Posted on 08/24/2012 2:10:17 PM PDT by Hunton Peck
Irans Defense Minister says the countrys new space center will be operational by next spring, the latest development in a program signaling Tehrans fast-developing ballistic missile capability.
Ahmad Vahidi said after a cabinet meeting Wednesday that the facility, to be called the Imam Khomeini Spaceport, would be completed and running by the end of the Iranian year (March 20, 2013).
Officials said earlier that the center whose location has not been disclosed will be used to launch satellites built in Iran and other Islamic countries.
The children of great Khomeini, the innovative and leading scientists and experts from the Aerospace Industry Organization of the Defense Ministry, will send into orbit the new generation of the Islamic Republic of Irans satellites from this center, Vahidi said in June.
Since Iran in February 2009 joined an exclusive club of nations with the ability to put a satellite into orbit, it has sent several small satellites into space, using variants of its liquid-fueled Safir-2 rocket.
In 2010 it sent live animals, including a rat and turtles, in a capsule into space, although plans last year to send a live monkey were unsuccessful. All are part of a concerted drive, Iran says, aimed at achieving manned spaceflight by 2020 and a moon landing by 2025.
Given the relatively slow progress of Chinas much better resourced space program, experts are skeptical about Irans declared ambitions, particularly as the country grapples with ever harsher sanctions over its nuclear activities.
Of greater significance is what the satellite-launching ability says about Tehrans advances in long-range ballistic missile development.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has repeatedly denied that the space program has military goals, but reaction from the U.S. and other Western nations to Irans first successful satellite launch in 2009 made evident the doubts about those denials.
Efforts to develop missile delivery capability, efforts to continue an illicit nuclear program, or threats that Iran makes towards Israel and its sponsorship of terror are of acute concern to this administration, the White House said in response to the launch, which came just weeks after President Obama took office.
Britains Foreign Office said the launch underscored our serious concerns about Irans intentions and sends the wrong signal to the international community which has already passed five successive UN Security Council resolutions on Irans nuclear and ballistic missile program.
Iran already has missiles capable of reaching Israel and U.S. military bases in the Middle East.
The U.S. and Arab Gulf allies have been stepping up efforts to develop a network of missile defenses, with Iran clearly seen as the potential threat.
State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland on Thursday recalled that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton during a visit to Saudi Arabia earlier this year discussed with Gulf states how individual missile defense plans in the region could be made interoperable
The missile defense work that were doing is very much a response to the concerns that those countries could come at risk as Iran develops its capability, she said. Nuland however distinguished between those initiatives and the current rhetoric about the possibility of an Israeli strike on Iranian nuclear facilities.
The unclassified portion of a Pentagon report on Irans military power released over the summer said the country was expanding its missile inventories while improving accuracy and firing capabilities, boosting the missiles lethality and effectiveness.
It said Iran had developed short-range missiles with an effective capability against partner forces in the region and continued to increase the range, lethality and accuracy of medium-range ballistic missiles targeting Israel.
The Pentagon report said Irans multistage space-launch vehicles, launched in recent years, could serve as a test bed for developing long-range ballistic missile technologies.
With sufficient foreign assistance, Iran may be technically capable of flight-testing an intercontinental ballistic missile by 2015.
If Iran does meet that prediction, and the test is successful, it will outdo North Koreas attempts in the long-range missile field.
Pyongyang in 1998 fired a Taepodong-I long-range ballistic missile that sailed over Japan before splashing down in the Pacific Ocean. In 2006 it tested a longer-range Taepodong-2 but it also failed, after around 40 seconds.
North Korean attempts to put satellites into orbit, using a carrier rocket identified by the U.S. military as essentially a Taepodong-2, failed in 2009 although the flight lasted some 18 minutes and again last April, when the rocket flew for just 70 or so miles before disintegrating.
Iran and North Korea have been collaborating in missile development since at least the early 1990s.
From the sounds of recent Israeli newspaper stories I’ll betcha it won’t.
I hope its ready for incoming.
Part of NASA’s muslim outreach?
Ah, yes. Imam Coyote. Originator of the prophetic saying, “What could go wrong?”
NASA outreach to muzzies?Maybe Barack can contract with his Islamo-fascist muzzie pals to provide a
space taxi service since he killed any hope we would have our own manned
space vehicle any time soon.
Yes a real spaceport, thanks to our former Crook of a Governor! A boondoggle built on the backs of the New Mexican Tax Payers who will never see a return on the money they buried in the sand to build that White Elephant!
It’ll be a spaceport alright — after the asteroid bullseyes Tehran.
Thanks Hunton Peck.
They’re just calling it a spaceport as a subterfuge anyway. Just like they say the nuclear reactors are for peaceful energy use, they’ll say they are just building ICBMs for their “space program”. That way Russia and China have cover when they get caught helping them.
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