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Continental 777 nearly gets shot down

Israeli warplanes were on the verge of shooting down a commercial airliner on Wednesday. Continental Flight 90 was over the Mediterranean. As it entered Israeli air space it was called upon to identify itself. According to Israel Air Force personnel, the Boeing 777 failed to respond. Israeli security being much more vigilant than any other, and fearing the aircraft may be in the hands of hijackers, the Israeli air force launched two F15s and two F16s to intercept the plane.

A spokeswoman for the Israel Airports Authority the plane was intercepted because it failed to respond when asked to identify itself when it entered Israeli air space. The plane was forced back over the Mediterranean Sea until communications were made with the pilot. No doubt the Continental crew have a lot of explaining to do in Tel Aviv and Newark when they return.

"From the moment that we lost contact with the jet we treated the incident as a possible terror act. When the fighters approached the plane, they guided it west. It contacted us and that's how we were sure it was not a terror attempt," an aviation authority source told Ynet news. You can well imagine the 777's crew reaction to four fighters screaming straight at them. No doubt the crew woke up. We wonder who is paying for the fighter scramble.

The Israeli Transportation Ministry said it was investigating whether there was a technical reason for the initial lack of communication between the plane and Israeli ground control. According to a report on Israel's Channel 10, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Defence Minister Amir Peretz, and General Gaby Ashkenazy, chief of staff, were warned that the air force was on the point of shooting down a civilian plane suspected of being in the hands of hijackers.

Following the mid-air drama, Continental Flight 90 touched down at Tel Aviv airport without further incident. We wonder if the passengers had any idea of the spectacle occurring around them. The aviation authority immediately launched an inquiry.

Continental 777 nearly gets shot down

Israeli warplanes were on the verge of shooting down a commercial airliner on Wednesday. Continental Flight 90 was over the Mediterranean. As it entered Israeli air space it was called upon to identify itself. According to Israel Air Force personnel, the Boeing 777 failed to respond. Israeli security being much more vigilant than any other, and fearing the aircraft may be in the hands of hijackers, the Israeli air force launched two F15s and two F16s to intercept the plane.

A spokeswoman for the Israel Airports Authority the plane was intercepted because it failed to respond when asked to identify itself when it entered Israeli air space. The plane was forced back over the Mediterranean Sea until communications were made with the pilot. No doubt the Continental crew have a lot of explaining to do in Tel Aviv and Newark when they return.

"From the moment that we lost contact with the jet we treated the incident as a possible terror act. When the fighters approached the plane, they guided it west. It contacted us and that's how we were sure it was not a terror attempt," an aviation authority source told Ynet news. You can well imagine the 777's crew reaction to four fighters screaming straight at them. No doubt the crew woke up. We wonder who is paying for the fighter scramble.

The Israeli Transportation Ministry said it was investigating whether there was a technical reason for the initial lack of communication between the plane and Israeli ground control. According to a report on Israel's Channel 10, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Defence Minister Amir Peretz, and General Gaby Ashkenazy, chief of staff, were warned that the air force was on the point of shooting down a civilian plane suspected of being in the hands of hijackers.

Following the mid-air drama, Continental Flight 90 touched down at Tel Aviv airport without further incident. We wonder if the passengers had any idea of the spectacle occurring around them. The aviation authority immediately launched an inquiry.

IATA raises 2007 forecast

Its been a while since we came across such bullish sentiments. We have been mumbling this for a while – starting in the third quarter last year. But for the lunatic in Tehran, oil prices would be even lower and airlines would be rolling in dough.

ATW has a neat summary of the IATA update here. Essentially IATA thinks the industry will go from $2.5bn to $3.8bn in net profits this year and then to $7.8bn in 2008. If you have not bought shares in airlines for a while, you might be too late. You could, maybe, take a run at Boeing because a lot of those profits are going to get recycled for new planes. Especially 787s. Unfortunately Toulouse badly missed this cycle and right sized plane.

IATA correctly talks about shocks that could derail the better scenario. No kidding. One of those shocks that we cannot blame on unstable oil nations is labor costs. Airlines have squeezed nearly all life from their employees and certainly squeezed all service out of their, well, service. Lousy balance sheets are not the fault of labor. Shoddy financials are the work of management. We expect to see bolshie union actions as the money flows back into the airlines. Delta has done a very smart thing with its labor and kudos to Mr. Grinstein on taking none of it for himself. The same cannot be said of United, where the Gordon Gekko school of management still seems to be at work.

As we move deeper into a knowledge based economy you would think management realizes that flatter structures are better. People have to "buy in" to corporate plans. Coercion no longer works like it used to. Labor no longer fears anything – they have been eyeball to eyeball with the White Elephant. Knuckle draggers make poor managers because we see aviation people marketing their skills the world over. Pilots are in demand overseas and go for the work. In the US, airline managers are facing a very new world order. Be nice or get nowhere.

Kudos also go to the managers at Continental, where pensions are funded and people are happy to work. Same thing at Southwest. American is sort of there. Northwest is not. US Airways? Too early to tell.

IATA raises 2007 forecast

Its been a while since we came across such bullish sentiments. We have been mumbling this for a while – starting in the third quarter last year. But for the lunatic in Tehran, oil prices would be even lower and airlines would be rolling in dough.

ATW has a neat summary of the IATA update here. Essentially IATA thinks the industry will go from $2.5bn to $3.8bn in net profits this year and then to $7.8bn in 2008. If you have not bought shares in airlines for a while, you might be too late. You could, maybe, take a run at Boeing because a lot of those profits are going to get recycled for new planes. Especially 787s. Unfortunately Toulouse badly missed this cycle and right sized plane.

IATA correctly talks about shocks that could derail the better scenario. No kidding. One of those shocks that we cannot blame on unstable oil nations is labor costs. Airlines have squeezed nearly all life from their employees and certainly squeezed all service out of their, well, service. Lousy balance sheets are not the fault of labor. Shoddy financials are the work of management. We expect to see bolshie union actions as the money flows back into the airlines. Delta has done a very smart thing with its labor and kudos to Mr. Grinstein on taking none of it for himself. The same cannot be said of United, where the Gordon Gekko school of management still seems to be at work.

As we move deeper into a knowledge based economy you would think management realizes that flatter structures are better. People have to "buy in" to corporate plans. Coercion no longer works like it used to. Labor no longer fears anything – they have been eyeball to eyeball with the White Elephant. Knuckle draggers make poor managers because we see aviation people marketing their skills the world over. Pilots are in demand overseas and go for the work. In the US, airline managers are facing a very new world order. Be nice or get nowhere.

Kudos also go to the managers at Continental, where pensions are funded and people are happy to work. Same thing at Southwest. American is sort of there. Northwest is not. US Airways? Too early to tell.

Delta matches Northwest fare sale

Delta matched Northwest's fare sale in tonight's update filing 15,472 fare reductions with an average cut of $93. Delta's cuts affect 220 top markets. As with Northwest the fare reductions apply to walk-up, 3-day, 7-day, 14-day and 21-day advance purchase categories. Delta applied its own date restrictions. For the Delta sale fares there is no purchase date restriction (with Northwest it is Feb 22) and return travel must commence by March 31st.

Continental and United also joined in on the fare sale, although not as broadly as Northwest and Delta. Continental filed 5,679 fare reductions with an average cut of $88. Continental's sale affects 115 top markets. United filed 1,596 fare reductions for an average cut of $105 affecting 65 top markets. For both Continental and United there is no purchase date restriction and return travel must commence by Jun 06.

So far American and US Airways have not selected to join in on Northwest's fare sale.

Separately, in tonight's update US Airways filed 1,802 fare increases to match the Southwest increase of this past weekend.

Neil Bainton, FareCompare.com