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Experts doubt Russian claims of bird strike in Kazakhstan plane crash

December 27, 2024
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Experts doubt Russian claims of bird strike in Kazakhstan plane crash
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Speculation was mounting Friday that Russia’s military could have had a role in the Azerbaijan Airlines plane crash that killed 38 people and left 29 survivors injured in Kazakhstan on Christmas day, with experts casting doubt on Moscow’s suggestion that a bird strike was to blame.

Azerbaijan Airlines Flight 8243, an Embraer 190 aircraft, was flying from the Azerbaijani capital of Baku to the city of Grozny in Russia’s North Caucasus region Wednesday when it was diverted for reasons that were still unclear two days later. At some point during the flight the plane’s GPS tracking was reportedly jammed, leading to significant deviations in the flightpath.

The plane crashed while trying to reach another airport in Aktau, in western Kazakhstan, after flying east across the Caspian Sea. It came down and burst into a ball of flames only about two miles from the Aktau airport.

Passenger plane crashes in Kazakhstan
A map shows site of an Azerbaijan Airlines plane crash in Kazakhstan, Dec. 25, 2024.

Murat Usubali/Anadolu/Getty


Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Russia all opened investigations into the cause of the crash, but it was Russia facing the most pointed questions two days later. The Kremlin has urged people not to jump to conclusions, and President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan, who’s forged closer ties between his country and Russia during his two decades in power, also said it was too soon to speculate.

“The information provided to me is that the plane changed its course between Baku and Grozny due to worsening weather conditions and headed to Aktau airport, where it crashed upon landing,” he said, as Russia’s civil aviation authority, Rosaviatsia, suggested the bird strike theory.

But a U.S. official told CBS News there were early indications a Russian anti-aircraft system may have struck the plane in a region where Ukrainian and Russian forces have traded drone and rocket fire for months. The official, who spoke to CBS News on the condition of anonymity, said if that proved to be true, it would further underscore Russia’s recklessness in its ongoing invasion of Ukraine.

Independent aviation experts were also casting doubt on the bird strike theory, and pointing to damage seen on the plane’s fuselage as evidence of a more nefarious possible explanation.

KAZAKHSTAN-PLANE-CRASH
Emergency specialists work at the crash site of an Azerbaijan Airlines passenger jet near the western Kazakh city of Aktau, Dec. 25, 2024.

ISSA TAZHENBAYEV/AFP/Getty


“It certainly does not look like a flock of birds,” said CBS News aviation safety analyst Robert Sumwalt, a former chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board.

“Birds don’t fly at the type of an altitude that the initial damage occurred on this airplane,” added Sumwalt.

­Instead, the damage bears the hallmarks of shrapnel from an airborne weapon, and British military veteran and security analyst Justin Crump told CBS News’ partner network BBC News that “the most likely hypothesis is that it was struck by an air defense missile — almost certainly Russian.”

Some survivors of the crash have said say they heard an explosion.

“Ukrainian drones were active at the time, and this is commensurate with everything we’ve seen with the pilots’ communication with air traffic control,” Crump told the BBC.

A drone view shows the crash site of a passenger plane near Aktau
A drone view shows the crash site of an Azerbaijan Airlines passenger plane near the city of Aktau, Kazakhstan, Dec. 25, 2024.

Azamat Sarsenbayev/REUTERS


Ukraine has relied heavily on explosive drones to hit Russian military and infrastructure targets inside the much larger neighboring country’s western territory over the last year, and Russia often shoots the weapons down with its air defense systems.

For many observers, the circumstances of the Azerbaijan Airlines crash and the damage to the plane’s wreckage recalled the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 in 2014. That passenger jet was hit by a missile launched by Russian-backed forces over Eastern Ukraine, killing all 298 people on board.
 
Among those desperate for answers in the most recent disaster in Kazakhstan are the survivors of the crash, including one man who said from a hospital bed that he’s been sitting next to his wife on the plane when it crashed.

“I haven’t seen my wife since,” he said.
 
Investigators have recovered both of the so-called “black boxes” — the flight data and cockpit voice recorders — from the crash site. Experts from Brazil, where the plane was built, were due to arrive in Kazakhstan Friday to help retrieve and analyze the information from them.

As the formal investigations ramped up, Ukraine’s government called on Friday for Russia to be held accountable for the crash, as Azerbaijan Airlines reportedly halted scheduled services to seven cities in Russia.


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Chris Livesay


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Chris Livesay is a CBS News foreign correspondent based in Rome.

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