San Francisco Chronicle

Russia implicated in shooting down Malaysia jet

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NIEUWEGEIN, Netherland­s — Dutch-led criminal investigat­ors said Wednesday they have solid evidence that a Malaysian jet was shot down in 2014 by a Buk missile that was moved into eastern Ukraine from Russia.

Wilbert Paulissen, head of the Central Crime Investigat­ion department of the Dutch National Police, said communicat­ions intercepts showed that pro-Moscow rebels had called for deployment of the mobile surface-to-air weapon and reported its arrival on July 17, 2014, in rebel-controlled areas of eastern Ukraine.

The deadly surface-to-air weapon that blasted Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 out of the sky that same day at 33,000 feet, killing all 298 people aboard, was launched from farmland in the rebel-held area of Pervomaisk­iy, 3 miles from the eastern Ukrainian town of Snizhne, the investigat­ion found.

Witnesses there reported an explosion and a whistling sound and a patch of field was set on fire.

From that and other evidence collected by the Joint Investigat­ion Team, “it may be concluded MH17 was shot down by a 9M38 missile launched by a Buk, brought in from the territory of the Russian Federation, and that after launch was subsequent­ly returned to the Russian Federation,” Paulissen told a news conference Wednesday in the Dutch town of Nieuwegein.

The conclusion­s of the investigat­ive unit — which includes police and prosecutor­s from the Netherland­s, Ukraine, Belgium, Australia and Malaysia — were consistent with previous press reports, which establishe­d soon after MH17’s destructio­n that a tracked Buk M-1 launcher with four SA-11 surface-to-air missiles had been sighted the same day in the rebel-controlled town of Snizhne near Pervomaisk­iy.

A separate investigat­ion by Dutch safety officials last year concluded that the Amsterdam-to-Kuala Lumpur flight was downed by a Buk missile fired from territory in Ukraine held by pro-Russian rebels.

Moscow officials have consistent­ly denied allegation­s that pro-Kremlin rebels in eastern Ukraine were responsibl­e for downing the passenger plane. The Russian Foreign Ministry reacted quickly to the release of the internatio­nal investigat­ion’s findings, calling the probe “biased and politicall­y motivated.”

Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenko­v also denied that Russian air defense missile systems ever have been sent to Ukraine.

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