The Air India crash that killed 158 souls over the Irish Sea was not an accident. It was a strategic symptom. The UK’s aviation safety regime, which prides itself on being the gold standard, has been caught napping. The victims of that 1985 flight from Montreal to Delhi were not just victims of a bomb; they were victims of a systemic failure in intelligence and threat assessment. And seven years later, we still don’t look at the sky the same way.
The threat vector was clear: Sikh extremists, backed by hostile state actors, had the intent and capability to strike at Indian aviation. The UK, a hub for air travel and a staging ground for intelligence, missed the indicators. The bombing was a strategic pivot for terror networks, proving that commercial aviation could be weaponised. But what really concerns me is the enduring vulnerability in UK airspace. Our perimeter defences are porous. Our intelligence sharing is fractured.
Consider the logistics. The bomb was assembled in Canada, transported by a passenger, and detonated over UK sovereign territory. The hardware was simple: a suitcase bomb using a timing device. The countermeasure should have been obvious: enhanced baggage screening and watchlist coordination. But the inter-agency friction between MI5, MI6, and the RCMP was a failure of operational security. The result was a hole in the sky over County Cork.
Now, the UK is asking itself: can it protect its air travel? The answer is no, not yet. The adversarial use of civilian aviation as a delivery platform is a known tactic. The 1985 bombing was a dry run for 9/11. The UK’s aviation security still relies on reactive measures. We need to shift to proactive threat neutralisation. That means biometric screening, behavioural analysis, and intelligence-driven surveillance at every point of entry.
The victims of Air India Flight 182 are a permanent indictment of western intelligence culture. We treat aviation security as a matter of convenience, not as the front line of asymmetric warfare. Until we change that posture, every aircraft that takes off from Heathrow is a potential target. The sky is no longer a symbol of freedom; it is a contested domain. And we are losing the battle.









