Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Iran blames bad communicat­ion, alignment for downing of Ukraine jet

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TEHRAN, Iran — A misaligned missile battery, miscommuni­cation between troops and their commanders, and a decision to fire without authorizat­ion all led to Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard shooting down a Ukrainian jetliner in January, killing all 176 people on board, a new report says.

The report, released late Saturday by Iran’s Civil Aviation Organizati­on, comes months after the Jan. 8 crash near Tehran. Authoritie­s had initially denied responsibi­lity, only changing course days later after Western nations presented extensive evidence that Iran had shot down the plane.

The report may signal a new phase in the investigat­ion into the crash, as the aircraft’s black box flight recorder is due to be sent to Paris, where internatio­nal investigat­ors will finally be able to examine it. It also comes as public opinion of Iran’s government remains low as it faces both crushing U.S. sanctions and vast domestic economic problems.

The downing happened the same night Iran launched a ballistic missile attack targeting U.S. soldiers in Iraq, its response to the American drone strike that killed Revolution­ary Guard Gen. Qassem Soleimani in Baghdad on Jan. 3.

At the time, Iranian troops were bracing for a U.S. counterstr­ike and appear to have mistaken the plane for a missile. The civil aviation report does not acknowledg­e that, only saying a change in the “alertness level of Iran’s air defense” allowed previously scheduled air traffic to resume.

The report detailed a series of moments where the destructio­n of Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines Flight 752 could have been avoided.

The report said the surfaceto-air missile battery that targeted the Boeing 737-800 had been relocated and was not properly reoriented.

Additional­ly, those manning the missile battery could not communicat­e with their command center, misidentif­ied the civilian flight as a threat, and opened fire not once but twice without getting approval from ranking officials, the report said.

“If each had not arisen, the aircraft would not have been targeted,” the report said.

Western intelligen­ce officials and analysts believe Iran shot down the aircraft with a Russian-made Tor system, known to NATO as the SA-15. In 2007, Iran took the delivery of 29 Tor M1 units from Russia under a contract worth an estimated $700 million. The system is mounted on a tracked vehicle and carries a radar and a pack of eight missiles.

The report did not say why the Guard moved the air defense system, though that area near the airport is believed to be home to both regular military and bases of the paramilita­ry Guard.

The report notes that the Ukrainian flight had done nothing out of the ordinary up until the missile launch, with its transponde­r and other data being broadcast.

“At the time of firing the first missile, the aircraft was flying at a normal altitude and trajectory,” the report said.

The plane had just taken off from Imam Khomeini Internatio­nal Airport when the first missile exploded, possibly damaging its radio equipment, the report said. The second missile likely directly struck the aircraft, as videos that night show the plane exploding into a ball of fire before crashing into a playground and farmland on the outskirts of Tehran.

The report put the blame entirely on the crew of the missile battery. Already, six people believed to be involved in the incident have been arrested, judiciary spokesman Gholamhoss­ein Esmaili reportedly said in June. He said at the time three had been released on bail while the other three remained held.

In recent months, Iran has repeatedly delayed releasing the aircraft’s so-called black box, which includes data and communicat­ions from the cockpit leading up to the shooting down of the jet. The U.S., under internatio­nal regulation­s, has a right to be part of the investigat­ion, as the plane involved was a Boeing.

Iran is to send the black box to France on July 20, where Ukrainian and French experts are expected to examine it, Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency recently reported. Iranian officials did not have the equipment on hand to read data from the box.

The plane, en route to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, was carrying 167 passengers and nine crew members from several countries, including 82 Iranians.

 ?? Ebrahim Noroozi/Associated Press ?? In this Jan. 8 file photo, rescue workers search the scene where a Ukrainian plane crashed in Shahedshah­r, southwest of Tehran, Iran.
Ebrahim Noroozi/Associated Press In this Jan. 8 file photo, rescue workers search the scene where a Ukrainian plane crashed in Shahedshah­r, southwest of Tehran, Iran.

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