Azerbaijan Airlines plane may have been downed by Russian air defenses, sources say

A Russian air defense system may have mistakenly downed an Azerbaijan Airlines flight that crashed in Kazakhstan, killing all 38 passengers and crew, according to four sources familiar with Azerbaijan’s investigation.

Flight J2-8243, en route from Baku to Grozny in Russia’s Chechnya region, crashed in a fiery explosion near the Kazakh city of Aktau after veering hundreds of miles off its intended course. The Embraer jet reportedly diverted from southern Russian airspace, where Moscow has frequently deployed air defenses to counter Ukrainian drone strikes.

Russia’s aviation authority suggested the crash might have been caused by a bird strike, but officials have not clarified why the plane crossed the Caspian Sea. The nearest Russian airport on its flight path, Makhachkala, was closed on the day of the incident.

Preliminary findings from Azerbaijan’s investigation indicate the plane was struck by a Russian Pantsir-S air defense system. Electronic warfare systems allegedly disabled the jet’s communications as it approached Grozny, according to one Azeri source.

“There’s no claim it was intentional. However, given the established facts, Baku expects Russia to acknowledge the aircraft was downed by its air defense system,” the source told Reuters.

Three additional sources corroborated the investigation’s preliminary conclusion. The Russian Defense Ministry has not commented on the allegations.

International reaction has been swift, with a U.S. official indicating early evidence suggests a Russian anti-aircraft system might have been involved. Canada expressed grave concern, urging Russia to allow an open, transparent investigation and to accept its findings.

Kazakh Deputy Prime Minister Qanat Bozymbaev said it was too early to confirm or deny that Russian defenses were responsible. Local Kazakh prosecutors emphasised the investigation remains ongoing.

The Kremlin has dismissed speculation, emphasising the importance of awaiting official conclusions. “It is wrong to build hypotheses before the investigation is complete,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said.

The incident highlights heightened risks in a region already fraught with geopolitical tensions stemming from the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Investigators face mounting pressure to unravel the cause of the disaster.

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