Revisiting the airplane hijacking heyday of the 1960s
Earlier today, EgyptAir Flight MS181 from Alexandria to Cairo was hijacked…for some reason. The plane was diverted to Cyprus on the orders of the hijacker, identified by the Cyprus Ministry of Foreign Affairs as Seif Eldin Mustafa, who claimed to have an explosive belt which was later deemed to be fake. There was a stand-off as Mustafa released passengers and negotiated with Cypriot officials, but eventually the situation came to a peaceful end.
The Egyptian and Cypriot authorities quickly made statements that the hijacking was not connected to terrorism, but it was a reminder that hijackings aren’t all that unusual and used to be sort of commonplace. That’s not the case anymore. In 2009, Nate Silver crunched ten-years-worth of U.S. Bureau of Transportation data:
Over the past decade, according to BTS, there have been 99,320,309 commercial airline departures that either originated or landed within the United States. Dividing by six, we get one terrorist incident per 16,553,385 departures.
These departures flew a collective 69,415,786,000 miles. That means there has been one terrorist incident per 11,569,297,667 miles flown. This distance is equivalent to 1,459,664 trips around the diameter of the Earth, 24,218 round trips to the Moon, or two round trips to Neptune.
Those numbers, and the numbers of all Americans being affected by terrorism, not just airplane hijacking, have only gone down in the years since the Silver story.
However, in the early 1960s, the chances of being on an airplane that was hijacked was much, much higher.
The federal government started overseeing aviation in 1958 and at that time, you could basically waltz onto a plane and never show anyone your ticket. On May 1, 1961 a Miami electrician, Antulio Ramirez Ortiz, attempted to hijack a plane and take it to Havana, claiming he had been hired (by Dominican Republic dictator Rafael Trujillo) to assassinate Fidel Castro and wanted to warn him. Ortiz was given asylum in Cuba and the plane was returned.