given that parker will be runnin the combined company i wonder if he will add that 2nd philly to tlv and or more tlv flights from the say ny or ord or even dfw or mia
P&Ws on the -300s. High output RR Trents on the -200s (72K thrust)since DOT data doesn't include religion it is impossible to know the faith of the people that go to the Holy Land but since there are more Christians than Jews in the US and Christians go on their own pilgrimages to the Holy Land and the sites of the ancient Church, it isn't a stretch to think that there are plenty of Christians onboard flights to TLV.
However, DOT data clearly shows that the top destinations for all 3 US carriers that fly to Israel are the big coastal cities such as NYC, PHL, BOS, LAX and SFO, major cities of FL, plus LAS. Each carrier then has their hub cities in their top O&Ds.
As for the question regarding whether AA can fly to TLV again, that is probably one of those "wait and see" things but if the Israeli's pursue the claim against AA, then $40M is not an insignificant amount. Other carriers don't have to pay that kind of fee - and some did not have t pay $50M per flight in order to gain access to LHR. LHR is strategically far more significant than TLV to an airline.
As a side note, for those who know, what make of engines does US have on its 330s?
I heard that they attempted to collect on that judgment in the TWA bankruptcy liquidation case in Delaware and got nowhere.
EL AL flies (or used to) from LAX, but I don't see new AA doing that.
The claim filed by the TWA Israeli employees and retirees was rejected by the Delaware Bankruptcy Court and that rejection was upheld on appeal by the US third Circuit Court of Appeal in an opinion authored by now Supreme Court Justice Alito.
El Al flies as many as five weekly non-stop round trips between TLV and LAX, but then Los Angeles has the largest Israeli expatriate community in the world.
Mel Gibson is flying the plane... :wacko:Hurray for Hollywood....
I've heard that more than half of the traffic to TLV from the USA are Christians from middle-America, so that would argue in favor of a flight from ORD or DFW in addition to the Jewish-heavy cities of PHL and NYC (and perhaps MIA). EL AL flies (or used to) from LAX, but I don't see new AA doing that.
However, DOT data clearly shows that the top destinations for all 3 US carriers that fly to Israel are the big coastal cities such as NYC, PHL, BOS, LAX and SFO, major cities of FL, plus LAS. Each carrier then has their hub cities in their top O&Ds.
July 2012
Rank Orig Demand %ofTotal
.1 JFK 33521 41%
.2 EWR 15109 19%
.3 LAX 8828 11%
.4 SFO 2583 3%
.5 MIA 2563 3%
.6 BOS 2494 3%
.7 ORD 2426 3%
.8 PHL 2103 3%
.9 LAS 1162 1%
.10 ATL 1069 1%
.11 IAD 1065 1%
.12 DFW 937 1%
.13 DCA 821 1%
.14 SEA 685 1%
.15 BWI 678 1%
.16 MCO 639 1%
.17 MSP 631 1%
.18 FLL 523 1%
.19 DEN 511 1%
.20 IAH 420 1%