I love the automatic assumption the military is either stupid or malevolent.
Three separate responses:
1: I never said
either.
2: What else is going to get people to volunteer to go to terribly uncomfortable foreign places and trade bullets with people they've never met? Bear in mind, both of my parents are noncombat air force veterans.
3: Give me an alternative explanation for a scenario in which they say that they have no idea what a large missile miles away from a major population center is.
That's not to drive you away, I've been meaning to say that I rather admire your dedication to your beliefs insomuch as though you may be surrounded by people of many different ideologies, you keep them.
DJ: Good idea. I'll go try to find a VCR.
Servant Corps: That's what they WANT you to think! Though I suppose he'd be an expert. I'd still think that if it really was clear that it was just a jetliner, then NORAD would try to make it clear that that's all that it was. But it's food for thought.
EDIT: Whoa, post storm. It's not a missile test. That was friday. This one was monday, when no missile tests where supposed to be scheduled... hmm.... interesting, kael. Still, I'm unsure why the military (Whatever branch it may be) is working so hard to maintain the illusion of incompetence. Wouldn't it be better sounding to say "Yeah, we planned that. Sure was cool, huh?"
Summary: They're still evil and/or incompetent even if they launched it themselves and pretended not to, though perhaps not so much as they would be otherwise.