Korean Air Lines Flight 007 transcripts

{{header | title = Korean Air Lines Flight 007 transcripts | author = |override_author = International Civil Aviation Organization | section = | previous = | next = | year = 1983 | commonscat=Korean Air Lines Flight 007 | notes = Korean Air Lines Flight 007 transcripts concerns the air traffic control, flight voice recorder and military communications leading up to and immediately after the shooting down of Korean Air Lines Flight 007.

Timeline of release of transcripts
On 7 September 1983, Japan and the United States jointly released a transcript of Soviet communications, intercepted by the listening post at Wakkanai, Japan to an emergency session of the United Nations Security Council. These intercepts captured only one side of the Soviet transmissions—those of the high-flying fighter aircraft.

In 1993, a transcript of communications of Soviet Air Defence Command Centres on Sakhalin Island was released after a change of government in the USSR; the aircraft's cockpit voice recorder, which the Soviet Union had withheld secretly for 10 years, was released at the same time.

The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) co-ordinated the times of Soviet transmissions with the time-stamped communications intercepted by Japan, as well as air traffic control recordings, to create a complete picture of events. Some Air Combat Controller fighter vectoring, fuel read-outs and inter-command post "chatter" is not included in the transcript for clarity.

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