After four days of denials, misleading disinformation and misguided analyses about a plane crash that claimed 176 lives in Tehran, Iran finally assumed responsibility for the tragedy under foreign pressure.
The commander of Iran's Aerospace Force has accepted full responsibility for downing of Ukrianain airliner.
After days of denials, Iran has admitted that its military “unintentionally” shot down a Ukrainian airliner outside of Tehran on January 8, citing “human error” in the tragedy that claimed 176 lives.
After Iran's missile strike on US bases in Iraq, it seems both try to avoid a larger conflict, but tensions will continue.
The news of the plane crash in Tehran which killed all 179 passengers and crew including many Canadian nationals allegedly caused by an Iranian surface-to-air missile are highly censored in Iranian media in the country.
About five hours after Iran launched a volley of missiles at U.S. forces in Iraq, bringing the Middle East a step closer to war, Ukrainian International Airlines Flight PS752 took off into the predawn darkness from Tehran's Imam Khomeini International airport.
Iran has given Ukrainian investigators access to the fragments of an airliner that crashed earlier this week near Tehran and invited Boeing and the U.S. accident-investigation agency to help in the probe of the incident that killed 176 people.
Citing “multiple” intelligence sources, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says evidence indicates that the Ukrainian passenger plane that crashed near Tehran was shot down by an Iranian missile.
A top Iranian general claimed that Iran carried out a cyberattack against U.S. monitoring systems during the missile attack on two U.S. bases in Iraq on January 8.
Iran's UN envoy Majid Takhtravanchi says he cannot believe the United States' "claim" about its willingness to "cooperate" with Iran.
A day after the crash of a Ukrainian Boeing 737 -800 in the south of the Iranian capital Tehran, it is still not clear whether Iran will allow other countries to be involved in the investigation, as international laws require.
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