The investigation into the Air India crash that killed 192 people in 2022 has hit a wall. British aviation experts are digging in their heels, refusing to rubber-stamp a preliminary report they claim is riddled with holes. This is Whitehall's worst nightmare: a politically sensitive inquiry descending into a transatlantic blame game.
Sources close to the Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) tell me the UK team is 'furious' at attempts to rush the final report. They want more time to analyse cockpit voice recorder data and examine whether a known software glitch played a role. The Indian authorities, keen to bury this before an election cycle, are pushing for closure. Classic tale of two masters: one chasing truth, the other optics.
The background is grim. Air India Flight 127, a Boeing 787 Dreamliner, slammed into a hillside near Mumbai in monsoon conditions. Initial theories of pilot error are now being challenged. A whistleblower leaked internal Boeing documents suggesting the flight control system had a history of uncommanded inputs. The AAIB team wants those documents independently verified. But Boeing has been dragging its feet on disclosure, citing commercial confidentiality. Convenient, isn't it?
Behind the scenes, the Foreign Office is trying to play peacemaker. A diplomatic source tells me, 'We can't afford to alienate Delhi over a technical report. But we can't be seen to whitewash a crash that killed British citizens.' Eleven Britons died on that flight. Their families are watching this closely. They have already briefed a cross-party group of MPs who are demanding a parliamentary debate.
The logjam is real. Indian investigators have refused to extend the deadline beyond next month, citing pressure from their ministry. The British team has threatened to issue a minority report unless they get full access to Boeing's data. That would be a diplomatic earthquake. It would also break the long-standing tradition of international aviation cooperation. My Whitehall whisperers say Downing Street is worried the row could spill over into trade talks.
Polling data is the unsung subtext here. Both governments are watching domestic sentiment. Modi, facing a tough election, cannot afford an anti-India narrative from British media. Sunak, trailing in polls, needs a win with the diaspora. Neither wants a blow-up. So the worst outcome is a fudged compromise: a report that satisfies no one but allows both sides to claim victory.
For now, the AAIB team remains in Delhi, sequestered in a hotel, going through boxes of transcripts. The clock is ticking. The truth is in the details. And in Westminster, a select committee clerk is already drafting an evidence request. The crash of Air India 127 will not be forgotten. Not while families grieve. Not while the lobby waits for the full story.











