So you have nothing definitive other than that the US tried to dispute the Vincennes actual location: international waters or not.
First...
Contrary to what many Iranians would like to believe, it is not enough, even today, to use only radar to determine friend or foe. Why do you think there is such a thing as IFF in the first place?
IFF modes 1 and 2 are 'military' and mode 3 is 'commair' or 'commercial airline'. These are responses to query, not detection results. This is one point in the system for error. What if the response is 'commair' when the true nature of the target is 'military'? Is this an error or of deceit?
Identification friend or foe - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Do you see the highlighted? Is it possible for deceit? Absolutely.
IFF And Transponders — Military Forum | Airliners.net
Do you see the highlighted? A military target can disable his 'military' response so that when queried, his response will be incomplete, showing a 'civilian' status.
This is not to say that Flight 655 was trying to deceive US in anyway, but to show fair minded readers the holes in the IFF system where mistakes and misunderstandings can occur.
Now...
If you want to say that the Vincennes' captain lied about knowing the true nature of Flight 655, then there must be contradictory physical evidences to support your argument. If the captain was not aware, then it is ignorance, not malice. Ignorance is a sign of incompetence. Malice is a sign of a crime.
So let us see...
Sea Of Lies - Newsweek and The Daily Beast
So Petty Officer Andrew Anderson received a 'civilian' response but because he missed Flight 655 on his schedule, he did not know who is this 'civilian' response came from.
Anderson have a radar contact, he queried and received a 'civilian' response, he scanned his flight schedule and missed Flight 655, then he asked another person for advice/clarification.
You can call this chain of events 'incompetence' if you wish, but there is no malice here. This is the start of the tragedy.
Lt. Clay Zocher was also uncertain, so he passed the buck, so to speak.
If the Vincennes knew the exact nature of the Flight 655, then why bother to have a
MANUAL VOICE QUERY?
So here we have a second point of error in this tragedy. We have an on scene commander who is uncertain of a target that may pose a threat to his ship. We have a superior commander who is not on scene but believes something else and held the leash on his attack dogs. Smith's decision to defer to his subordinate is nothing new. It is logical and have plenty of historical support in warfare when immediate danger required the most knowledgeable person to take charge. We even have many instances of sergeants gave orders to officers in the heat of battle.
So now the Vincennes is effectively engaged in combat against multiple small boats.
Not much difference between 9:49 and 9:50, is there? As the Vincennes maneuvers to fight the gunboats, someone called out a possible hostile attack aircraft.
Why would Anderson performed another electronic query if the Vincennes knew the exact nature of Flight 655?
So now we have an electronic query, a voice query, and another electronic query. What is the point of all this if the Vincennes knew the exact nature of Flight 655? You can call Anderson's failure to reset query range as incompetence if you wish, but there is no malice here.
Aaahhh...So now we see that Rogers was himself uncertain of what was in the sky. He has to consider the history of the USS Stark that was hit by an Iraqi Exocet a short time before his current combat situation. One of his subordinates was telling him that the target is a high probable threat, another subordinate was shouting in his ears that it is not. You can call this incompetence if you wish, but there is no malice here, especially if the Vincennes sent another series of queries, electronic and voice, to try to determine the target's true nature.
Whatever the shrinks want to call it, this clearly fell into the category 'fog of battle' situation. You can call Anderson and Leach incompetent and too mentally deficient to keep their wits under pressure if you wish, but there is no malice here.
So from engaging in a shooting fight with gunboats to the firing of the missiles at a perceived air threat, barely 5 minutes passed. Talk to anyone who has ever been in combat for five minutes and see what he can tell you about clarity.
So Flight 655 could not respond to all queries because of excessive radio traffic. This is not to blame Captain Rezaian, but to show another factor that facilitated the tragedy.
But it begs the question: Would this tragedy occurred had Flight 655 was able to respond? Since you and others have already made up your mind that the Vincennes already knew the true nature of 655, the hypothetical question is irrelevant. Sort of 'Do not bother me with the facts, I already made up my mind.' If I wanted to be like you Iranians, I could have come up with all sorts of arguments to make Captain Rezaian share at least half of the blame. I could cast aspersions on his training, experience, soundness of mind, or even insinuate that Flight 655 was part of some Iranian plot to use a civilian airliners for military purposes.
No, I have no problems that based on whatever military experience I have, I will place the blame for this tragedy on US. But it was an accident and I will not allow the charge of murder to go unchallenged. Murder automatically assign willful intent, deliberate planning, and malice onto the defendant. All in equal measures. In any court, public opinion or legal, if one leg of that triad fail examination, the entire charge is reduced. So far, Iranian argument that it was a deliberate mass murder of Flight 655 --
FAILED.
I do not care if Rogers was a likeable person or not. Your bringing that up is pointless and a convenient distraction for the gullible. I used the same news source as you did and there is nothing that showed beyond any reasonable doubt that the Vincennes knew the exact nature of Flight 655. I have no interest in changing your mind, but the beauty of an open forum is that anyone can read opposing arguments and make up his own mind.