There have been other, similar suggestions. It's being said that the launcher vehicle has a radar, but a limited one, & this system may have lacked the dedicated vehicle which carries the main radar. Therefore it could operate, but at reduced capacity.
Combined with a probably ill-trained crew, & it's easy to see how they could make this mistake. They may have shot at anything they could, assuming (because they'd never thought to check, though it's be easy) that anything overhead was Ukrainian.
Poorly trained & trigger-happy is a dangerous combination.
Yep. Only the TELAR was seen at Snezhnoe, no main radar, no transporter-loader, no commands vehicle.
Proper air defences can tell them from enemy combat aircraft, except when they let their emotions take over (Persian Gulf, 1987...). Height, size, route - & published schedules.
Assuming the person operating it knows what they're doing, right?
CNN is reporting that the BUK launcher involved in the shootdown was moved back into Russia overnight. There will be a huge coverup here but (also according to CNN), US intelligence has determined the precise launch point, it's well within rebel held territory.
Instead of telling us that the launch was "well within rebel territory" how about they tell us where it actually took place from. Given the quality of CNN material I hardly trust them to make conclusions of that sort.
Air disasters, even those involving shoot downs, rarely have a single cause and thorough investigations usually show up multiple failings that led to the loss of life.
Many airlines had taken it on themselves to divert their aircraft around Eastern Ukraine, Malaysia for what ever reason did not.
Actually they did. All their previous flights carefully flew south of the conflict zone. Only this particular flight was directed to fly through the conflict zone by Ukrainian air traffic control.
According to the intercepted communications the rebels, whether they fired the actual missile or not, have been taking pot-shots at anything and everything on the basis they don't have any aircraft so its not one of theirs.
Yep. It doesn't take intercepted comms to know that.
Ukraine does not appear to have control of their own airspace or knowledge of what is happening in it.
Well let's be fair, it's because the rebels systematically attacked and disabled airspace control assets in the conflict zone.
No-one, not even the rebels themselves actually seem to know what capabilities and ordinance they have.
Well that's because "the rebels" are actually a whole bunch of loosely coordinate separate forces. There are at least 4 distinct major groups, and a plethora of smaller ones.
The rebels, as evidenced by recent friendly fire incidents do not have control over their own forces.
The rebels, as evidenced by their firing on Ukrainian targets from neutral and possibly even Russian territory have no regard for the rule of law or rules of engagement.
Add to all of this that conflicts such as these tend to attract murderous psychopaths, to all sides, who like to identify themselves as soldiers of fortune or freedom fighters. These scum, infiltrating the local forces and stirring up things to better get their fill of death and suffering, seem to have out done themselves this time.
I doubt a murderous psychopath is responsible for the shoot down. A mistake by perfectly ordinary SAM operators from the rebel side is far more likely. The psychopaths are more likely to be found on the front line, or among the "security" forces on both sides.