An Asiana Airbus A380-800, registration HL7626 performing flight OZ-201 from Los Angeles,CA (USA) to Seoul (South Korea) with 353 people on board, was enroute at FL360 about 710nm southsoutheast of Anchorage,AK (USA), 820nm west of Vancouver,BC (Canada) and 1460nm northnorthwest of Los Angeles when the crew received a cargo smoke indication. The crew decided to turn around and return to Los Angeles for a safe landing about 3:40 hours later and about 7 hours after departure.
http://avherald.com/h?article=49ea07fc&opt=0
Standard procedure with smoke is to land at the nearest suitable airport. As i understand it, even the ECAM tells to land ASAP. How on earth were these sky gods able to assess the severity of what was happening in the cargo hold, and decide to comfortably fly twice the distance of the nearest suitable airport all the way back to LAX? All the mentioned airports have maybe not facilities for the plane, but suitable runways and surely a place on a cargo ramp for them to park on. So they all fall in the category suitable.
The beggars were sure as hell lucky the smoke detector was at fault this time.
Kind regards, Vincent