Iran ready for bilateral talks on downed jet, ignores call for reparations

Demonstrators from the Anglo-Iranian Communities in the UK attend a vigil opposite 10 Downing Street, London, for the victims of the Ukrainian airliner which crashed on January 8, killing all 176 onboard. (AFP/File)
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Updated 07 January 2022
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Iran ready for bilateral talks on downed jet, ignores call for reparations

  • Canada, Britain, Sweden and Ukraine said on Thursday they had abandoned efforts to talk to Tehran about reparations
  • Most of the 176 people killed when Iran shot down the Ukrainian airliner in January 2020

DUBAI: Iran said on Friday it was prepared to hold bilateral talks with concerned countries over a Ukrainian airliner downed by its forces in 2020.
That came after ignoring a joint statement on reparations made by Canada and other states whose citizens were killed.
Canada, Britain, Sweden and Ukraine said on Thursday they had abandoned efforts to talk to Tehran about reparations for an airliner brought down by Iran and would try to settle the matter according to international law.
Most of the 176 people killed when Iran shot down the Ukrainian airliner in January 2020 were citizens from those four nations, which formed a group aiming to hold Tehran to account.
“Despite certain countries’ illegal actions and attempts to exploit this tragic event ..., Iran remains ready to negotiate bilaterally with each of the relevant states,” Iran’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement on state media.
It said any talks should respect “sovereignty, domestic laws and international obligations.”
Tehran says its Revolutionary Guards accidentally shot down the Boeing 737 plane, which was hit at a time when tensions were high between Iran and the United States. Tehran blamed a misaligned radar and an error by the air defense operator.
A Canadian court this week awarded nearly $84 million plus interest to the families of six people who died. In June, Canada said it had found no evidence that the downing of the plane had been premeditated.


Germany’s leader calls on US and Europe to ‘repair trans-Atlantic trust’

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Germany’s leader calls on US and Europe to ‘repair trans-Atlantic trust’

  • German Chancellor said Europe and US should conclude that 'we are stronger together'
  • Merz acknowledges rift in trans-Atlantic relations over the past year as he opens Munich Security Conference
MUNICH: German Chancellor Friedrich Merz called on Friday for the United States and Europe to “repair and revive trans-Atlantic trust together,” arguing that even the US isn’t powerful enough to go it alone in an increasingly tough world.
Merz called for a “new trans-Atlantic partnership,” acknowledging that “a divide, a deep rift” has opened up across the Atlantic as he opened the Munich Security Conference, an annual gathering of top global security figures including many European leaders and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
At last year’s conference, held a few weeks into US President Donald Trump’s second term, Vice President JD Vance stunned European leaders by lecturing them about the state of democracy and freedom of speech on the continent — a moment that set the tone for the last year.
A series of statements and moves from the Trump administration targeting allies followed, including Trump’s threat last month to impose new tariffs on several European countries in a bid to secure US control of Greenland, a semiautonomous territory of NATO ally Denmark. The president later dropped that threat.

‘Stronger together’

“The culture war of the MAGA movement in the US is not ours,” Merz said. “The freedom of the word ends here when this word is turned against human dignity and the constitution. And we don’t believe in tariffs and protectionism, but in free trade.”
He added that Europe would stand by climate agreements and the World Health Organization “because we are convinced that we will only solve global tasks together.”
But Merz said Europe and the US should conclude that “we are stronger together” in today’s world. He argued that the post-World War II world order “as imperfect as it was at its best times, no longer exists” today.
“In the era of great-power rivalry, even the United States will not be powerful enough to go it alone,” he said. “Dear friends, being a part of NATO is not only Europe’s competitive advantage. It’s also the United States’ competitive advantage, so let’s repair and revive trans-Atlantic trust together.”
The Europeans, Merz said, are doing their part.

A ‘shift in mindset’ in Europe

Since last year’s Munich conference, NATO allies have agreed under pressure from Trump to a large increase in their defense spending target.
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said there has been a “shift in mindset,” with “Europe really stepping up, Europe taking more of a leadership role within NATO, Europe also taking more care of its own defense.”
With Rubio heading the US delegation this year, European leaders can hope for a less contentious approach more focused on traditional global security concerns.
Speaking as he introduced Merz, conference chairman Wolfgang Ischinger asked: “does the Trump administration truly believe that it needs allies and partners and if so ... is Washington actually prepared to treat allies as partners?”
Before departing for Germany on Thursday, Rubio had some reassuring words as he described Europe as important for Americans.
“We’re very tightly linked together with Europe,” he told reporters. “Most people in this country can trace both, either their cultural or their personal heritage, back to Europe. So, we just have to talk about that.”
But Rubio made clear it wouldn’t be business as it used to be, saying: “We live in a new era in geopolitics, and it’s going to require all of us to reexamine what that looks like.”
Mike Waltz, the US ambassador to the United Nations, told the conference that the US had been sustaining the financial burden of multilateralism for too long and Europeans need to do more.
“There is a cost to the status quo and the status quo was not sustainable any more,” Waltz said.
Merz said that Europe’s “excessive dependency” on the US was its own fault, but it is leaving that behind. “We won’t do this by writing off NATO — we will do it by building a strong, self-supporting European pillar in the alliance, in our own interest,” he said.
He acknowledged that Europe and the US will likely have to bridge more disagreements in the future than in the past, but “if we do this with new strength, respect and self-respect, that is to the advantage of both sides.”
Rubio arrived in Munich on Friday. He met Merz and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi separately on the sidelines of the conference, and also had a meeting scheduled with Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and Greenlandic Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen. He is due to address the conference on Saturday morning.