>>>>>
http://edition.cnn.com/2014/08/02/us/us-spy-plane/index.html?hpt=hp_t3>>>>>
>>>>>So an US spy plane gets highlighted and then hightailed (or is "tailgated" the proper expression) and flees over the territory of a neutral country, without permission. Then five days later it happens again. Ouch.
>>>>>
>>>>>The funny thing is this happened just one day after MH17 was taken down... and everybody stayed silent until the Swedes published it.
>>>>
>>>>I don't see why they needed to divert into Swedish airspace.
>>>>The RAF have been tracking Russian planes over the North Sea for years
>>>
>>>You're right, spy planes are business as usual. I view Russia turning up the publicity machine over this particular plane as payback for the U.S. trying to put international heat on them over Ukraine.
>>
>>But you're viewing an empty scene. Russia kept mum, US kept mum. Nobody knew until Swedes published.
>
>Oddly enough, that is directly on mark with the world view of a Swedish mystery writer named Henning Mankell. I have been devouring his books during my convalescence. His main character is a provincial Swedish police inspector named Kurt Wallander, a man who is both tortured and hopeful. He struggles with his demons and keeps going. He reminds me a lot of myself.
Netflix has a British TV version of Wallander with Kenneth Branagh in the title role.
Tamar