CAIRO — An Egyptian jetliner carrying 66 people from Paris to Cairo
 abruptly swerved, vanished from radar and plunged into the 
Mediterranean early Thursday, shortly before it was scheduled to land. 
Egyptian officials said wreckage had been found and suggested terrorism 
was a more likely cause than technical failure
.
The
 loss of the flight, EgyptAir 804, was the second civilian aviation 
disaster for Egypt in the past year. It immediately resurrected fears 
and speculation about the safety and security of Egyptian air travel and
 broader questions about terrorism against civilian air travel.
Egypt
 and Greece mounted an intense search-and-rescue operation in the 
southern Aegean Sea, and, on Thursday afternoon, the Greek authorities 
said debris believed to be from the wreckage had been found at a site 
around 205 nautical miles southeast of Crete and 190 nautical miles 
south of the Greek island of Karpathos. EgyptAir confirmed the discovery
 of wreckage a few hours later in a Twitter posting.
The
 Egyptian civil aviation minister, Sherif Fathi, told a news conference 
in Cairo that it was premature to draw conclusions about the cause of 
the crash, but he quickly acknowledged that it might be terrorism.
“I
 don’t want to go to speculations and I don’t want to go to 
assumptions,” Mr. Fathi said. Still, he said, “if you analyze the 
situation properly,” the possibility of “having a terror attack is 
higher than the possibility” of technical failure.
The jetliner, an Airbus A320, departed Paris at 11:09 p.m.
 on Wednesday. The pilot spoke to Greek air traffic controllers at 2:26 
a.m. and nothing seemed out of the ordinary, officials said. Three or 
four minutes later, the plane made its last normal radar contact.
Watch the video as analyzed by the body responsible wreckage investigation


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