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India’s oldest flying aircraft in spotlight after radar website shows it going to Pakistan
The site, Flightradar24.com, later put out a clarification, but not before social media was buzzing about the Aviation Research Centre’s Boeing 707.
SNEHESH ALEX PHILIP14 May, 2020
Screenshot from Flightradar24.com, showing a flight heading into Pakistan from India
New Delhi: An innocuous blip on a flight tracking website has thrown the spotlight on India’s oldest flying aircraft, a Boeing 707, used by the country’s intelligence agencies to gather information.
It all started when various OSINT (open-source intelligence) handles tweeted a flight path that appeared on Flightradar24, indicating that an Indian Air Force flight (the Boeing 707) flew into Pakistan.
Screenshot of a tweet by an OSINT handle, later deleted.
While it is yet to be ascertained if the aircraft did fly into Pakistani air space, the buzz generated by the OSINT handles has put the spotlight on the old and trusted flying machine of the Aviation Research Centre, which falls under the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW).
The buzz, in fact, has led to Flightradar 24 issuing a statement, saying when aircraft fly out of coverage, the positions on their website are shown according to estimates based on the latest received position, speed and track data.
https://theprint.in/defence/indias-...ar-website-shows-it-going-to-pakistan/421757/
@waz @MastanKhan @Arsalan 345 @Imran Khan @Bilal Khan (Quwa) @Bilal Khan 777 @Irfan Baloch
The site, Flightradar24.com, later put out a clarification, but not before social media was buzzing about the Aviation Research Centre’s Boeing 707.
SNEHESH ALEX PHILIP14 May, 2020
Screenshot from Flightradar24.com, showing a flight heading into Pakistan from India
New Delhi: An innocuous blip on a flight tracking website has thrown the spotlight on India’s oldest flying aircraft, a Boeing 707, used by the country’s intelligence agencies to gather information.
It all started when various OSINT (open-source intelligence) handles tweeted a flight path that appeared on Flightradar24, indicating that an Indian Air Force flight (the Boeing 707) flew into Pakistan.
Screenshot of a tweet by an OSINT handle, later deleted.
While it is yet to be ascertained if the aircraft did fly into Pakistani air space, the buzz generated by the OSINT handles has put the spotlight on the old and trusted flying machine of the Aviation Research Centre, which falls under the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW).
The buzz, in fact, has led to Flightradar 24 issuing a statement, saying when aircraft fly out of coverage, the positions on their website are shown according to estimates based on the latest received position, speed and track data.
https://theprint.in/defence/indias-...ar-website-shows-it-going-to-pakistan/421757/
@waz @MastanKhan @Arsalan 345 @Imran Khan @Bilal Khan (Quwa) @Bilal Khan 777 @Irfan Baloch