Russia: Black box from warplane downed by Turkey unreadable

World Today

Col. Nikolai Primak, left, head of Russian investigation commission, and Lt-Gen. Sergei Bainetov speak about the Russian Su-24 bomber, seen behind, which was shot down by Turkey at the border with Syria on Nov. 24, saying it violated its airspace for 17 seconds despite repeated warnings, in Moscow on Monday, Dec. 21, 2015. (AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin)

Investigators in Moscow said on Monday they were unable to retrieve information from the damaged black box of a Russian warplane shot down by Turkey last month, data the Kremlin hoped would support its version of what happened.

Russia’s Defence Ministry publicly opened the recorder last week, hoping its contents would confirm Moscow’s assertions that the bomber did not stray into Turkish air space and was maliciously downed.

Sergei Bainetov, Russian Air Force’s deputy head of flight safety, was quoted as saying that 13 of the flight recorder’s 16 microchips had been destroyed and that those remaining were damaged.

The damage was so severe, he said, because of the sheer force with which the plane had hit the ground after being struck by an air-to-air missile, severing a cord that connected the black box and the jet’s avionics.

The defence ministry would now turn to specialised scientific institutions in the hope that they could get something from the damaged chips, he said, saying it was an uncertain process that was likely to take “a lot of time.”

The downing of the Russian SU-24 fighter-bomber by Turkish jets on Nov. 24 was the most serious confrontation between Moscow and a NATO member state in the last 50 years.

Russian President Vladimir Putin accused Turkey of “stabbing Russia in the back” and ordered a raft of retaliatory economic sanctions against Ankara.

Turkey says the warplane, part of Russia’s Syria-based strike force, strayed into its airspace and ignored repeated warnings to leave. Russia says the plane did not leave Syria and posed no threat to Turkey.

Reuters