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Iran claims to have S-300 surface-to-air missiles PDF Print E-mail

By ALI AKBAR DAREINI
The Associated Press
Wednesday, August 4, 2010; 4:04 AM

TEHRAN, Iran -- Iran has obtained four S-300 surface-to-air missiles
despite Russia's refusal to deliver them to Tehran under a valid
contract, a semiofficial Iranian news agency claimed Wednesday.

The Fars news agency, which has ties to Iran's elite Revolutionary
Guard, Iran's most powerful military force, said Iran received two
missiles from Belarus and two others from another unspecified source.
Fars didn't elaborate, and there was no immediate official confirmation
of the report.

Russia signed a contract in 2007 to sell S-300 missiles to Iran, a move
that would have substantially boosted the country's defense capacities.
Israel fears that supplying S-300s to Iran would change the military
balance in the Middle East.

The S-300 anti-aircraft missile defense system is capable of shooting
down aircraft, cruise missiles and ballistic missile warheads at ranges
of over 90 miles (144 kilometers) and at altitudes of about 90,000 feet
(27,432 meters).

Russia said in June that the new tough U.N. Security Council sanctions
against Iran prevent Russia from delivering the missiles to Iran but
Iran has insisted that Moscow is under an obligation to carry out the
contract to provide the S-300 missiles to Tehran.

"Iran possesses four S-300 PT missiles," Fars reported.

The agency said Iran's possession of the missiles was revealed for the
first time last year by Al-Menar TV, which is affiliated the
Iranian-backed Islamic militant Hezbollah group in Lebanon. Fars said
Iranian government officials never denied the report.

It added that Iran may try to start building the missiles itself.

Russia is in a difficult position in the international standoff with
Iran, in part because it does not want to jeopardize decades of
political and trade ties with the Islamic republic. Still, Moscow has
lately shown increasing frustration with Iran, and last month backed the
new sanctions.

Iran insists its nuclear work is only for generating power and other
peaceful uses. The U.S. and its allies accuse Iran of using its civilian
nuclear program as a cover to develop atomic weapons.

Moscow has delivered other anti-aircraft systems to Tehran, such as the
Tor-M1, which can hit aerial targets at up to 20,000 feet.



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