Transpacific Route Case
The Transpacific Route Case was a major
President
The CAB concluded the case in 1969, retaining Northwest and Pan Am's routes to Asia and making the following additional route awards:
- American Airlines - Australia, Fiji, Hawaii, New Zealand, Samoa
- Continental Airlines - Guam, Hawaii, Saipan
- Northwest Airlines - Hawaii to Asia flights
- Trans World Airlines - Hawaii, Japan, Taiwan
- Western Airlines - Hawaii
The award was a great victory for TWA, which had already established service from the U.S. to Europe, connecting onward as far east as Hong Kong. The case gave TWA a "round the world route" and allowed it to serve South and Southeast Asia in both westbound and eastbound directions. Initially, Continental Airlines was awarded routes to Australia and New Zealand with stops. However, President Nixon, upon taking office set aside the international route awards. The rights previously given to Continental Airlines were later given to American Airlines.
One loser in the case was American, which had petitioned long and hard for rights to serve Japan: it did not want the South Pacific routes, and it ended up trading those routes to Pan Am. United Airlines was the biggest loser of all: it received no transpacific routes, besides some Hawaiian routes that were added in the early 1960s.