The investigation into the catastrophic Air India crash has hit a critical delay, with senior officials now admitting that the initial timeline for the probe was dangerously optimistic. Sources within the Directorate General of Civil Aviation confirm that the forensic analysis of cockpit voice recorders and flight data modules has been hampered by technical failures and a lack of interoperable decoding systems. This is not merely an administrative hiccup, it is a major threat vector.
Every day the black boxes remain silent is a day that hostile state actors or non-state terrorists could exploit the narrative gap. The preliminary report, once expected within weeks, is now indefinitely postponed. The official line cites 'complexity of evidence' but the subtext is clear: the authorities are out of their depth.
Without a rapid, transparent assessment, the flying public faces a strategic pivot of trust. Structural failures, sabotage, or pilot error: all scenarios remain on the table, and uncertainty erodes confidence faster than any single cause. The hardware of inquiry is failing, and with it, our awareness of the next potential attack on aviation infrastructure.
The clock is ticking, and the silence is deafening.








