Malaysian police named one as Pouria Nour Mohammad Mehrdad, 18, and said he was probably migrating to Germany.
Interpol identified the other as Delavar Seyed Mohammadreza, 29.
Experts have said the presence of two people with stolen passports on a plane was a breach of security, but one that is relatively common in a region regarded as a hub for illegal migration.
Malaysia's police chief, Inspector General Khalid Abu Bakar, said the younger Iranian was "not likely to be a member of a terrorist group", adding that the authorities were in contact with his mother in Germany, who had been expecting her son to arrive in Frankfurt.
Speaking in Paris later on Tuesday, Interpol Secretary General Ronald Noble said the two men had travelled from Qatar's capital Doha on their Iranian passports, and switched to stolen Italian and Austrian passports to board the Malaysia Airlines flight.
"The more information we get, the more we are inclined to conclude it is not a terrorist incident," he added.
Add the fact that no terrorist group is bragging about bringing the plane down, and the suspicion that it was terrorism lessens significantly.
On the other hand, the pilots in the missing plane were not averse to inviting hot blondies into the cockpit, where they apparently smoked and flirted with them shamelessly.
On a previous flight, they saw these two South Africans waiting to board, and on their own sent a stewardess back to bring them into the cockpit.
Seems more than a bit lax with security. The South African babes report the following:
On the other hand, the pilots in the missing plane were not averse to inviting hot blondies into the cockpit, where they apparently smoked and flirted with them shamelessly.
On a previous flight, they saw these two South Africans waiting to board, and on their own sent a stewardess back to bring them into the cockpit.
Seems more than a bit lax with security. The South African babes report the following:
“At one stage they were pretty much turned around the whole time in their seats talking to us.
“They were so engaged in conversation that he took my friends hand and he was looking at her palm and said ‘your hand is very creased. That means you’re a very creative person’ and commented on her nail polish.”
Mr Hamid identified the South African natives as they waited in the boarding queue at Phuket airport in December 2011.
As they took their seats on the aircraft, an air steward approached the women and invited them to join the pilots in the cockpit.
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Yes, I can see why the flight crew invited the ladies up into the snake pit/cockpit. I think that it's a perk. Most of these pilots are former Indonesian Air Force, which means that despite the small equipment that Zoomies are known to possess, they are able to get it done.
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