The Asian Age

Iran tests its own missile shield

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Tehran, Sept. 3: Iran has tested its home-grown air defence system, designed to match the Russian S300, the head of the Revolution­ary Guards’ air defence has said.

“In parallel with the deployment of the S-300, work on Bavar-373 system is underway,” Farzad Esmaili told state broadcaste­r IRIB late on Saturday.

“The system is made completely in Iran and some of its parts are different from the S-300. All of its sub-systems have been completed and its missile tests have been conducted.”

Bavar (which means “belief”) is Tehran’s first long-range missile defence system, and is set to be operationa­l by March 2018, he added. In 2010, Iran began manufactur­ing Bavar-373 after the purchase of the S-300 from Russia was suspended due to internatio­nal sanctions. Russia resumed the sale following the 2015 nuclear

Bavar is Tehran’s first long-range missile defence system

— Farzad Esmaili, Revolution­ary Guards air defence chief

deal with world powers, which lifted sanctions, and Iran’s S-300 defence system became operationa­l in March.

On Sunday, state television aired the first footage from a “secret” drone base in an undisclose­d desert location, where dozens of different types of unmanned aircraft were lined up.

“If necessary, a great number of Iran’s highspeed eagles (drones) will land on the enemy,” Esmaili said in the footage.

Iran has developed several military drones in recent years, drawing criticism from Washington.

Last month, the United States claimed Iranian drones flew dangerousl­y close to an aircraft carrier and a US Naval jet in two separate incidents in Gulf waters.

On Saturday, the new defence minister Amir Hatami said Iran has “a specific plan to boost missile power”.

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