Korean Air Lines flight 007: Facts & Related Content

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Facts

Also Known As KAL 007
Date September 1, 1983
Location Sea of JapanRussiaSakhalin Island
Context Cold War

Did You Know?

  • While warning shots were fired, the Soviet pilot did not attempt to contact the aircraft through radio.
  • The plane was not destroyed in the air, but crashed into the sea.
  • The USSR refused to reveal whether it had found the plane's wreckage, including any survivors or bodies.

Topics

Timeline

Consider President Truman's reasoning for using atomic bombs against Japan and issuing the Truman Doctrine
Truman Doctrine
March 12, 1947
George C. Marshall
Marshall Plan
April 1948 - December 1951
Berlin blockade and airlift
Berlin blockade
June 24, 1948 - May 12, 1949
NATO and the Warsaw Pact
Warsaw Pact
May 14, 1955 - July 1, 1991
Francis Gary Powers
U-2 Incident
May 5, 1960 - May 17, 1960
Bay of Pigs invasion
Bay of Pigs invasion
April 17, 1961
Kennedy announces U.S. naval blockade of Cuba
Cuban missile crisis
October 22, 1962 - November 20, 1962
John F. Kennedy: Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty
Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty
August 5, 1963
Mutual and Balanced Force Reductions
October 1973 - February 9, 1989
Korean Air Lines flight 007
September 1, 1983
Reagan, Ronald; Gorbachev, Mikhail
Reykjavík summit of 1986
October 11, 1986 - October 12, 1986
Boris Yeltsin and the collapse of the Soviet Union
collapse of the Soviet Union
August 18, 1991 - December 31, 1991

Key People

Ronald Reagan
Ronald Reagan
president of United States

Quiz