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Iran likely downed Ukraine airliner with missiles: Canadian PM

This article is 5 years old

A Ukrainian airliner that crashed in Iran, killing all 176 people aboard, was likely brought down by an Iranian missile, Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said, citing intelligence from Canadian and other sources.

The destruction of the airliner, which carried 63 Canadians, “may well have been unintentional”, Trudeau (above) told a news conference in Ottawa on Thursday.

“We have intelligence from multiple sources, including our allies and our own intelligence. The evidence indicates that the plane was shot down by an Iranian surface-to-air missile,” he said.

The Ukraine International Airlines flight to Kiev from Tehran crashed on Wednesday, hours after Iran fired ballistic missiles at two US military bases in Iraq, and Iranians were on high alert for a US military response.

Trudeau said his government would not rest until it had obtained closure, transparency, accountability and justice.

Earlier on Thursday, a US official, citing an extensive review of satellite data, said Washington had concluded with a high degree of certainty that anti-aircraft missiles brought down the plane. The official said the Boeing 737-800 had been tracked by Iranian radar.

The US government believes Iran shot down the plane by mistake, three US officials told Reuters.

The data showed the plane was airborne for two minutes after departing Tehran when the heat signatures of two surface-to-air missiles were detected, one of the officials said.

That was quickly followed by an explosion in the vicinity of the plane, this official said. Heat signature data then showed it on fire as it went down. Heat signatures are infrared emissions detected by US military satellites.

The New York Times said it had obtained and verified a video that appeared to show an Iranian missile hitting a plane near Tehran airport.

Iran denied that the airliner had been hit by a missile, government spokesman Ali Rabiei said in a statement.

“All these reports are a psychological warfare against Iran... all those countries whose citizens were aboard the plane can send representatives and we urge Boeing to send its representative to join the process of investigating the black box,” he said.

An initial report issued by Iran’s civil aviation organisation on Thursday said the three-year-old airliner, which had its last scheduled maintenance on Monday, encountered a technical problem shortly after take-off and started to head toward a nearby airport before it crashed.

Speaking to reporters at the White House, US President Donald Trump said he did not believe the crash of the airliner was due to a mechanical issue.

“It’s a tragic thing. But somebody could have made a mistake - on the other side,” Trump said.

Riki Ellison, a defence expert and founder of the Missile Defence Advocacy Alliance, said the radar signature of a Boeing airliner would have been quite similar to a large US military transport plane.

“They (the Iranians) were on full alert to shoot down anything that resembled a US aircraft. Somebody made a mistake by identifying it as a warplane,” Ellison said.

Passengers belongings are seen after the Ukraine International Airlines plane crashed after take-off from Irans Imam Khomeini airport

Once the missiles were fired, it would have been impossible to divert them, even if the ground operators realised their error, he said. “Once you shoot those things, it’s over.”

Tensions between Washington and Tehran have risen since Trump ordered the US drone killing of a top Iranian general last Friday. Trump has refrained from ordering more military action and Iran’s foreign minister said the strikes on Iraqi bases that house US forces had “concluded” Tehran’s response.

Technical problem

Investigations into airliner crashes require regulators, experts and companies across several international jurisdictions to work together. It can take months to fully determine the cause and issuing an initial report within 24 hours is rare.

The Ukrainian airliner took off at 6.12am local time and was given permission to climb to 26,000 feet, Iran’s report said. It crashed six minutes later near the town of Sabashahr.

There was no radio communication from the pilot and the aircraft disappeared from radar at 2,440 metres, the report said.

Ukranian President Volodymyr Zekenskiy lays flowers to commemorate the victims of the Ukraine International Airlines Boeing 737-800 crash at a memorial at Boryspil International Airport, just outside Kiev, on Thursday.
 

Bodies and body parts recovered from the site of the crash were taken to the coroner’s office for identification, it said.

Smouldering debris, including shoes and clothes, was strewn across a field where the plane crashed. Rescue workers in face masks laid out scores of body bags.

Ukraine had outlined four potential scenarios to explain the crash, including a missile strike and terrorism. Kiev said its investigators wanted to search the crash site for possible debris of a Russian-made missile used by Iran’s military.

Boeing and US Federal Aviation Administration declined to comment on Thursday, as did the Pentagon. Spokespersons for Ukraine’s president and prime minister did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Boeing is still reeling from two deadly crashes of 737 MAX planes in five months that led to the plane’s grounding in March 2019. The 737-800 that crashed was built in 2016 and is the prior generation of the 737 before the MAX. Boeing has built about 5,000 of those planes, which have a good safety record.

Boeing shares rose on Thursday.

The FAA had banned US carriers from operating in the airspace over Iraq, Iran, the Gulf of Oman and the waters between Iran and Saudi Arabia in the hours after Iran’s attack on US-led forces in Iraq. Several other airlines also diverted flights.

OpsGroup, which advises airlines on safety matters, said that after the comments from Trudeau and US officials pointing to a missile downing, some flights inbound to Tehran were turned around and diverted.

The group advised operators not to fly to airports in Iraq or Iran and said traffic flow over the countries had greatly reduced in the last 48 hours.

- Reuters