Defying US sanctions,
Iran conducts multiple missile tests!
-Dr. Abdul Ruff
________
Growing US-Iran
relations on fast track annoys the nations that want to see serious conflicts
in Islamic world; especially West Asia led by Arab nations. Anti-Arab countries
like Israel had expected a doom’s day for Tehran that as USA and EU were
targeting the nation that successfully underwent Islamic revolution, disposing
of the then pro-West Shah regime. The revolution brought Iran in
perpetual conflict with enemies of Islam.
Ant-Islamic
strategists and their media outlets have struck alarm bell
warning against US alliance with Iran following West-Iran
agreement over resolving the explosive Iranian nuclear program. Having
obtained nukes by illegal means under US shield, Israel opposes Iranian move
for nuclear technology and wants USA go for a preemptive attack on Iran.
However, USA rejected Israeli call war against Iran. However, much before
they could manage a rift between USA and Iran, these forces
are at work to create trust deficit between Persia and America.
However, the fact
Iran continues to pursue its security interests and
notwithstanding the US sanctions, it keeps testing high precision missiles
as part of its long term security program. .
Iran conducted
multiple ballistic missile tests again on March 08 in an exercise to
demonstrate "deterrent power," a move that comes in defiance of US
sanctions imposed over its missile program in January. The announcement by the
official IRNA news agency said the tests showed the country's "all-out
readiness to confront threats" against its territorial integrity.
Iranian State
television a short time after showed still images of the armaments used in what
it described as a military drill in which "ballistic missiles were fired
from silos" in different parts of Iran.
The United States
imposed new sanctions over Iran's missile programme in January almost
immediately after separate sanctions related to Iran's nuclear activities had
been lifted under a landmark deal with world powers.
Ballistic missile tests have been seen as a means for Iran's military to
demonstrate that the nuclear deal will have no impact on its plans, which is
says are for domestic defence only.
The missile tests, which come less than two weeks after elections in Iran
delivered gains to politicians aligned with Hassan Rouhani, the country's
moderate president. The latest tests, called "The Power of Velayat",
a reference to the religious doctrine of the Islamic republic's leadership,
were undertaken by the Revolutionary Guards and Aerospace Forces, IRNA
reported. Major General Ali Jafari, the Guards' top commander, and Brigadier
General Amir Ali Hajizadeh, were present when the exercise took place, IRNA
reported.
Iran's ballistic missile program has been contentious since the nuclear deal
with the USA and five other powers was struck in Vienna on July 14 last year.
The Revolutionary Guards report to Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, not Rouhani, and their influence dwarfs that of the army and other
armed forces.
Earlier, on October 11, Tehran conducted the first of two ballistic missile
tests which angered Washington. State television weeks later aired
unprecedented footage of underground missile storage bunkers. A UN panel said
in December that the tests breached previous resolutions aimed at stopping
Tehran from developing missiles capable of carrying a nuclear warhead.
Iran has always denied seeking an atomic weapon and argues that its missiles
would never be designed to carry the WMD. The nuclear deal was heralded by
moderates such as Rouhani, who staked his reputation on the negotiations, but
hardliners in Tehran said it damaged national interests.
Announcing the new missile sanctions on January 17, one day after the nuclear
deal was finally implemented, US President Barack Obama said "profound
differences" with Tehran remained over its "destabilising activities".
As part of US sanctums, five Iranians and a network of companies based in
the United Arab Emirates and China were added to an American blacklist, the US
Treasury Department announced.
The White House had first threatened to impose the measures in December but
withdrew them after Rouhani hit out at both their timing and intent. Missiles
were not part of the nuclear agreement which was to be finalized weeks later.
Asked before the missile sanctions were announced on January 17 how Iran would react
to fresh measures against it, Rouhani said: "Any action will be met by a
reaction." Those measures came after four Iranian-Americans, including
Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian, left Tehran following their release in
a prisoner swap with the USA. That exchange was announced on the same day the
nuclear deal was implemented.
Even while
advancing its security program, however, Iran does not want to jeopardize its
new relations with USA and therefore is not interested in creating conflictual
saturations with USA.
The strategic class
does comprehend the emerging new non-conflictual US-Iran relations on a slow
and cautious footing.
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