In 2003, I read Larry Stang's report about his friend's demise. Stang was a speech writer for President Reagan. About a year ago I posted on Congressman Larry McDonald's disappearance according to witnesses and excellent researchers. KAL 007 was forced to land in Sakhalin Island. It was here that I posted the following:
After this interview, the International Cabal was so alarmed and threatened by Congressman Lawrence Patton McDonald that they planned to get rid of him anyway possible. And they accomplished it by taking down an entire Korean 747 airline, KAL 007 in 1983. The "official" story is that the Soviets shot down the plane, but McDonald's personal friend, author, and radio host, Alan Stang was informed that KAL 007 was forced to land on Soviet territory. Congressman McDonald was extracted and disappeared forever into the gulags of Siberia never to be seen again. You can read more about the eye-witness accounts here.
Congressman Larry McDonald was an avid anti-communist and a nephew of General George S. Patton. At that time, Congressman McDonald headed the Birch Society as President. After boarding Korean Air Lines Flight 007, he was on his way to Seoul to participate in the 30th anniversary celebration of the U.S.-Korea Mutual Defense Pact.
The media originally reported that KAL 007 had "landed on Sakhalin," that the passengers were "safe," that Congressman McDonald was "all right," and that Korean Air Lines had sent another aircraft to the island to take them off. The next day everything changed. Now it was reported that KAL 007 had been "blown to bits," bits small enough to pass through a cheesecloth. All the passengers and crew were dead, especially Dr. McDonald.
One rule to remember in journalism is that the first reports of something are generally the most accurate, for the obvious reason that the first reporters don't yet know the 'official' narrative. Orville Brockman, FAA Duty Officer in Washington, D.C. reported to McDonald’s Congressional office that Japanese military radar had tracked KAL 007 to "a landing on Sakhalinska." The evidence is confirmed on recorded tape. KAL 007 was forced down and that it landed on Sakhalin and that all aboard were safe. Even the President of KAL started out for Sakhalin to greet the passengers and crew, and got as far as Tokyo, where he was told they would not be coming.
We know from the transcripts, long after KAL 007 was attacked, the flight deck was still talking to Air Traffic Control in Tokyo, which is hard to do if you have been blown to bits. The 747 was aloft for twelve minutes after it was "blown to bits."
Researcher Bert Schlossberg (www.rescue007.org) in his book- “Rescue 007: The Untold Story of KAL 007 and Its Survivors” states according to people who were there, the crippled aircraft landed successfully in the water off Sakhalin, near a tiny island called Moneron. The Soviets took the surviving passengers off, towed the aircraft to a shallow site near Moneron and sank it. The Soviets separated Larry McDonald from the rest of the passengers and flew him to Moscow about a week after the shootdown with a special KGB guard unit brought from Khabarovsk for the purpose. The other crew members were never seen again.
Schlossberg reports that the KGB stashed him in the infamous Lefortovo prison and interrogated him for months. The temperature in the Lefortovo cells is deliberately kept near freezing. The cells are a shade under 5-feet long, the trouble with which is that Larry McDonald is more than 6-feet tall. It gets worse. Bert Schlossberg writes: "The dirt floors were submerged in water so that the prisoners either stood or lay down in mud. There might be a slanted bench against which the prisoner could lean with his feet against the opposite wall."
In middle of 1987, the Soviets moved Congressman McDonald to a small prison near a town called Temir-Tau, in Kazakhstan. Bert Schlossberg says guards at the prison identified him from a photograph that had been computer-aged to show what he would have looked like at the time. The photograph also showed a scar running from his left nostril to the left end of his lip. In the summer of 1990, he was taken to the transportation prison in Karaganda, where he was known to remain as late as 1995. He may have been moved again. It’s now 2016 and has been 21 years, since his last sighting. Could Larry McDonald have survived all this? U.S. Navy Commander Lawrence Patton McDonald, a relative of General George S. Patton, Jr. would be 87 years old today.
From Russia perspective, it would be best to keep the Soviet government’s narrative. The Council on Foreign Relations and the Khazarian Mafia hated Congressman McDonald. It makes you wonder how convenient it was for this particular flight to experience a Soviet aggression.
In 2003, I read Larry Stang's report about his friend's demise. Stang was a speech writer for President Reagan. About a year ago I posted on Congressman Larry McDonald's disappearance according to witnesses and excellent researchers. KAL 007 was forced to land in Sakhalin Island. It was here that I posted the following:
After this interview, the International Cabal was so alarmed and threatened by Congressman Lawrence Patton McDonald that they planned to get rid of him anyway possible. And they accomplished it by taking down an entire Korean 747 airline, KAL 007 in 1983. The "official" story is that the Soviets shot down the plane, but McDonald's personal friend, author, and radio host, Alan Stang was informed that KAL 007 was forced to land on Soviet territory. Congressman McDonald was extracted and disappeared forever into the gulags of Siberia never to be seen again. You can read more about the eye-witness accounts here.
Congressman Larry McDonald was an avid anti-communist and a nephew of General George S. Patton. At that time, Congressman McDonald headed the Birch Society as President. After boarding Korean Air Lines Flight 007, he was on his way to Seoul to participate in the 30th anniversary celebration of the U.S.-Korea Mutual Defense Pact.
The media originally reported that KAL 007 had "landed on Sakhalin," that the passengers were "safe," that Congressman McDonald was "all right," and that Korean Air Lines had sent another aircraft to the island to take them off. The next day everything changed. Now it was reported that KAL 007 had been "blown to bits," bits small enough to pass through a cheesecloth. All the passengers and crew were dead, especially Dr. McDonald.
One rule to remember in journalism is that the first reports of something are generally the most accurate, for the obvious reason that the first reporters don't yet know the 'official' narrative. Orville Brockman, FAA Duty Officer in Washington, D.C. reported to McDonald’s Congressional office that Japanese military radar had tracked KAL 007 to "a landing on Sakhalinska." The evidence is confirmed on recorded tape. KAL 007 was forced down and that it landed on Sakhalin and that all aboard were safe. Even the President of KAL started out for Sakhalin to greet the passengers and crew, and got as far as Tokyo, where he was told they would not be coming.
We know from the transcripts, long after KAL 007 was attacked, the flight deck was still talking to Air Traffic Control in Tokyo, which is hard to do if you have been blown to bits. The 747 was aloft for twelve minutes after it was "blown to bits."
Researcher Bert Schlossberg (www.rescue007.org) in his book- “Rescue 007: The Untold Story of KAL 007 and Its Survivors” states according to people who were there, the crippled aircraft landed successfully in the water off Sakhalin, near a tiny island called Moneron. The Soviets took the surviving passengers off, towed the aircraft to a shallow site near Moneron and sank it. The Soviets separated Larry McDonald from the rest of the passengers and flew him to Moscow about a week after the shootdown with a special KGB guard unit brought from Khabarovsk for the purpose. The other crew members were never seen again.
Schlossberg reports that the KGB stashed him in the infamous Lefortovo prison and interrogated him for months. The temperature in the Lefortovo cells is deliberately kept near freezing. The cells are a shade under 5-feet long, the trouble with which is that Larry McDonald is more than 6-feet tall. It gets worse. Bert Schlossberg writes: "The dirt floors were submerged in water so that the prisoners either stood or lay down in mud. There might be a slanted bench against which the prisoner could lean with his feet against the opposite wall."
In middle of 1987, the Soviets moved Congressman McDonald to a small prison near a town called Temir-Tau, in Kazakhstan. Bert Schlossberg says guards at the prison identified him from a photograph that had been computer-aged to show what he would have looked like at the time. The photograph also showed a scar running from his left nostril to the left end of his lip. In the summer of 1990, he was taken to the transportation prison in Karaganda, where he was known to remain as late as 1995. He may have been moved again. It’s now 2016 and has been 21 years, since his last sighting. Could Larry McDonald have survived all this? U.S. Navy Commander Lawrence Patton McDonald, a relative of General George S. Patton, Jr. would be 87 years old today.
From Russia perspective, it would be best to keep the Soviet government’s narrative. The Council on Foreign Relations and the Khazarian Mafia hated Congressman McDonald. It makes you wonder how convenient it was for this particular flight to experience a Soviet aggression.