How can a modern Boeing 777 disappear in the era of satellites, global radar, and constant connectivity? In this episode, national security analyst Charles Denyer reconstructs the final hours of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 (MH370) and traces the search that spanned oceans, agencies, and years, separating hard evidence from speculation. What You'll Learn: - A clear timeline (ACARS, transponder off, SDU log-on, Inmarsat “handshakes”), the major theories (pilot action, mechanical failure, hijacking), what the debris does and does not prove, and how MH370 reshaped aviation tracking and crisis response. - The verified timeline: What changed after the last ACARS message, why the transponder went dark, and how the SDU reboot and Inmarsat pings formed the “seventh arc.” - Evidence vs. theory: What the Réunion flaperon and other debris confirm, where they fall short, and how drift modeling informs (but doesn’t settle) the search. - Competing explanations: A balanced read on pilot involvement, catastrophic failure, hijacking, and fringe claims—and how each stacks up against the data. - Search lessons: Why the Indian Ocean is so unforgiving, what the ATSB/AAIB analysis concluded, and how Ocean Infinity factors into renewed efforts. - Human impact & policy change: The psychology of ambiguous loss, public mistrust, and the post-MH370 push for more robust satellite-based aircraft tracking. Episode Highlights: 00:00 – How does a plane vanish? The last ACARS, “good night,” and a transponder that goes silent. 05:12 – What is the SDU log-on and why does it matter? Inside the Inmarsat “handshake” trail. 11:04 – Did we search the right ocean? From South China Sea to the seventh arc in the southern Indian Ocean. 16:38 – What did we actually find? Réunion flaperon, additional debris, and what it can (and can’t) tell us. 22:10 – Pilot action, failure, or hijacking? Weighing the leading theories against confirmed signals and flight path changes. 28:31 – Why is finding wreckage this hard? Depths, currents, and lessons from Air France 447. 33:02 – Aftermath and reform: Ambiguous loss, mistrust, and how regulation shifted toward continuous tracking. Tools, Frameworks, or Strategies Mentioned: - ACARS (aircraft communications) - Transponder/SSR, SDU (satellite data unit) log-on - Inmarsat Doppler and burst frequency offset analysis, seventh arc modeling, drift modeling for debris - ATSB/AAIB/BEA investigations, deep-ocean sonar mapping - Renewed searches by Ocean Infinity. Closing Insight: “The data are incomplete—but not nothing.” This mystery reshaped how we track aircraft and how we think about risk, evidence, and closure. If this briefing sharpened your view, follow the show, share it with someone who cares about aviation safety, and send the question you still want answered. About The Host Charles Denyer is a nationally recognized authority on cybersecurity, national security, and global risk, bringing decades of briefings and field-informed analysis to decode how the bin Laden case was built and why the raid unfolded the way it did. 🚨 THIS IS NOT A DRILL, This is THREAT LEVEL RED. Your briefing begins now. 👉 Subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@ThreatLevelRedPodcast 👉 Explore more intel: https://www.threatlevelredpodcast.com/ 👉 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/threat-level-red 👉 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThreatLevelRedPodcast 👉 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/threatlevelredpodcast 👉 X: https://x.com/ThreatLVLred This podcast is for news reporting, commentary, and criticism. We use excerpts, clips, and quotations from political events and other copyrighted works under the fair use doctrine (17 U.S.C. § 107). All rights in those works remain with their respective owners. The views expressed are our own and do not represent any other entity.