Arab News

Iran tests new medium-range missile, defying US warnings

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TEHRAN: Iran said on Saturday that it had successful­ly tested a new medium-range missile in defiance of warnings from Washington that such activities were grounds for abandoning their landmark nuclear deal.

State television carried footage of the launch of the Khoramshah­r missile, which was first displayed at a high-profile military parade in Tehran on Friday.

It also carried in-flight video from the nose cone of the missile, which has a range of 2,000 km and can carry multiple warheads.

“As long as some speak in the language of threats, the strengthen­ing of the country’s defense capabiliti­es will continue and Iran will not seek permission from any country for producing various kinds of missile,” Defense Minister Amir Hatami said in a statement.

The test comes at the end of a heated week of diplomacy at the UN General Assembly in New York, where US President Donald Trump again accused Iran of destabiliz­ing the Middle East, calling it a “rogue state whose chief exports are violence, bloodshed and chaos.”

Previous Iranian missile launches have triggered US sanctions and accusation­s that they violate the spirit of the 2015 nuclear deal between Tehran and major powers.

Iran, which fought a brutal war with neighborin­g Iraq in the 1980s, sees missiles as a legitimate and vital part of its defense — particular­ly as regional rivals like Israel import huge amounts of military hardware from the West.

Trump has threatened to bin the nuclear agreement, saying Iran is developing missiles that may be used to deliver a nuclear warhead when the deal’s restrictio­ns are lifted in 2025.

He is due to report to Congress on Oct. 15 on whether Iran is still complying with the deal and whether it remains in US interests to stick by it.

If he decides that it is not, that could open the way for US lawmakers to reimpose sanctions, leading to the potential collapse of the agreement.

Trump said on Wednesday he had made his decision but was not yet ready to reveal it.

The other signatorie­s to the deal — Britain, France, Germany, China, Russia and the EU — have all pushed for it to continue.

They point out that abandoning the agreement will remove restrictio­ns on Iran immediatel­y — rather than in eight years’ time — and that the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency has repeatedly confirmed Tehran is meeting its commitment­s.

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