At least one American citizen died in the Malaysia Airlines plane crash Thursday in eastern Ukraine, President Obama said Friday at the White House. The nearly 300 passengers and crew on the jet were assumed dead after the plane was taken down by a surface-to-air missile launched from an area in Ukraine controlled by pro-Russian separatists.
“This was a global tragedy — an Asian airliner was shot down in European skies filled with citizens from many countries,” President Barack Obama said Friday at the White House. “This certainly will be a wakeup call for Europe and the world that there are consequences to an escalated conflict in eastern Ukraine.” He added that at least one American was among the victims of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17.
The president called for an immediate cease-fire so that a “credible international investigation” can be conducted and stressed that Russia needs to end the conflict.
“We know that [the separatists] are heavily armed and they are trained and that is not an accident — that is happening because of Russian support. [Putin] has the most control over that situation,” Obama said in some of his strongest remarks on Russia yet.
Obama’s remarks were echoed just hours earlier when U.N. Ambassador Samantha Power declared “Russia must end this war.”
Here’s what we currently know — and what we’re still waiting to find out. We’ll be updating this page throughout the day.
What happens now?
An international investigation will begin, led by the fledgling government of Ukraine with help from the Malaysian government and the Netherlands.
The pro-Russian separatists that control the region are going to complicate the situation as both sides jockey to look like they’re in control.
“Our efforts are complicated by the presence of insurgents in the area,” a duty officer for the Ukrainian State Emergency Service told NBC News on Thursday. “The place is controlled by the militants — our people at the crash site are followed by armed men.”
Obama said the FBI and National Transportation Safety Board will send investigators who will be able to assist with the investigation.
Could the plane have crashed on its own?
No. Malaysia Airlines says the plane had a clean bill of health and that all the aircraft’s systems were functioning normally.
So, who shot it down?
The flight was brought down by a missile fired from just inside the Ukrainian border, US officials told NBC News on Friday. They are still trying to determine if it was fired by the pro-Russian separatists or by the Russian military.
Russia has been supplying the separatists with weapons and arms, leading President Obama on Wednesday evening to announce increased economic sanctions against the country. The sanctions impact eight Russian arms dealers, among other companies in the country. U.S. officials also told NBC news that, in recent weeks, the Russian military had stepped up its delivery of heavy weapons, including missile systems, to the separatists.
On the other hand, Russia and the pro-Russian separatists are blaming Ukraine. “Without question, the state over whose territory this happened bears the responsibility for the terrible tragedy,” Putin said Thursday, according to the Interfax news agency. The Russian president on Friday called for a “thorough and unbiased” investigation into the crash.
Ukrainian officials say they couldn’t possibly have shot down the plane because there were no Ukrainian fighter jets in the air when the plane crashed and that it was out of reach of their weapons. The U.S. has agreed it wasn’t Ukraine.
“Today the war stepped out from the Ukrainian territory,” said Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, according to an NBC News translation. In his address, he blamed the pro-Russian separatists and Russia for backing them. “Today the terrorists with just one shot killed almost 300 people with women, children and citizens of many countries in the world.”
He added that the international community “saw the real face of the aggressor as shooting a civilian plane is an act of international terrorism that is targeted against the whole world.”
Who and what was on that plane?









