4
questions for Dutch probe into MH17 crash
RT,
13
October, 2015
The
final report into the causes of the MH17 crash in Ukraine over a year
ago is ready and is expected to be revealed within hours. Russia
claims some that findings have not been included in the Dutch report
while remaining questions hang heavy in the air.
The
DBS issued a preliminary report in September 2014 which only
confirmed that the passenger plane crashed due to external damage.
Amid the probe there has been extensive media speculation regarding
the causes of the incident.
Days
ahead of the DBS official report, a letter addressed to the head of
the UN aviation agency about the investigation was leaked to the
media. It was published by a Malaysian newspaper on Sunday.
The
letter was written by the Russian Federal Air Transport Agency’s
Chief, Oleg Storchevoy, who was acquainted with the results of the
investigation, to Olumuyiwa Benard Aliu, the head of the
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). Storchevoy asked
the UN aviation body to intervene in the DBS investigation.
Ahead
of the DBS report, RT examines some of the controversial points which
are expected to be answered by the probe.
1. Why did the DBS fail to use the BUK manufacturer’s declassified data in the probe?
It
has been widely speculated that a BUK anti-aircraft missile was fired
at the plane. Dutch investigators previously told RT that they could
not confirm reports that a BUK missile had been used.
In
order to aid the investigation Almaz-Antey, the designer and producer
of BUK missile systems, carried out two meetings with the DBS in
which it declassified the specifications of its rockets – the 9M38
and 9M38M1 surface-to-air missile systems – Storchevoy said, in the
letter addressed to the UN.
The
declassified information included technical specifications, flight
and ballistics characteristics, launch parameters, algorithms
governing the detonator and characteristics of the warhead, he said.
The
arms maker also provided the results of a simulated test of a BUK
missile hitting a Boeing and described the damage, he dded.
He
stated that in the final Dutch report all these calculations were
ignored. He added that the report had discrepancies with regards to
the metallurgical properties of the missile and size of the warhead.
©
Anton Denisov / RIA Novosti
2. Why did the probe ignore Russian findings?
Kremlin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday that the facts delivered by
the Russian side were ignored “for
unclear reasons.”
In
his letter, Storchevoy added that the DSB ignored “comprehensive
information” provided by the Russian side which related to the
downing of the Boeing 777.
Days
after the catastrophe, the Russian military provided monitoring
data of a Ukrainian SU-25 fighter jet gaining height towards the MH17
Boeing on the day of the downing.Russian military had also posed a
set of questions to Kiev regarding the jet which have not been
answered.
3. Why did the investigation focus on the BUK missile version?
The
investigation was conducted in an illogical order, Storchevoy said,
explaining that the DBS started with an assumed hypothesis, and
worked backwards to demonstrate that the evidence met the criteria
necessary to prove their preconceived conclusions.
This
violates the principle of “sequence
of conclusions,”
one of the most fundamental rules when conducting probes into air
crashes, he said explaining that firstly, the damage to the airplane
should have been examined and then, based on this analysis,
conclusions as to its cause and source should have been drawn.
After
the film “MH17:
A year without truth”
was released in July, the DBS contacted RT asking for help gathering
the pieces.
“With
great interest we watched your documentary, ‘MH17: A year without
truth,’” Dutch
Safety Board spokesperson Sara Vernooij wrote to RT. “In
this film, RT shows parts of the cockpit roof which were found near
Petropavlivka. We would like to gather those pieces and bring them
over to the Netherlands so the Dutch Safety Board can use them for
the investigation and the reconstruction.”
4. Why did DBS fail to collect all debris in over a year after the crash?
An
RT Documantary film crew traveled to the site of the MH17 downing,
discovering that debris from the Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 was
still covering the crash site in eastern Ukraine a year after the
catastrophe. The RTD crew collected parts of the plane’s exterior
which they spotted, bringing them to the town administration of
nearby Petropavlivka.
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