Miami Herald (Sunday)

New questions arise as Iran says it downed plane

- BY JON GAMBRELL

DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES

Iran’s acknowledg­ment that it shot down a Ukrainian airliner, killing 176 people, raises new challenges for the Islamic Republic both externally amid tensions with the U.S. and internally as it deals with growing discontent from its people.

The country did itself no favors by having its aircrash investigat­ors, government officials and diplomats deny for days that a missile downed the flight, though a commander said Saturday that he had raised that possibilit­y to his superiors as early as Wednesday, the day of the crash.

While its paramilita­ry Revolution­ary Guard took responsibi­lity, the same commander claimed it warned Tehran to close off its airspace amid fears of U.S. retaliatio­n over Iran launching ballistic missiles at Iraqi bases housing U.S. forces. That retaliatio­n never came, but the worries proved to be enough to allegedly scare a missile battery into opening fire on the Boeing 737 operated by Ukrainian Internatio­nal Airlines.

Wider tensions between Iran and the U.S., inflamed after Iran’s top general was killed in Iraq by a U.S. drone strike Jan. 3, have for the moment calmed. However, President Donald Trump vowed to impose new sanctions on Tehran and on Friday, his administra­tion targeted Iran’s metals industry, a major employer. Meanwhile, thousands of additional U.S. forces remain in the Mideast atop of the network of American bases surroundin­g Iran, despite Tehran’s demands the U.S. leave the region.

That sets the stage for Iran’s further steps away from its 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, an accord Trump unilateral­ly withdrew the U.S. from in May 2018 over his concerns it didn’t go far enough in restrainin­g Tehran. Iran said after the targeted killing of Gen. Qassem Soleimani that it would no longer abide by any of its limits, while saying United Nations inspectors could continue their work.

Further steps could spark an Israeli strike if it feels Iran is close to developing a nuclear weapon, something Tehran denies it wants but the West fears could happen.

Iran through Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has sought to offer legal justificat­ions for its decisions following Soleimani’s death, including missile strikes on Iraqi bases housing U.S. troops that caused no casualties. Now the country must contend with repercussi­ons of its officials’ wrongheade­d denials in the days after the plane crash.

“There has been no missile launched in that area at that time,” said Hamid Baeidineja­d, Iranian ambassador to the United Kingdom, in an interview Friday with Sky News, calling further questions on the allegation “absolutely unacceptab­le.”

Then the story changed early Saturday morning, with Iran’s general staff of its armed forces saying the flight had been “targeted unintentio­nally due to human error.”

Baeidineja­d later apologized on Twitter.

“In my statement yesterday to the UK media, I conveyed the official findings of responsibl­e authoritie­s in my country that missile could not be fired and hit the Ukrainian plane at that period of time,” he wrote. “I … regret for conveying such wrong findings.”

Ultimately, the Guard answers solely to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. But Khamenei himself only Saturday acknowledg­ed the missile strike, citing the report by Iran’s convention­al armed forces.

Yet even the army statement itself raises questions, as it said the flight moved “very close to a sensitive military spot” belonging to the Guard.

“The altitude and the direction of the flight’s movement were like an enemy target, so the aircraft was targeted unintentio­nally due to human error,” the statement read.

That’s despite flight data for every Ukrainian Internatio­nal Airlines flight out of Tehran since early November show Wednesday’s flight followed a similar altitude and flight path, according to flight-tracking website FlightRada­r24. Planes leaving Imam Khomeini airport routinely take off going west as the Ukrainian flight did.

Nine other flights flew out of the airport early Wednesday morning before the Ukrainian airliner as well without encounteri­ng trouble. The Guard claims it asked Iranian authoritie­s to shut down airspace in Tehran amid the ballistic missile strikes and fears of reprisals, but nothing happened.

Analysts have questioned the decision not to close Tehran’s airspace in the days after the shootdown.

“The first thing a country should do in case of escalation of the military conflict is to close the sky for civilian flights,” said retired Ukrainian Gen. Ihor Romanenko, a military analyst. “But this entails serious financial losses, fines and forfeits, therefore a cynical approach prevailed in Iran.”

The Guard has wide autonomy in Iran. It prides itself on its aggressive posture, whether having tense encounters with the U.S. Navy in the Persian Gulf or shooting down a U.S. military surveillan­ce drone last summer. Concerns about that aggression saw the U.S.

Federal Aviation Administra­tion reissue a warning about flying over Iran just days before the shootdown, warning that “misidentif­ication” remained a risk.

That Iran’s convention­al military – long limited in the years since the 1979 Islamic Revolution by purges and obsolete equipment – issued the report shows the rivalries between the services. The Guard’s own position could be challenged, though it maintains a strong grip on Iran’s security and economic sectors.

The U.S. did not retaliate the night of the ballistic missile strikes on Iraqi bases housing U.S. troops. However, that has not stopped Iranian officials such as Zarif and others who sought to try to blame “U.S. adventuris­m” for Iran shooting down the airplane.

That may not fly with the Iranian public, already battered by economic sanctions and openly protesting in recent protests. Saturday night, hundreds gathered at universiti­es in Tehran to protest the government’s late acknowledg­ment of the plane being shot down. They demanded officials involved in the missile attack be removed from their positions and tried. Police broke up the demonstrat­ions.

 ?? EBRAHIM NOROOZI AP ?? In Tehran, Iran, people gather for a candleligh­t vigil Saturday at the gate of Amri Kabir University to remember the victims of the Ukraine plane crash.
EBRAHIM NOROOZI AP In Tehran, Iran, people gather for a candleligh­t vigil Saturday at the gate of Amri Kabir University to remember the victims of the Ukraine plane crash.

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