by Philip Baum, Editor-in-Chief, Aviation Security International
No sooner had the news broken this morning that a Ukraine International Airlines flight, PS752, had crashed shortly after its departure from Teheran for Kiev, speculation erupted on social media that the plane must have been brought down by a missile or some other act of foul play. After all, this was the same night that the Iranian authorities had elected to target US military facilities in Iraq with missile strikes in response to the killing of General Qasem Soleimani on 3 January.
The Iranian authorities must have been fearful of any tit-for-tat response from the Americans, meaning that any aircraft deviating even slightly from its intended course (memories here of Korean Air flight 007) could be deemed to pose a threat and become the target of a trigger-happy anti-aircraft gunner. But, for now, it’s all speculation. And I’d prefer ro avoid speculating until more details become apparent. That said, if not an act of foul play, intended or otherwise, it is a cruel coincidence that two of the countries most associated with previous missile attacks were to be the protagonists in the loss of PS752.
Most recently, in 2015, in the highest profile shoot-down of the modern era, it was Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 that was brought down whilst overflying Ukraine by a Buk missile. 298 innocent lives were lost in an instant; Russian-backed rebels are believed to be responsible. Then again, in 2001, and only shortly after the 9/11 attacks, Ukraine itself was held responsible for the shooting down a Siberia Airlines flight en route from Tel Aviv to Novosibirsk. It was a mistake – a tragic one – as the Ukrainian forces were engaged in a military training exercises and had locked on to what they believed to be a drone; inadvertantly they had actually locked on to the Siberia Airlines flight and 78 people were to lose their lives as a result. Ukraine never officially accepted responsibility, but they did cough up compensation to the victims’ families. And an Iranian aircraft was itself the target of a missile strike back in 1988 when the USS Vincennes shot down Iran Air flight 655, en route from Bandar Abbas to Dubai, allegedly mistaking the Airbus for a fighter jet. In the aftermath of the subsequent bombing of Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie in December 1988, those who considered Iran responsible for the bombing (and who question Libyan involvement) moot that it could well have been a retaliatory act against the US for the destruction of Iran Air flight 655.
But, for all that, it’s too early to state whether PS752 was, today, brought down by a missile or, as initially claimed by the Ukrainian authorities (albeit subsequently retracted), due to a major technical malfunction that just happened to occur on an aircraft between two states sadly associated with loss of aircraft due to military error on a night when Iran was likely to be most sensitive to being the target of an aerial attack.