An initial investigation by Dutch experts appears to support the long-held theory of what happened to
MH17 over eastern Ukraine
Although the preliminary technical report by the Dutch Safety Board did not directly say the objects were surface-to-air missiles, it left little room to conclude otherwise.
Teri Schultz, reporting for NPR, says the report concludes there was "extensive damage to the plane's fuselage [and] holes pockmarking the metal of the cockpit caused by objects coming from outside the aircraft."
"The report confirms it broke up in the air, [and that] its wreckage scattered over a very large area, where most of it remains today, as fighting between pro-Russian separatists and Ukrainian armed forces has made the site too dangerous for these investigators to visit," Teri says.
The report out of the Netherlands said there was "no evidence of technical or human error."
The Boeing 777, carrying 298 passengers and crew, careened into the Ukrainian countryside over rebel-held territory on July 17, killing everyone aboard.
Kiev and the
West
In the preliminary report out of the Netherlands, investigators said:
" 'The damage observed in the forward section of the aircraft appears to indicate that the aircraft was penetrated by a large number of high-energy objects from outside the aircraft,' the report said." 'The initial results of the investigation point toward an external cause of the MH17 crash,' the board's chairman, Tjibbe Joustra, said in a statement. 'More research will be necessary to determine the cause with greater precision. The Safety Board believes that additional evidence will become available for investigation in the period ahead.' "
The investigators relied on information obtained by the flight data recorders, air traffic control, satellite images and photos from the scene,
according to the BBC
The investigators noted that three other very large commercial airliners flew over the same area at about the same time.
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