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Iran Test-Fires Its Longest-Range Missile - Occasion2B
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Sadie
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Iran Test-Fires Its Longest-Range Missile
« Dec 16, 2009    10:59:32 PM »
Ya got your bunker ready yet?  gasmask


December 16, 2009
AP

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran announced Wednesday it has successfully test fired an upgraded version of its longest-range, solid-fuel missile which it said is faster and harder to shoot down.

Photo: Iranian Students News Agency photo claims to show the launch of a high-speed surface-to-surface Sajjil-2 missile at an undisclosed location. (AP/ISNA)

State television broke the news in a one-sentence report accompanied by a brief clip of the test.

Defense Minister Gen. Ahmad Vahidi later spoke on television, describing the Sajjil-2 as a high-speed, surface-to-surface missile that would serve as a "strong deterrent" against any possible foreign attack.

"Given its high speed," he said, "it is impossible to destroy the missile with anti-missile systems because of its radar-evading ability."

The Sajjil-2 is a two-stage missile with a range of about 1,200 miles. That range places Israel, Iran's sworn enemy, well within reach and reaches as far away as southeastern Europe with greater precision than earlier models.

It is Iran's most advanced two-stage missile and is powered entirely by solid-fuel while the older, long-range Shahab-3 missile uses a combination of solid and liquid fuel in its most advanced form.

Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor declined to comment on Iran's latest missile test.

Photo: May 18: An Iranian Sejil 2 missile is seen in front of a banner featuring Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei at an undisclosed location. (Reuters)

Iran has intensified its missile development program in recent years, a source of serious concern in Israel, the United States and its Western allies at a time when they accuse Tehran of seeking to build a nuclear weapon. Iran, which is under several sets of U.N. sanctions over its nuclear program, denies the charges and says its nuclear program is aimed solely at generating electricity.

Israel has not ruled out a military strike against Iran's nuclear facilities. Iran, in turn, has threatened that such an attack would be retaliated against with strikes on Israel's own nuclear sites.

The name "Sajjil" means "baked clay," a reference to a story in the Koran, Islam's holy book, in which birds sent by God drive off an enemy army attacking the holy city of Mecca by pelting them with stones of baked clay.

Solid-fuel missiles like the Sajjil-2 are more accurate than the liquid fuel missiles of similar range currently possessed by Iran. The country has for several years had a solid-fuel missile, the Fateh, but with the much shorter range of 120 miles.

Iran's arms manufacturing program began during the country's ruinous 1980-88 war with neighboring Iraq to compensate for a U.S. arms embargo. Since 1992, Iran has produced its own tanks, armored personnel carriers, missiles and a fighter plane. The actual capabilities of the weapons, including the accuracy and range of the country's homemade missiles, are difficult to ascertain given the secrecy of the Iranian military.


Source: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,580341,00.html
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beast
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Re: Iran Test-Fires Its Longest-Range Missile
« Dec 16, 2009    11:53:17 PM »
makes that November 2010 date seem realistic, doesn't it?  The cow
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beast
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Re: Iran Test-Fires Its Longest-Range Missile
« Dec 17, 2009    12:23:46 AM »
JERUSALEM —  Iran is close to a "technological breakthrough" that would enable it to build nuclear weapons, Israel's military intelligence chief said in a rare public assessment Tuesday.

Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin said Iran has enriched enough uranium this year at its facility in Natanz to build a bomb and is on the brink of a "technological breakthrough" that would enable it to build atomic weapons.

He noted, however, that the uranium must be further enriched if Iran wants to build a weapon. He did not say when Iran might reach full weapons capability and did not elaborate on what technology Iran is allegedly nearing.

The countdown on Iran's nuclear technology clock "has almost finished ticking," he said, speaking to a security conference at Tel Aviv University. U.N. monitors have confirmed that Iran has generated enough low-enriched uranium to build a bomb — if it were enriched up to a military grade of over 90 percent.


Source: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,580274,00.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+foxnews%2Flatest+%28FOXNews.com+-+Latest+Headlines%29&utm_content=Google+Reader
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