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Analysis

Boeing boss Dennis Muilenburg owns the fix but not the fault after 737 MAX disasters

The chief executive promised a lot but did not take the blame for crashes that cost 346 lives, says Sky's Hannah Thomas-Peter.

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Boeing boss: 'We're sorry' for air tragedies
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All of the slick production, earnest promises and on the record press conferences won't change the brutal,聽tragic facts for Boeing.

In the last six months, two of their brand new 737 MAX planes crashed to the ground within minutes of take-off and 346 people were killed.

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Accident investigators for both incidents say that a new anti-stall system called MCAS was involved.

They suggested MCAS was being fed faulty data about the plane's angle of flight, leading it to automatically and repeatedly push the nose down in to an unrecoverable dive.

'Pitch up, pitch up': Final moments of Ethiopia Airlines crash
'Pitch up, pitch up': Final moments of Ethiopia Airlines crash

The Boeing 737 MAX anti-stalling technology has been linked to two deadly plane crashes, according to investigators

Before the first crash in Indonesia, Boeing had not told pilots about this new, powerful system.

In both instances, crews appeared to battle in vain to work out what was going on, and then how to override it.

More on Boeing

Twelve of the 17 coffins are laid out in front of the church in Addis Ababa
Image: Twelve coffins are pictured outside a church in Addis Ababa after the Ethiopian Airlines crash

And yet Boeing's chief executive Dennis Muilenburg refuses to admit that his company made a mistake in either the design of the aircraft itself or the communication about that design to the aviation community.

Instead he speaks in broad platitudes about being committed to a rigorous process and, on safety, repeatedly saying "we own it".

Boeing cuts 737 MAX production after fatal plane crashes
Boeing cuts 737 MAX production after fatal plane crashes

The move underscores the growing financial risk the aircraft-maker faces the longer its best-selling plane remains grounded

Put another way, he is taking responsibility for fixing the problem, but not for the problem itself. It is the opposite of owning it.

It is also a very, very awkward public messaging position.

Investigators have recovered the data recorders from the wreckage
Image: Wreckage from the Ethiopian Airlines crash in which 157 people died

Boeing is banking on sheer momentum to get the MAX through re-certification, back up to speed on the production lines, and back in the skies.

It is helped by the lack of other options for airlines - the nearest competitor from Airbus is in short supply.

But will this be enough for a full recovery for the world's largest aircraft manufacturer?

Investigators examine engine parts from the ill-fated Lion Air flight JT 610 at a port in Jakarta on November 7, 2018, after they were recovered from the bottom of the Java sea. - The Indonesian Lion Air jet that plunged into the Java Sea on October 29, killing all 189 on board, had an air speed indicator problem on its fatal flight and on three previous journeys, the country's transportation watchdog said on November 6. (Photo by BAY ISMOYO / AFP) (Photo credit should read BAY ISMOYO/AFP/Getty
Image: Investigators examine engine parts from the Lion Air jet that crashed into the Java Sea in October

Dennis Muilenburg told me he wasn't going to resign.

But I predict heads will have to roll at Boeing, and maybe even the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), before investors, shareholders and the flying public put their full faith in Boeing again.