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TIME - Man of the Year
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CompactPublishing-TimeMagazine-TimeManOfTheYear-Win31MSDOS.iso
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102692
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1993-04-08
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THE WEEK, Page 22WORLDNinety Seconds Of Terror
Moscow releases documents on KAL 007 and a massacre of Poles
Over and over, in English, Japanese and Korean, the voice on
the passenger-cabin intercom repeated, "Urgent descent. Fasten
seat belts. Put on masks." Those chilling words and others from
the "black box" voice recorder, recovered from the wreckage of
Korean Air Lines Flight 007, put to rest the nine-year-old
question of whether the 269 passengers died instantly after
Soviet fighters shot them out of the sky on Sept. 1, 1983. The
crew's response to the disaster provided further evidence that
they had no idea they had been attacked by air-to-air missiles.
The transcripts of the tapes, made public in Moscow, also put
the lie to claims by the Soviets that they never recovered the
plane's flight recorder.
No less incriminating to the Soviet Union's communist
rulers were minutes of a March 5, 1940, Politburo meeting making
plain that it was Joseph Stalin who ordered the massacre of
Polish officers whose bodies were later found in the Katyn
Forest. Almost simultaneously with the release of the KAL
transcripts, Moscow released documents showing that Stalin
signed the minutes, which contained an order for "execution by
a firing squad" -- without trial or indictment -- of 25,700
Polish officers and other notables.