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Air Force jets intercept plane straying near White House
Washington, Nov 11: Air Force fighter Jets were scrambled today to intercept a privately owned plane that flew too close to the White House, the secret service said.
Washington, Nov 11: Air Force fighter Jets were
scrambled today to intercept a privately owned plane that flew
too close to the White House, the secret service said.
President George W Bush was away at the time, on a
trip to Arkansas and South Carolina.
Vice President Dick Cheney and White House chief of
staff Andrew card were moved temporarily to a secure location
as a precautionary measure, said presidential spokesman Scott
McClellan. They resumed their normal routine soon thereafter,
said McClellan, who was with Bush in little rock, Arkansas.
The privately owned plane was detected flying in a southwest direction when it entered restricted airspace, said secret service spokeswoman Jean Mitchell. The fighters were scrambled from nearby Andrews Air Force in Maryland and they intercepted the plane, escorting it out of the area, she said.
``Anytime we have an airspace violation, we take it very seriously,'' Mitchell said. ``at this point we don't know if it was a mistake.''
The privately owned plane was detected flying in a southwest direction when it entered restricted airspace, said secret service spokeswoman Jean Mitchell. The fighters were scrambled from nearby Andrews Air Force in Maryland and they intercepted the plane, escorting it out of the area, she said.
``Anytime we have an airspace violation, we take it very seriously,'' Mitchell said. ``at this point we don't know if it was a mistake.''
Maj Douglas Martin, spokesman for the North American
aerospace defense command, or Norad, said it was determined
that the plane did not represent a threat.
``From the Norad perspective, he's not a threat, and
that's the main thing for us,'' Martin said.
The plane apparently strayed within the air defense
identification zone, roughly a 48-kilometer (30-mile) radius
around Washington, according to Les Dorr, spokesman for the
federal aviation administration.
Bureau Report