San Diego Union-Tribune

IRAN NEAR TO SPACE LAUNCH

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Iran appears to be preparing for a space launch as negotiatio­ns continue in Vienna over its tattered nuclear deal with world powers, according to an expert and satellite images.

The likely blastoff at Iran’s Imam Khomeini Spaceport comes as Iranian state media has offered a list of upcoming planned satellite launches in the works for the Islamic Republic’s civilian space program, which has been beset by a series of failed launches. Iran’s paramilita­ry Revolution­ary Guard runs its own parallel program that successful­ly put a satellite into orbit last year.

Conducting a launch amid the Vienna talks fits the hard-line posture struck by Tehran’s negotiator­s, who already described six previous rounds of diplomacy as a “draft,” exasperati­ng Western nations. Germany’s new foreign minister has gone as far as to warn that “time is running out for us at this point.”

But all this fits into a renewed focus on space by Iran’s hard-line President Ebrahim Raisi, said Jeffrey Lewis, an expert at the James Martin Center for Nonprolife­ration Studies at the Middlebury Institute of Internatio­nal Studies who studies Tehran’s program. With Iran’s former President Hassan Rouhani, who shepherded the nuclear deal, out of office, concerns about alienating the talks with launches that the U.S. asserts aids Tehran’s ballistic missile program likely have faded.

“They’re not walking on eggshells,” Lewis said. “I think Raisi’s people have a new balance in mind.”

Iranian state media did not acknowledg­e the activity at the spaceport and Iran’s mission to the United Nations did not respond to a request for comment. The U.S. military, which tracks space launches, did not respond to requests for comment.

Satellite images taken Saturday by Planet Labs Inc. obtained by The Associated Press show activity at the spaceport in the plains of Semnan province, some 150 miles southeast of Tehran.

A support vehicle stood parked alongside a massive white gantry that typically houses a rocket on the launch pad. That support vehicle has appeared in other satellite photos at the site just ahead of a launch. Also visible is a hydraulic crane with a railed platform, also seen before previous launches and likely used to service the rocket.

Other satellite images in recent days have shown an increase in the number of cars at the spaceport, another sign of heightened activity that typically precedes a launch. A building believed to be the “checkout” facility for a rocket has seen increased activity as well, Lewis said.

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