2010 false terrorism alarm
United Airlines Flight 663
![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0b/United_Airlines_Boeing_757.jpg/250px-United_Airlines_Boeing_757.jpg) A United Airlines Boeing 757, similar to the aircraft involved
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Date
| 7 April 2010
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Summary
| Suspected terrorist attack
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Site
| en route Washington D.C. to Denver
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Aircraft type
| Boeing 757-222
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Operator
| United Airlines
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Flight origin
| Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport
,
Crystal City, Virginia
, U.S.
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Stopover
| Denver International Airport
,
Denver
, Colorado, U.S.
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Destination
| Las Vegas International Airport
,
Las Vegas
, Nevada, U.S.
|
---|
Occupants
| 163
|
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Passengers
| 157
|
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Crew
| 6
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Fatalities
| 0
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Injuries
| 0
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Survivors
| 163
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The
United Airlines Flight 663 incident
was a "minor
international incident
" in 2010 involving a
Qatari
diplomat
on the leg of a
United Airlines
flight from
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport
(
Washington, D.C.
) to
Denver International Airport
(
Denver
, Colorado).
[1]
The diplomat prompted a mid-air
terrorism
alert after smoking in the aircraft lavatory, which led the
Qatari government
to recall him two days later.
United no longer uses Flight 663 as a DCA-DEN-LAS route. As of April 2024, UA663 is now used on the
Orlando
-
Denver
route, flown by a variety of aircraft types.
[2]
Incident
[
edit
]
Wikinews has related news:
Flight 663 was a flight between
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport
in
Washington, D.C.
and
Denver International Airport
, continuing on to
Las Vegas International Airport
using an aircraft different from the one that operated the Washington?Denver sector.
[3]
On 7 April 2010, a disturbance involving a passenger happened
en route
from Washington, D.C. to Denver.
[3]
[4]
Officials identified the passenger as Mohammed al-Madadi, a
diplomat
from the
Embassy of Qatar
in Washington, D.C.
[5]
[6]
Officials took al-Madadi into custody, and the plane landed safely in Denver.
[7]
The
North American Aerospace Defense Command
scrambled two
F-16
fighters to intercept and escort the aircraft into Denver.
[8]
Officials said the incident was a misunderstanding after al-Madadi attempted to smoke a pipe in the lavatory, then made "an unfortunate remark" after being confronted by two members of the
Federal Air Marshal Service
.
[9]
[10]
Law enforcement officials said al-Madadi mentioned "lighting his shoes", taken as a reference to shoe bomber
Richard Reid
.
[11]
Qatari Ambassador to the United States
Ali Bin Fahad Al-Hajri
issued a statement on the Embassy website:
Press reports today regarding an incident aboard a commercial flight from Washington, DC to Denver, CO indicate that a Qatari diplomat was detained for suspicious behavior. We respect the necessity of special security precautions involving air travel, but this diplomat was traveling to Denver on official Embassy business on my instructions, and he was certainly not engaged in any threatening activity. The facts will reveal that this was a mistake, and we urge all concerned parties to avoid reckless judgments or speculation.
[12]
[13]
The Associated Press reported that al-Madadi was traveling on official Embassy business to visit
Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri
, a jailed
al-Qaeda
conspirator held at
United States Penitentiary, Florence
.
[14]
[15]
Department of Homeland Security
Secretary
Janet Napolitano
praised the air marshals, who had been deployed in greater numbers following the attempted in-air bombing by
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab
on December 25, 2009.
[16]
Felony
charges would be applicable for non-diplomats.
[17]
U.S. officials said al-Madadi would not face criminal charges because of
diplomatic immunity
.
[18]
The suspect was released following interviews with law enforcement officials.
[19]
United States Department of State
officials said al-Madadi was removed from the country by Qatar, rather than being declared
persona non grata
by the U.S. government and expelled from the United States.
[20]
[21]
[22]
Al-Madadi left the United States on April 9, 2010.
[23]
Qatar's Minister of State for Foreign Affairs
Ahmed bin Abdullah Al Mahmood
said that al-Madadi would be disciplined.
[24]
[25]
Analysis and debate
[
edit
]
The incident sparked international debate about how a matter of this nature should be handled.
[26]
[27]
[28]
[29]
In the United States, some analysts objected that Qatar would not be asked to reimburse taxpayers, inconvenienced passengers, and the airline for costs of the incident.
[30]
Though smoking was banned aboard U.S. commercial airliners in 1990, the cases brought by the
Federal Aviation Administration
rarely lead to more than a fine.
[31]
Because of this, the
Washington Post
reported that some diplomats felt that the incident was a case of
racial profiling
of Arabs and Muslims.
[1]
A
Wall Street Journal
editorial asserted that new profiling techniques based on behavior enjoy "widespread public support."
[32]
A Scripps News editorial agreed, stating "the success so far of preventing a reprise of
9/11
may just depend on the highest-level reaction and then sorting it all out later."
[33]
One passenger, author
Michael Lind
, argued in the
Financial Times
that "there should have been a debate about overreaction to false alarms. I am as angry as anyone at the Qatari diplomat who escaped prosecution thanks to diplomatic immunity. But the incident was the result of the toxic interaction between his arrogance and foolishness and an airline security system that is irrational as a whole."
[34]
In Qatar, the incident provoked criticism of the foreign ministry. An editorial by Ahmad Al Sulaiti in the daily
Al-Watan
called the event "embarrassing," adding, "While I do not intend to give lessons to the foreign ministry, I wish [Minister] Al Mahmood would tell me if our diplomats are properly groomed before they are sent to our embassies abroad and whether they acquire skills from our veteran ambassadors."
[35]
Al Mahmood replied that the incident was "an individual misjudgment that should not be over-generalised."
[35]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
DeYoung, Karen and Spencer S. Hsu (April 9, 2010).
Diplomat on Denver flight to be sent back to Qatar, U.S. says.
Washington Post
- ^
"UA663 (UAL663) United Flight Tracking and History"
.
- ^
a
b
Cardon, Felisa and Jeffrey Leib (April 7, 2010).
Possible shoe bomb incident on Denver-bound flight.
Denver Post
- ^
Staff report (April 8, 2010).
'Cigarette' behind US plane alert.
Aljazeera
- ^
Hsu, Spencer S. and Clarence Williams (April 8, 2010).
Qatari diplomat, apparently smoking in onboard bathroom, causes security scare on D.C. flight.
Washington Post
- ^
O'Connor, Anahad (April 7, 2010).
Air Marshals Intervene in Incident on Plane.
New York Times
- ^
Spillius, Alex (April 8, 2010).
Qatari diplomat questioned after incident on US flight.
The Telegraph
- ^
Wald, Matthew L. and Charlie Savage (April 8, 2010).
Plane Passenger Is Held Following a Confrontation.
New York Times
- ^
Pelofsky, Jeremy (April 8, 2010).
Man in custody after disturbance on U.S. flight.
Reuters
- ^
Associated Press
(April 7, 2010).
Official: Incident a misunderstanding.
Washington Post
- ^
Moreno, Ivan and Devlin Barrett (April 8, 2010).
AP source: Man on flight trying to sneak smoke.
Associated Press
- ^
Ali Bin Fahad Al-Hajri (April 7, 2010).
Statement by Qatari Ambassador.
Archived
2005-04-15 at the
Wayback Machine
via qatarembassy.net
- ^
Hampton, Olivia (April 8, 2010).
Qatari diplomat held in US flight bomb scare; officials.
Sydney Morning Herald
- ^
Shane, Scott (April 8, 2010).
Qatari Envoy Was to Meet Al Qaeda Figure in Jail.
New York Times
- ^
Winter, Michael (April 8, 2010).
AP: Qatari envoy in plane scare was going to visit jailed al-Qaeda agent.
USA Today
- ^
Crabtree, Susan (April 8, 2010).
Napolitano thanks air marshals for taking action on flight disrupted by diplomat.
The Hill
- ^
Serrano, Richard, and Nicholas Riccardi (April 8, 2010).
Qatari envoy subdued after smoke is detected on jetliner.
Los Angeles Times
- ^
Moreno, Ivan, and Devlin Barrett (April 8, 2010).
AP source: Man on flight will not be charged.
[
dead link
]
Associated Press
- ^
Shane, Scott, and Anahad O'Connor (April 8, 2010).
Qatar Diplomat Who Disrupted Flight Is Released.
New York Times
- ^
Salinger, Rick (April 8, 2010).
Diplomat Traveled To See Imprisoned Al-Qaida Agent.
KCNC-TV
- ^
Meikle, James (April 8, 2010).
Qatari diplomat 'smoking' causes US plane scare.
The Guardian
- ^
Lee, Matthew (April 8, 2010).
Officials: Plane scare diplomat likely sent home.
Associated Press
- ^
Associated Press (April 10, 2010).
Diplomat from Qatar leaves US.
[
dead link
]
- ^
White, Andrew (April 15, 2010).
'Shoe bomb' diplomat will be punished ? minister.
Arabian Business
- ^
AFP (April 14, 2010).
Qatar to discipline US flight passenger.
Sydney Morning Herald
- ^
Staff report (April 8, 2010).
Qatari Diplomat Who Caused Security Scare Should Be Expelled, Critics Say.
Fox News
- ^
Wachter, Paul (April 8, 2010).
What Does It Take to Lose Diplomatic Immunity?
Archived
2010-04-11 at the
Wayback Machine
AOL News
- ^
Mayerowitz, Scott (April 8, 2010).
The Idiots Who Cause Your Flight to Be Late.
ABC News
- ^
Williams, Mary Elizabeth (April 10, 2010).
This week in crazy: The smoking diplomat.
Salon.com
- ^
Editorial staff (April 12, 2010).
Flying idiot from Qatar.
New York Post
- ^
Hughes, John and Jeff Green (April 9, 2010).
In-Flight Smokes Entice Hundreds 20 Years Following U.S. Ban.
Bloomberg.com
- ^
Crovitz, L. Gordon (April 12, 2010).
The Lesson of the Joking 'Shoe-Bomber.'
Wall Street Journal
- ^
Thomasson, Dan K. (April 12, 2010).
Thomasson: Cost of overreaction is worth it.
ScrippsNews
- ^
Lind, Michael (April 19, 2010).
Hysteria that plays into the hands of bin Laden.
Financial Times
- ^
a
b
Toumi, Habib (April 14, 2010).
Qatar to take disciplinary action against 'erring' diplomat.
Gulf News
External links
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