Anatomy of a Lie: How Iran Covered Up the Downing of an Airliner – The New York Times

When the Revolutionary Guards officer spotted what he thought was an unidentified aircraft near Tehrans international airport, he had seconds to decide whether to pull the trigger.

Iran had just fired a barrage of ballistic missiles at American forces, the country was on high alert for an American counterattack, and the Iranian military was warning of incoming cruise missiles.

The officer tried to reach the command center for authorization to shoot but couldnt get through. So he fired an antiaircraft missile. Then another.

The plane, which turned out to be a Ukrainian jetliner with 176 people on board, crashed and exploded in a ball of fire.

Within minutes, the top commanders of Irans Revolutionary Guards realized what they had done. And at that moment, they began to cover it up.

For days, they refused to tell even President Hassan Rouhani, whose government was publicly denying that the plane had been shot down. When they finally told him, he gave them an ultimatum: come clean or he would resign.

Only then, 72 hours after the plane crashed, did Irans supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, step in and order the government to acknowledge its fatal mistake.

The New York Times pieced together a chronology of those three days by interviewing Iranian diplomats, current and former government officials, ranking members of the Revolutionary Guards and people close to the supreme leaders inner circle and by examining official public statements and state media reports.

The reporting exposes the governments behind-the-scenes debate over covering up Irans responsibility for the crash while shocked Iranians, grieving relatives and countries with citizens aboard the plane waited for the truth.

The new details also demonstrate the outsize power of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, which effectively sidelined the elected government in a moment of national crisis, and could deepen what many Iranians already see as a crisis of legitimacy for the Guards and the government.

The bitter divisions in Irans government persist and are bound to affect the investigation into the crash, negotiations over compensation and the unresolved debate over accountability.

Around midnight on Jan. 7, as Iran was preparing to launch a ballistic-missile attack on American military posts in Iraq, senior members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps deployed mobile antiaircraft defense units around a sensitive military area near Tehrans Imam Khomeini Airport.

Iran was about to retaliate for the American drone strike that had killed Irans top military commander, Gen. Qassim Suleimani, in Baghdad five days earlier, and the military was bracing for an American counterstrike. The armed forces were on at war status, the highest alert level.

But in a tragic miscalculation, the government continued to allow civilian commercial flights to land and take off from the Tehran airport.

Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, commander of the Guards Aerospace Force, said later that his units had asked officials in Tehran to close Irans airspace and ground all flights, to no avail.

Iranian officials feared that shutting down the airport would create mass panic that war with the United States was imminent, members of the Guards and other officials told The Times. They also hoped that the presence of passenger jets could act as a deterrent against an American attack on the airport or the nearby military base, effectively turning planeloads of unsuspecting travelers into human shields.

After Irans missile attack began, the central air defense command issued an alert that American warplanes had taken off from the United Arab Emirates and that cruise missiles were headed toward Iran.

The officer on the missile launcher near the airport heard the warnings but did not hear a later message that the cruise missile alert was a false alarm.

The warning about American warplanes may have also been wrong. United States military officials have said that no American planes were in or near Iranian airspace that night.

When the officer spotted the Ukrainian jet, he sought permission to fire. But he was unable to communicate with his commanders because the network had been disrupted or jammed, General Hajizadeh said later.

The officer, who has not been publicly identified, fired two missiles, less than 30 seconds apart.

General Hajizadeh, who was in western Iran supervising the attack on the Americans, received a phone call with the news.

I called the officials and told them this has happened and its highly possible we hit our own plane, he said later in a televised statement.

By the time General Hajizadeh arrived in Tehran, he had informed Irans top three military commanders: Maj. Gen. Abdolrahim Mousavi, the armys commander in chief, who is also the chief of the central air defense command; Maj. Gen. Mohammad Bagheri, chief of staff of the Armed Forces; and Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami, commander in chief of the Revolutionary Guards.

The Revolutionary Guards, an elite force charged with defending Irans clerical rule at home and abroad, is separate from the regular army and answers only to the supreme leader. At this point, the leaders of both militaries knew the truth.

General Hajizadeh advised the generals not to tell the rank-and-file air defense units for fear that it could hamper their ability to react quickly if the United States did attack.

It was for the benefit of our national security because then our air defense system would be compromised, Mr. Hajizadeh said in an interview with Iranian news media this week. The ranks would be suspicious of everything.

The military leaders created a secret investigative committee drawn from the Guards aerospace forces, from the armys air defense, and from intelligence and cyberexperts. The committee and the officers involved in the shooting were sequestered and ordered not to speak to anyone.

The committee examined data from the airport, the flight path, radar networks, and alerts and messages from the missile operator and central command. Witnesses the officer who had pulled the trigger, his supervisors and everyone involved were interrogated for hours.

The group also investigated the possibility that the United States or Israel may have hacked Irans defense system or jammed the airwaves.

By Wednesday night, the committee had concluded that the plane was shot down because of human error.

We were not confident about what happened until Wednesday around sunset, General Salami, the commander in chief of the Guards, said later in a televised address to the Parliament. Our investigative team concluded then that the plane crashed because of human errors.

Ayatollah Khamenei was informed. But they still did not inform the president, other elected officials or the public.

Senior commanders discussed keeping the shooting secret until the planes black boxes the flight data and cockpit voice recorders were examined and formal aviation investigations completed, according to members of the Guards, diplomats and officials with knowledge of the deliberations. That process could take months, they argued, and it would buy time to manage the domestic and international fallout that would ensue when the truth came out.

The government had violently crushed an anti-government uprising in November. But the American killing of General Suleimani, followed by the strikes against the United States, had turned public opinion around. Iranians were galvanized in a moment of national unity.

The authorities feared that admitting to shooting down the passenger plane would undercut that momentum and prompt a new wave of anti-government protests.

They advocated covering it up because they thought the country couldnt handle more crisis, said a ranking member of the Guards who, like others interviewed for this article, spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. At the end, safeguarding the Islamic Republic is our ultimate goal, at any co
st.

That evening, the spokesman for the Joint Armed Forces, Brig. Gen. Abolfazl Shekarchi, told Iranian news media that suggestions that missiles struck the plane were an absolute lie.

On Thursday, as Ukrainian investigators began to arrive in Tehran, Western officials were saying publicly that they had evidence that Iran had accidentally shot down the plane.

A chorus of senior Iranian officials from the director of civil aviation to the chief government spokesman issued statement after statement rejecting the allegations, their claims amplified on state media.

The suggestion that Iran would shoot down a passenger plane was a Western plot, they said, psychological warfare aimed at weakening Iran just as it had exercised its military muscle against the United States.

But in private, government officials were alarmed and questioning whether there was any truth to the Western claims. Mr. Rouhani, a seasoned military strategist himself, and his foreign minister, Javad Zarif, deflected phone calls from world leaders and foreign ministers seeking answers. Ignorant of what their own military had done, they had none to give.

Domestically, public pressure was building for the government to address the allegations.

Among the planes passengers were some of Irans best and brightest. They included prominent scientists and physicians, dozens of Irans top young scholars and graduates of elite universities, and six gold and silver medal winners of international physics and math Olympiads.

There were two newlywed couples who had traveled from Canada to Tehran for their weddings just days earlier. There were families and young children.

Their relatives demanded answers. Iranian social media began to explode with emotional commentary, some accusing Iran of murdering its own citizens and others calling such allegations treason.

Persian-language satellite channels operating from abroad, the main source of news for most Iranians, broadcast blanket coverage of the crash, including reports from Western governments that Iran had shot down the plane.

Mr. Rouhani tried several times to call military commanders, officials said, but they did not return his calls. Members of his government called their contacts in the military and were told the allegations were false. Irans civil aviation agency called military officials with similar results.

Thursday was frantic, Ali Rabiei, the government spokesman, said later in a news conference. The government made back-to-back phone calls and contacted the armed forces asking what happened, and the answer to all the questions was that no missile had been fired.

On Friday morning, Mr. Rabiei issued a statement saying the allegation that Iran had shot down the plane was a big lie.

Several hours later, the nations top military commanders called a private meeting and told Mr. Rouhani the truth.

Mr. Rouhani was livid, according to officials close to him. He demanded that Iran immediately announce that it had made a tragic mistake and accept the consequences.

The military officials pushed back, arguing that the fallout could destabilize the country.

Mr. Rouhani threatened to resign.

Canada, which had the most foreign citizens on board the plane, and the United States, which as Boeings home country was invited to investigate the crash, would eventually reveal their evidence, Mr. Rouhani said. The damage to Irans reputation and the public trust in the government would create an enormous crisis at a time when Iran could not bear more pressure.

As the standoff escalated, a member of Ayatollah Khameneis inner circle who was in the meeting informed the supreme leader. The ayatollah sent a message back to the group, ordering the government to prepare a public statement acknowledging what had happened.

Mr. Rouhani briefed a few senior members of his government. They were rattled.

Mr. Rabiei, the government spokesman who had issued a denial just that morning, broke down. Abbas Abdi, a prominent critic of Irans clerical establishment, said that when he spoke to Mr. Rabiei that evening, Mr. Rabiei was distraught and crying.

Everything is a lie, Mr. Rabiei said, according to Mr. Abdi. The whole thing is a lie. What should I do? My honor is gone.

Mr. Abdi said the governments actions had gone far beyond just a lie.

There was a systematic cover-up at the highest levels that makes it impossible to get out of this crisis, he said.

Irans National Security Council held an emergency meeting and drafted two statements, the first to be issued by the Joint Armed Forces followed by a second one from Mr. Rouhani.

As they debated the wording, some suggested claiming that the United States or Israel may have contributed to the accident by jamming Irans radars or hacking its communications networks.

But the military commanders opposed it. General Hajizadeh said the shame of human error paled compared with admitting his air defense system was vulnerable to hacking by the enemy.

Irans Civil Aviation Agency later said that it had found no evidence of jamming or hacking.

At 7 a.m., the military released a statement admitting that Iran had shot down the plane because of human error.

The bombshell revelation has not ended the division within the government. The Revolutionary Guards want to pin the blame on those involved in firing the missiles and be done with it, officials said. The missile operator and up to 10 others have been arrested but officials have not identified them or said whether they had been charged.

Mr. Rouhani has demanded a broader accounting, including an investigation of the entire chain of command. The Guards accepting responsibility, he said, is the first step and needs to be completed with other steps. His spokesman and lawmakers have demanded to know why Mr. Rouhani was not immediately informed.

Mr. Rouhani touched on that concern when he put out his statement an hour and 15 minutes later. The first line said that he had found out about the investigative committees conclusion about cause of the crash a few hours ago.

It was a stunning admission, an acknowledgment that even the nations highest elected official had been shut out from the truth, and that as Iranians, and the world, turned to the government for answers, it had peddled lies.

What we thought was news was a lie. What we thought was a lie was news, said Hesamedin Ashna, Mr. Rouhanis top adviser, on Twitter. Why? Why? Beware of cover-ups and military rule.

See the original post here:
Anatomy of a Lie: How Iran Covered Up the Downing of an Airliner - The New York Times

Meditation initiative benefits healthcare workers – CapeGazette.com

The Heal the Healers Now project of Delmarva is part of a nationwide initiative to bring the stress-reducing Transcendental Meditation technique to doctors, nurses and medical providers who are battling the coronavirus pandemic.

Kim Bemis, head of the Transcendental Meditation program for Delmarva, said, "The TM program is an effortless, enjoyable, and easy-to-learn mental technique for deep relaxation and stress reduction. It has been successfully offered in hospitals and clinics as well as medical schools, academic and VA medical centers, military academies, substance abuse centers, prisons and other settings."

Most recently, the program was offered at Weill Cornell Medical Center-New York Presbyterian Hospital with significant reductions in physician burnout, insomnia and symptoms of post-traumatic stress.

Bemis said, "Even before the pandemic, a Harvard report cited physician burnout as a public health crisis that urgently demands action. And today, the situation is far worse. This highly effective program can help our healthcare providers during this devastating public health crisis."

Laurie Vonasek, RN, MSN, an adjunct professor at Wesley College, said, "Practicing the Transcendental Meditation technique twice daily for the past three years has been transformative. I have increased focus, quieted my mind, decreased anxiety, slept better, increased efficiency, and I am slower to react to negative stimulus. I think before I react. TM has decreased the effects of stress. I am healthier and happier. I could not navigate life, especially now with all the uncertainty and pain related to COVID-19 without meditating. It has helped me to achieve balance and peace. Nurses by nature care for others before they care for themselves. It is time to help nurses heal.

Dr. Uday Jani, a doctor of integrative medicine in Lewes, said, The power of meditation to activate the bodys capacity for self-healing by reducing levels of stress-related hormones and strengthening the immune system has been well documented over the years. We are fortunate to be able to learn from master meditation teacher Kim Bemis, who draws on two decades of studying and living in the Himalayas to teach this remarkably effective technique in our community.

For more information on learning the Transcendental Meditation program, or to donate to help make this program available to medical providers who need it, go to http://www.healthehealersnow.org or contact KimBemis@tm.org.

Read the original:
Meditation initiative benefits healthcare workers - CapeGazette.com

Adagio Therapeutics Announces Dosing of First Patient in Phase 1 Trial of ADG20, its Lead Monoclonal Antibody Candidate for the Treatment and…

Feb. 16, 2021 12:00 UTC

-ADG20 is uniquely engineered to maximize potency, duration of effect, and ease of use in the community setting, and has shown outstanding manufacturability to meet global demand-

-ADG20 binds to a highly conserved region of the spike protein not targeted by other antibodies, enabling potent neutralization to all known SARS-CoV-2 variants and several pre-emergent coronavirus threats-

WALTHAM, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Adagio Therapeutics, Inc., a biotechnology company developing best-in-class antibodies to broadly neutralize coronaviruses, today announced the initiation of a Phase 1 clinical trial evaluating its lead monoclonal antibody product candidate, ADG20. The Phase 1 trial will be conducted in the United States and will evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of ADG20, including serum SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibody levels, in healthy participants. Once adequate safety data are evaluated, Adagio plans to advance ADG20 into global pivotal trials for the treatment and prevention of COVID-19, including in countries with high rates of resistant variants.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210216005243/en/

Tillman Gerngross, Co-Founder and CEO, Adagio Therapeutics, Inc. (Photo: Business Wire)

We are in the unique position of having a monoclonal antibody that binds to and protects against common circulating SARS-CoV-2 variants as well as SARS-related viruses with pandemic potential. This broadly neutralizing activity was intentionally designed into ADG20, as we anticipated the continued emergence of resistance mutations, and we took deliberate steps to engineer ADG20 to maximize its potential to avoid viral escape. This design feature also enables ADG20 to target and neutralize coronaviruses that may emerge in the future, said Tillman Gerngross, Chief Executive Officer of Adagio. Were very proud of the impressive work the team at Adagio has done, rapidly moving from lead identification and manufacturing into clinical trials within eight months.

This Phase 1 study is the first step in the clinical development of ADG20, our broadly-neutralizing antibody for coronavirus threats, and we expect it to provide key information regarding safety, pharmacokinetics and serum SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibody levels, said Lynn Connolly, Chief Medical Officer of Adagio. We plan to evaluate intramuscular administration of ADG20, which could be a critical differentiator for patients and providers, allowing for administration in the community setting for both prevention and treatment of COVID-19. We will be evaluating ADG20 across multiple clinical settings on a global basis from pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis to treatment. We are currently focused on outpatient populations, including an emphasis on addressing unmet needs in vulnerable groups such as the immune compromised and children.

In this Phase 1, randomized, double-blind, single ascending-dose study, healthy adult participants will either receive an intramuscular or intravenous dose of ADG20 or placebo. The primary endpoint of the study is safety and tolerability, while secondary endpoints include evaluations of pharmacokinetics and immunogenicity. The study will also explore the serum neutralizing activity of ADG20 ex vivo against SARS-CoV-2.

In closing, Gerngross notes, We believe ADG20 is poised to address the endemic nature of SARS-CoV-2 as well as the pandemic potential of future coronaviruses. We are excited to initiate clinical trials and potentially commercialize a differentiated antibody whose combined attributes address key limitations of other antibody programs and have the potential to address the significant unmet need that remains in the treatment and prevention of COVID-19.

About Adagio Therapeutics

Adagio is developing best-in-class antibodies that can broadly neutralize SARS-CoV-2, SARS-CoV-1 and additional pre-emergent coronaviruses. Our candidates are optimized using Adimabs industry-leading antibody engineering capabilities and are designed to provide patients and clinicians with an unsurpassed combination of potency, breadth, durable protection (via half-life extension), manufacturability, tolerability, and affordability. Our portfolio of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies includes multiple, non-competing antibodies with distinct binding epitopes. Pre-clinical data show that our lead antibody ADG20 matches or exceeds the potency and coverage of other clinical SARS-CoV-2 antibody programs. We plan to advance ADG20 aggressively through global clinical trials for both the prevention and treatment of symptomatic COVID-19 and anticipate data from both prevention and treatment clinical trials in 2021. Adagio has secured manufacturing capacity for the production of ADG20 with third party contract manufacturers through the completion of clinical trials and, if approved by regulatory authorities, through initial commercial launch. For more information: http://www.adagiotx.com

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210216005243/en/

See the article here:

Adagio Therapeutics Announces Dosing of First Patient in Phase 1 Trial of ADG20, its Lead Monoclonal Antibody Candidate for the Treatment and...

Crypto market report: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin & Co .: How the crypto prices develop on Saturday | message – The Times Hub

The Bitcoin price fell on Saturday. At noon, Bitcoin fell to $ 46,887.78 after trading at $ 47,586.24 the day before.

Bitcoin Cash price fell to $ 558.30 after trading at $ 579.65 the previous day.

display

Do you want to invest in Bitcoin? We explain the possibilities to youHere you can easily buy and sell Bitcoin

Ethereum is in the red at $ 1,797.30.

The previous evening, the digital currency was still at $ 1,846.07.

The price of the digital currency Litecoin rose to 198.73 US dollars on Saturday.

The day before, the rate of the digital currency was put at 197.45 US dollars.

The ripple is worth $ 0.5817 on Saturday.

The Ripple price fell compared to the previous day when it was still at $ 0.6138.

The Cardano course has fallen compared to the previous day. A Cardano is currently worth $ 0.8810.

The price was yesterday at $ 0.9254.

The course of the digital currency Monero is quoted today at 214.78 US dollars in the plus.

The previous day the price was $ 201.19.

The IOTA course is stronger than the day before. One IOTA is currently worth $ 1.266. Yesterday the price was still at $ 1.232.

The Verge price runs sideways at 0.0255 US dollars compared to the previous days level.

The Stellar exchange rate rose to $ 0.5423 compared to the previous day.

There was still $ 0.5258 on the price board.

The NEM rate trades lighter at $ 0.3870.

The previous day the price was $ 0.3986.

The Dash price rose to $ 207.98.

The day before, the cryptocurrency was worth $ 168.16.

The price of the NEO rose to $ 36.86 today, while the previous day it was trading at $ 37.99.

Finanzen.net editorial team

Image sources: Wit Olszewski / Shutterstock.com

Natasha Kumar has been a reporter on the news desk since 2018. Before that she wrote about young adolescence and family dynamics for Styles and was the legal affairs correspondent for the Metro desk. Before joining The Times Hub, Natasha Kumar worked as a staff writer at the Village Voice and a freelancer for Newsday, The Wall Street Journal, GQ and Mirabella. To get in touch, contact me through my [emailprotected] 1-800-268-7116

More:

Crypto market report: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin & Co .: How the crypto prices develop on Saturday | message - The Times Hub

Ethereum Posts 450% Gain in 2020, Beats Bitcoin – Finance Magnates

Ethereum, the second-largest cryptocurrency in the world, posted a significant gain in 2020 as the price of ETH increased by more than 450%. Ethereum has performed better than Bitcoin this year.

Ethereum is currently trading around $730, a significant jump from $129 at the start of 2020. On the other hand, the worlds largest cryptocurrency Bitcoin is hovering around $28,000, compared to around $7,200 at the start of this year. BTC posted a nearly 300% gain since the start of 2020.

ETH price is not the only indicator that shows its performance. Grayscale, a leading cryptocurrency asset management firm reported growing interest in ETH-related investment products earlier this year. Michael Sonnenshein, Managing Director at Grayscale Investments, outlined the growing interest of institutional investors in Ethereum.

Jesse Willms on Making The Most Of The eCommerce BoomGo to article >>

Over the course of 2020, we are seeing a new group of investors who are Ethereum-first and in some cases Ethereum-only. Theres a growing conviction around ETH as an asset class. The development of the asset class has continued to solidify itself, he mentioned in an interview.

On the last day of 2020, Ethereum touched the $750 mark, its highest level since March 2018. The price of ETH is still far away from its all-time high of $1380, but the recent price action shows that the worlds second-largest cryptocurrency is set to test new highs in 2021. ETHs recent introduction of Beacon Chain and its network upgrade to make the entire system more efficient attracted several institutional investors to participate in Ethereum 2.0 staking. The current market cap of ETH stands at around $83 billion.

Due to the growing interest of investors in Ethereum 2.0, several cryptocurrency exchanges started offering ETH staking services, including Binance. Finance Magnates earlier reported about the support from cryptocurrency exchange Gemini for the latest upgrade of the ETH network. But, the key driver has been the institutional adoption of the worlds second-largest cryptocurrency. Institutional investors started including ETH in their investment portfolios this year.

See original here:

Ethereum Posts 450% Gain in 2020, Beats Bitcoin - Finance Magnates