US ready to join probe

US officials are trying to establish if any Americans were on board

Update: 2014-07-18 06:08 GMT
People walk amongst the debris at the crash site after a passenger plan was shot down Thursday as it flew over Ukraine, near the village of Hrabove, in eastern Ukraine. Malaysia Airlines tweeted that it lost contact with one of its flights as it was

Grabovo: The scale of the disaster affecting scores of foreigners could prove a turning point for international pressure to resolve a crisis that has claimed hundreds of lives in Ukraine since pro-Western protests toppled the Moscow-backed president in Kiev in February and Russia annexed Crimea a month later.

The Kremlin said President Vladimir Putin and US President Barack Obama — at loggerheads over a new wave of US sanctions over Ukraine — had discussed the crash.

Mr Obama called it a “terrible tragedy” and said US officials were trying to establish if any Americans were on board.

“MH-17 is not an incident or catastrophe, it is a terrorist attack,” Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko tweeted.

US Vice President Joe Biden told Mr Poroshenko the United States was ready to help probe the crash of a Malaysian Airlines plane in eastern Ukraine.

Several Ukrainian planes and helicopters have been shot down in four months of fighting in the area. Ukraine had said an An-26 was shot down on Monday and one of its Sukhoi Su-25 fighters was downed on Wednesday by an air-to-air missile — Kiev’s strongest accusation yet of direct Russian involvement, since the rebels do not appear to have access to aircraft.

The loss of MH-17 is the second disaster for Malaysia Airlines this year, following the mysterious loss of flight MH-370. It disappeared in March with 239 passengers and crew on board on its way from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.    

Flashback: 3 jets shot

Three civilian jets have been shot down by hostile fire in the past. Two of the incidents involve the erstwhile Soviet Union.

April 20, 1978: Korean Air Flight 902, Paris to Seoul, strayed over the Soviet Union. Fired upon by an interceptor aircraft, the crew made a forced landing at night on the surface of a frozen lake. Two of the 97 passengers killed.

Sept. 1, 1983: Korean Air Flight 007 shot down by USSR after the 747 had strayed into Soviet airspace. All 240 passengers and 29 crew killed.

July 3, 1988: Iran Air Flight 655 shot down by American naval vessel USS Vincennes minutes after take-off. All 16 crew and 274 passengers were killed.
Was it shot?

2001: Ukraine admitted its military was probably responsible for shooting a Russian airliner that crashed into the Black Sea, killing all 78 on board.

Similar News