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Finnair Flight 915
1987 alleged attempted missile attack over Norway / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Finnair Flight 915 (AY915) was a scheduled flight by Finnair from Tokyo, Japan, over the North Pole to Helsinki, Finland, on 23 December 1987. In 2014, Finnish media reported a claim by two of the flight's pilots that the Soviet Union had fired a missile at the aircraft, which exploded less than 30 seconds before impact. The allegations came out only in September 2014, when Helsingin Sanomat, the leading Finnish daily newspaper, published an extensive article on the matter.[1] The Finnish Broadcasting Corporation YLE reported on the article on the internet the same day.[2][3]
![]() The Finnair McDonnell Douglas DC-10 aircraft involved in the incident. | |
Incident | |
---|---|
Date | 23 December 1987 (1987-12-23) |
Summary | Alleged attempted missile attack, near miss |
Site | Edgeøya, Svalbard, Norway |
Aircraft | |
Aircraft type | McDonnell-Douglas DC-10-30ER |
Operator | Finnair |
Registration | OH-LHC / N345HC |
Flight origin | Narita International Airport, Tokyo, Japan |
Destination | Helsinki-Vantaa Airport, Vantaa, Finland |
Occupants | 219 |
Passengers | 201 |
Crew | 18 |
Fatalities | 0 |
Survivors | 219 |
When the matter came out, it caused outrage in Finland among those politicians and civil servants, to whom it should have been reported at the time,[2] and it was widely publicised and commented upon in the Finnish media, amidst allegations of Finlandization.
The alleged incident has been compared to other similar incidents involving the Soviet Union, such as the Aero Kaleva in 1940, Aeroflot Flight 902 in 1962, Korean Air Lines Flight 902 in 1978, and Korean Air Lines Flight 007 in 1983. Co-captain Kaukiainen said that the Finnair pilots decided to speak out on the matter after Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 had been shot down in Ukraine on 17 July 2014.[4]