President Trump gives remarks on the Boeing 737 that went down in Iran, saying that the event was "very devastating."
An Iranian surface-to-air missile brought down a passenger plane bound for Kyiv, Ukraine, shortly after takeoff from Tehran this week, killing all 176 people on board, officials from the U.S., Canada and the U.K. said Thursday, citing new intelligence.
“This may well have been unintentional,” Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a news conference, urging the Iranian government to ensure a “thorough investigation” of the crash.
Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 crashed Wednesday morning, after Iran had launched missile attacks on bases in Iraq that house U.S. and coalition forces, prompting the theory that it was struck by a stray missile, a theory that U.S. and Canadian government officials on Thursday said was likely, based on new information.
Sixty-three Canadians were among the victims in the crash of the flight, which lost contact with air traffic controllers five minutes after takeoff from Tehran on Wednesday morning, officials said.
The reports came after President Donald Trump said he did not believe mechanical failure caused the crash.
“It was flying in a pretty rough neighborhood,” Trump said. “Someone could have made a mistake.”
“I have a feeling that — it’s just some very terrible, something very terrible happened, very devastating,” Trump added.
Most of the passengers on the flight were from Iran and Canada. Other passengers came from countries including Sweden and Ukraine.
Newsweek noted that images that began circulating on Wednesday show what looked to be fragments of a Tor M-1 missile that were said to be found in a Tehran suburb.
Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., said, “It sounds pretty convincing that the plane that was shot down ... by Iranians.”
Asked what the U.S. response should be if true, Inhofe paused and then said, “I don’t want to interfere with the decisions that are now being made by the president.”
“I’m quite sure I’ll be talking to him because we talk on a regular basis about things like that.”
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said that if Iranian missiles had shot down the plane “it would be an outrage.”
“What I would do if I were the president would be to reach out to the Canadian people and the prime minister and try to rally the world around the idea that we shouldn’t accept 40 more years of state-sponsored terrorism,” Graham said.
Abedzadeh said in a statement that eyewitnesses had reported that the Kyiv-bound plane was on fire immediately before the crash.
Aviation safety experts, including former government crash investigators, told CNBC that the sudden loss of communication and lack of a distress signal were highly suspicious signs.
The crash occurred hours after Iran launched retaliatory missile strikes on U.S. positions in Iraq for the killing of Gen. Qasem Soleimani. The timing prompted speculation that a stray Iranian missile may have downed the passenger plane.
Determining the cause of plane crashes can take more than a year.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy vowed to uncover the “truth,” and said investigators from Ukraine had already traveled to Iran to assist the inquiry there.
Ukraine’s embassy in Iran originally said an engine problem likely caused the crash and ruled out terrorism or a rocket as possible causes. But that statement later was taken down from the embassy’s website.
The plane was the model that preceded the Boeing 737 Max, the aircraft that has been grounded worldwide since mid-March in the wake of two fatal crashes. The 737-800 was delivered new to Ukrainian International Airlines in 2016, and its crew included three experienced pilots, according to the carrier.
Boeing said in a statement that it is “ready to assist in any way needed.”
Boeing shares rose after news broke of U.S. government officials’ comments that a missile could have been involved in the crash.
Boeing has struggled to regain its footing from the fallout of the twin Max crashes that killed 346 people. Boeing’s former CEO was fired and the manufacturer suspended production of the best-selling jetliners.
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