Night flight radar and satellite tracking
MH370 — Chapter 1

The Disappearance

At 12:41 AM local time on March 8, 2014, Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 departed Kuala Lumpur International Airport bound for Beijing with 239 people on board. Less than an hour later, as the Boeing 777-200ER crossed into Vietnamese airspace near the IGARI waypoint, the aircraft's transponder stopped transmitting. The last verbal contact -- "Good night, Malaysian three seven zero" -- has become one of the most analyzed phrases in aviation history.

Malaysia's government, endorsed by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau, concluded the aircraft turned south, flew for hours on autopilot, and crashed into the Southern Indian Ocean west of Australia. That conclusion rests primarily on Inmarsat satellite "handshake" data: a series of hourly electronic pings between the aircraft and a geostationary satellite.

No crash site has ever been found. Despite the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, only a handful of debris fragments have surfaced, beginning with a flaperon washed ashore on Reunion Island in July 2015.

Ashton Forbes presents a fundamentally different framework. In his analysis, MH370 wasn't an accident, a pilot suicide, or a mechanical failure. It was a deliberate interception: a "Black World" event involving clandestine technology that had been tested hundreds of times at smaller scales before being deployed operationally. Satellite and thermal footage, Forbes argues, leaked from military surveillance systems, captured the final moments: three luminous spherical objects in coordinated formation around the aircraft before a terminal event.

Among the 239 on board were twenty Freescale Semiconductor engineers. Forbes contends that each data point, properly interpreted (the Inmarsat handshakes, the military radar returns, the turn at IGARI), points not to the Southern Indian Ocean but to an interception event whose physics the public hasn't been briefed on.

Aircraft flying low over dark ocean at night

March 8, 2014: MH370 vanished over the dark waters between Malaysia and the Indian Ocean

Theories

Key MH370 Theories

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Evidence

Related Evidence Artifacts

Evidence items sourced from MH370-related video analyses.

Artifact

Objects found in Peru that exhibit characteristics difficult to explain with conventional technology or methodology

Source: Various archaeological sites and finds in Peru

Raises questions about technological capabilities of ancient Peruvians

Artifact

MH370 debris fragments washing ashore in African continent locations rather than predicted Western Australia sites contradicting official search area predictions

Source: Multiple debris collection efforts

Physical evidence falsifying South Indian Ocean crash location hypothesis

Data

Frame-by-frame analysis showing 1Hz coordinate refresh rate on exact second boundaries

Source: Forensic analysis of leaked video file

Peer-reviewable proof of military system origin

Data

Chinese published satellite frame 5 days later showing phasing aftermath submissiveness gesture acceptance complete control defeat.

Source: Chinese state Administration science publication satellite frame reference 5 days delay

Demonstrates Chinese regime acceptance US technology superiority control demonstration

Data

Satellite coordinates and NOL22 relay identifier visible in footage

Source: Satellite imagery metadata

Corroborates military surveillance origin of footage

Data

MH370 cargo manifest showing 500 pounds of lithium-ion batteries

Source: Flight cargo records

Connected to lithium-6 use in thermonuclear reactions

Data

2015 public detection of gravity waves confirming Einstein's prediction

Source: LIGO scientific collaboration

Validates that spacetime is a malleable medium that can carry waves

Data

Military radar tracking data showing MH370 tracked after transponder loss at 1721 UTC at Igari waypoint

Source: Military radar systems

Establishes aircraft trajectory and location when videos capture orb interaction

Data

LIGO gravity wave detection timeline showing award in 2011 vs public announcement 2015

Source: Conference records and award documentation

Suggests classified knowledge predated public disclosure

Data

1972 experimental design diagrams showing beam splitters and entanglement setups

Source: Historical physics experiments

Shows evolution of entanglement experiments, beam splitting techniques

Data

AI analysis attempting to connect fusion technology to space-time manipulation

Source: Grok/AI conversation

Speaker uses AI's skepticism to refine arguments

Data

Temperature comparison: DPF plasmoid at 260 keV vs sun core at 1 keV

Source: Fusion physics research

Demonstrates feasibility of achieving fusion temperatures