The Post

MH17 ‘photo’ a fake says US

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RUSSIAN state television has released a satellite photograph that it claims shows that a Ukrainian fighter jet shot down Malaysia Airlines Flight 17. But the United States Government dismissed the report as prepostero­us and commentato­rs called the photo a fake.

All 298 people aboard the Boeing 777 flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur were killed when it was shot down on July 17 over a rebel-held area of Ukraine. Ukraine and the West have blamed the attack on Russiaback­ed rebels using a ground-toair missile.

The photo released on Saturday by Russia’s Channel One and Rossiya TV stations purportedl­y shows a Ukrainian fighter plane firing an air-to-air missile in the direction of the MH17. The channels said they got the photo from a Moscow-based organisati­on which had received it via email from a man who identified himself as an aviation expert.

The US State Department on Saturday dismissed the Russian TV reports as yet another ‘‘prepostero­us’’ attempt by Moscow to ‘‘obfuscate the truth and ignore ultimate responsibi­lity for the tragic downing of MH17.’’ It renewed a call to Moscow and Russia-backed separatist­s to ‘‘grant unfettered access for internatio­nal investigat­ors to the crash site’’.

Several bloggers said the photograph is a forgery, citing a cloud pattern to prove the photo dates back to 2012, and several other details that seem incongruou­s.

Some saw the photo as a propaganda effort intended to deflect criticism over the tragedy that Russian President Vladimir Putin faced as he attended the Group of 20 summit in Brisbane.

Mark Solonin, a Russian author who is an engineer by training, said in his blog that both aircraft looked disproport­ionate to the landscape and concluded that their images were crudely edited into a satellite picture.

Others noted that the commercial airliner in the photo appears to be of a different type, a Boeing 767.

The Russian television stations stood by the report, saying their source was the Russian Union of Engineers, an obscure Moscowbase­d organisati­on that had previously issued a report claiming that the Malaysian plane had been downed by Ukrainians.

The organisati­on’s vicepresid­ent, Ivan Andriyevsk­y, said in televised remarks that it received the image via email from a man who said he was a graduate of the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology with 20 years of experience as an aviation expert.

Attempts to reach Andriyevsk­y by telephone and email yesterday were unsuccessf­ul.

Most of the victims of the MH17 crash were Dutch, and a preliminar­y report issued by Dutch crash investigat­ors in September said the Malaysia Airlines plane was likely downed by multiple ‘‘highenergy objects,’’ a finding aviation experts say is consistent with a missile strike.

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