Ukraine plane struck by two missiles: NYT

This handout photograph taken and released on January 11, 2020, by The National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine, shows people standing and analysing the fragments and remains of the Ukraine International Airlines plane Boeing 737-800 that crashed outside the Iranian capital Tehran on January 8, 2020. Iran said on January 11, 2020 it "unintentionally" shot down a Ukrainian passenger jet, killing all 176 people aboard, in an abrupt about-turn after initially denying Western claims it was struck by a missile. Iranian president said a military probe into the tragedy had found "missiles fired due to human error" brought down the Boeing 737, calling it an "unforgivable mistake".
AFP/National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine/STR

WASHINGTON, United States — Two Iranian missiles struck down a Ukrainian passenger jet, the New York Times reported Tuesday, posting verified security camera footage showing double projectiles gliding through the sky before hitting their target.

The missiles

were fired 30 seconds apart and help explain a mystery

as to why the plane's transponder was not working

--

it was disabled by the first strike, before being hit by a second, the Times said.

The Ukraine International Airlines plane

was brought down shortly after takeoff on Wednesday, killing all 176 passengers and crew on board.

Tehran had

for days denied Western claims based on US intelligence that the Boeing 737 had been downed by a missile.

It came clean on Saturday when Revolutionary Guards aerospace commander Brigadier General

Amirali Hajizadeh acknowledged a missile operator had mistaken the plane for a cruise missile and opened fire independently.

The blurry footage shows the plane on fire and circling back to Tehran's airport, the Times said. Minutes later, it exploded and crashed.

The footage was shot from a rooftop in

Bidkaneh, a village four miles from an Iranian military site, the Times said.

Hundreds of angry protesters, most of them

student, have taken to the streets in the

wake of the tragedy, chanting slogans against the Islamic republic.

Iran announced its first arrests over the accidental shooting on Tuesday, without naming who or how many people had

been detained.

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