June
22, 2017
Iran's missile program stepped up after nuclear deal
By Shahriar Kia
Less
than a week after the U.S. Senate adopted sweeping new sanctions targeting
Iran's Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) and two days after Tehran launched a series of missiles at
territories inside Syria while claiming to target ISIS, the Iranian opposition
National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) held a press conference in Washington on Tuesday,
June 20, unveiling new information about dozens of IRGC missile sites.
On
the orders of Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei, the IRGC has accelerated its
ballistic missile activities and tests following the Iran nuclear deal,
representatives of the NCRI U.S. Office said.
Sources
associated with the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK), the
main NCRI coalition member, and inside Iran's Defense Ministry and IRGC
confirmed that Khamenei has specifically tasked the IRGC Aerospace Force with
carrying out this initiative.
The
locations of 42 sites were verified by the Iranian opposition, all being
affiliated with the IRGC's production, testing, and launching of missiles.
"A
dozen of these sites were revealed for the very first time. Among the 42 sites,
15 are part of the regime's missile manufacturing network," said NCRI U.S.
Office deputy director Alireza Jafarzadeh in the press conference.
"These 15 centers include several factories related to a missile
industry group and together form a web of dozens of missile production
facilities," he added.
The PMOI/MEK sources were able to provide
intelligence on four very important missile sites located in the cities of
Semnan in the east of Tehran, Lar in south-central Iran, and Khorramabad in
western Iran, as well as near the city of Karaj, west of Tehran. Iran has
recognized only two of these sites as ballistic missile facilities.
These IRGC missile
sites have been constructed based on blueprints provided by North Korea, and
experts from Pyongyang have been on the scene throughout the process, according
to PMOI/MEK sources.
During the past two
decades, the Iranian opposition has provided the international community with accurate reports of
Iran's clandestine nuclear and ballistic missile activities. The recent
revelations made in Washington make the sanctions proposed by the Senate all
the more necessary to adopt a firm policy against Tehran.
Iranian officials are
in consensus on the need for nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles
capable of delivering a nuclear payload, all in order to maintain their grip on
power. Iranian president Hassan Rouhani underscored in late May how the
regime's missile activities will go forward unabated.
Tehran is known as the
central banker of international terrorism. Iran's meddling in neighboring
countries and support for terrorist proxy groups in Syria, Iraq, and Yemen have
already plunged the region into an inferno.
On that note, Iran's
state-run Mashreq daily wrote on Iran launching missiles into Syria on Sunday:
Although
Iran had many different options to respond to ISIS' terrorist attack, it chose
to launch missiles from its soil[.] ... [T]his may have messages for Washington.
"The primary
reason for launching these missiles was in no way ISIS," Jafarzadeh said.
U.S. officials,
alongside their Arab counterparts in the recent Riyadh conference, underscored
strong positions against Tehran and its meddling across the region.
Targeting ISIS and claiming that these attacks were in response to the June 7 terrorist
attacks in Tehran are only pretexts for the mullahs' hollow
threats.
Prior to Iran's
measures having any military weight, these actions are aimed at elevating
morale among the rank and file, especially the IRGC. These elements are
currently terrified, as the U.S. has become active in Syria and intensified its
sanctions against Tehran, and America's top diplomat is emphasizing a policy of
supporting regime change during
the evaluation of a comprehensive Iran policy.
It has become a known
fact that Tehran lacks the capacity and will to halt is ballistic missile
policy.
"There is no
difference between a change in behavior and regime change," Khamenei
stressed on May 10.
In contrast to the
ruling mullahs in Tehran, the Iranian people welcome change and deplore the
regime's nuclear and missile programs and abhor the mullahs' meddling across
the region.
It is high time that
the international community adopted a united and firm policy on Iran based
on the following pillars: imposing sweeping sanctions targeting Iran's missile
program and blacklisting the IRGC for its role in directing Iran's support of
terrorism.
هیچ نظری موجود نیست:
ارسال یک نظر