Bangkok Post

Iran fails to put payloads into orbit

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>>DUBAI: Iran’s space launch on Thursday failed to put its three payloads into orbit after the rocket was unable to reach the required speed, a defence ministry spokesman said in remarks carried on state TV on Friday.

The attempted launch, which came as indirect US-Iran talks take place in Austria to try to salvage a 2015 nuclear deal, drew criticism from the United States, Germany and France.

“For a payload to enter orbit, it needs to reach speeds above 7,600 (metres per second). We reached 7,350,” the spokesman, Ahmad Hosseini, said in a documentar­y about the launch vehicle broadcast on state TV and posted online.

On Thursday, Mr Hosseini did not clarify whether the devices had reached orbit, but suggested the launch was a test ahead of coming attempts to put satellites into orbit.

Iran, which has one of the biggest missile programmes in the Middle East, has suffered several failed satellite launches in the past few years due to technical issues.

Washington has said it is concerned by Iran’s developmen­t of space launch vehicles, and a German diplomat said Berlin had called on Iran to stop sending satellite launch rockets into space, adding that they violated a UN Security Council resolution.

France said on Friday the launch aimed at sending research devices into space violated UN rules and was “even more regrettabl­e” as nuclear talks with world powers were making progress.

Iran’s foreign ministry rejected the US, German and French criticism of Tehran’s launch of the satellite-carrying rocket.

Tehran denies that its space activity is a cover for ballistic missile developmen­t or that it violated a UN resolution.

A UN resolution in 2015 “called upon” Iran to refrain for up to eight years from work on ballistic missiles designed to deliver nuclear weapons following an agreement with six world powers. Some states said the language did not make such a pledge obligatory.

Iran says it has never pursued the developmen­t of nuclear weapons and, therefore, the resolution does not apply to its ballistic missiles, which Tehran regards as an important deterrent in the event of war.

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