in Pakistan with 4% of GDP being used for military, and about 0.5% the military budget of the US, we have that capability. This is an absurd argument to say the least.
Not only that, the US military does not have authority over US airspace. The Federal Aviation Administration does...
Federal Aviation Administration - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The only places where the US military can exercise independent actions are Defense Identification Zones...
Air Defense Identification Zone - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Once an aircraft is confirmed to be 'friendly' and passed thru an ADIZ, jurisdiction falls to the FAA, not NORAD as deceitfully argued by many loony conspiracy believers. So if an aircraft somehow lost its ID to a controller, it would be the FAA's responsibility to reestablish contact and reconfirm ID before assuming that something as bad as an air piracy and before calling the military for assistance thru a liaison, such as this man...
http://www.asiwebsite.com/cv_ew.html
Any calls for military assistance would have to be approved by the Pentagon, not the local military liaison desk. This is to ensure no abuse of military assets for trivial reasons. So the chain of calls and confirmations can be long.
And I am not arguing against that, but you're telling me the pentagon would take forever to approve military assistance, given that a plane had already crashed and the news was spreading like wildfire.