Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Official admits citizens ‘were lied to’

- By Jon Gambrell and Emily Schmall

New footage appears to show two Iranian missiles shred a Ukrainian airplane and kill all 176 people aboard.

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iran’s top diplomat acknowledg­ed Wednesday that Iranians “were lied to” for days after the Islamic Republic accidental­ly shot down a Ukrainian jetliner. The admission came as new surveillan­ce footage purported to show two surface-to-air missiles 20 seconds apart shred the airplane and kill all 176 people aboard.

The downing of the Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines flight last week came amid heightened tensions between Iran and the U.S. over its unraveling nuclear deal. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani for the first time Wednesday threatened Europe by warning its soldiers in the Mideast “could be in danger” over the crisis as Britain, France and Germany launched a measure that could see United Nations sanctions reimposed on Tehran.

The crash — and subsequent days of Iranian denials that a missile had downed the airplane — has sparked angry protests in a country already on edge as its economy struggles under crushing American sanctions.

Tensions between Washington and Tehran reached a fever pitch two weeks ago with the American drone strike in Baghdad that killed the powerful Revolution­ary Guard Gen. Qassem Soleimani. The general had led Iranian proxy forces abroad, including those blamed for deadly roadside bomb attacks on U.S. troops in Iraq.

Iran retaliated with a ballistic missile strike targeting Iraqi military bases housing U.S. forces early on Jan. 8, just before Iran’s paramilita­ry Revolution­ary Guard shot down the Ukrainian airliner taking off from Tehran’s Imam Khomeini Internatio­nal Airport.

Iran for days afterward insisted a technical fault downed the 3-year-old Boeing 737-800. It wasn’t until Western government­s, including Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, went public with their suspicions the plane had been shot down that Iran admitted it fired on the plane.

Not admitting the plane had been shot down “was for the betterment of our country’s security, because if we had said this, our air defense system would have become crippled and our guys would have had doubted everything,” said Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the head of the Revolution­ary Guard’s aerospace program, in television footage aired Wednesday.

Hajizadeh only days earlier apologized on state television and said: “I wish I were dead.”

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, speaking at a summit in New Delhi, became the first official to describe Iran’s earlier claims as a lie. “In the last few nights, we’ve had people in the streets of Tehran demonstrat­ing against the fact that they were lied to for a couple of days,” Zarif said.

Zarif went on to praise Iran’s military for being “brave enough to claim responsibi­lity early on.”

However, he said he and Rouhani only learned that a missile had downed the flight Friday, raising new questions over how much power Iran’s civilian government has in its Shiite theocracy.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is expected to preside over Friday prayers in Iran for the first time in years over anger about the crash.

The new surveillan­ce footage obtained by The Associated Press showing the missile fire was filmed off a monitor by a mobile phone. It appears to be taken near the town of Bidkaneh.

The two minutes of black-and-white footage purportedl­y shows one missile streaking across the sky and exploding near the plane. Ten seconds later, another missile is fired. Some 20 seconds after the first explosion, another strikes near the plane. A ball of flames then falls from the sky out of frame.

Amid all of this, Britain, France and Germany on Tuesday launched the dispute mechanism pertaining to Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers. Iran has been breaking limits of the accord for months in response to President Donald Trump’s decision to unilateral­ly withdraw the U.S. from the deal in May 2018.

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GETTY-AFP

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