Foreign Policy Blogs

The Sad Side of Sanctions

On January 24th, a Russian-made Iranian passenger aircraft carrying 157 passengers and 13 crew crash-landed in northeastern Iran injuring at least 46 people. The Taban Air aeroplane caught fire upon landing at Mashhad airport at 7:20am local time. Iran has a bloody aviation history. Last July, a Caspian Airlines jet carrying 168 people crashed into a field in northwest Iran, killing all those on board. The Russian-built Tupolev aircraft had been flying from Tehran to Yerevan, the Armenian capital, when it crashed near the Iranian city of Qazvin.  Here is an Al Jazeera report from the crash site:

[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/xtao0f8C4MU" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]

Other recent air disasters include:

This list is by no means a comprehensive list of all the aviation disasters faced by Iran in recent years.

Iran’s bloody aviation history can be blamed on the US sanctions, which prevent Iran from purchasing new aircraft or spare parts from western countries, who are the dominant producers of passenger planes in the world market.  US sanctions have left Iran dependent on an ageing fleet, acquired from the former Soviet Union, and since the fall of the Soviet Union, it has been harder to get parts for these aircrafts. As the BBC states, series of disasters in Iran involve mainly Russian-built planes. Up to half of Iran’s transport aircraft are believed to be of Russian design, and correspondents say they have a poor safety record.  The New York Times reported that since entering service in 1971, the Russian made Tupolev aircraft has been in 54 crashes, resulting in the deaths of 2,602 passengers and 258 crew members.

As the US Congress passes sanctions on Iran once again, they fail to realize that innocent people die as a result. While we find plenty of rhetoric by the US politician supporting the green movement and making a distinction between Iranian government and Iranian people, there has been no political action that reflects this sentiment. Easing the sanctions on buying civilian airlines would be the right step from a humanitarian point of view and it will also show that the United States supports Iranian people.

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