TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran said on Thursday it had "scared its enemies" by
test flying two new generation, domestically-produced jet fighter
planes and had shown its battle readiness, the latest riposte to
speculation about a war over Tehran's nuclear plans.
French officials, including President Nicolas Sarkozy, have spurred
talk about a possible war by saying the failure of diplomacy to resolve
Iran's dispute with the West over its atomic programme could result in
conflict.
The United States, which has been leading efforts to isolate Iran
because it believes Tehran is trying to build atomic bombs, has said it
wants diplomacy to end the standoff but has refused to rule out
military options if that route fails. Tehran says its nuclear plans are
geared to energy production.
Defence Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar told state TV that experts in
the ministry and air force had jointly carried out research, design and
production of the Saegheh warplane.
"Two Saegheh jets were tested successfully by air force pilots ... The
test scared Iran's enemies," Najjar told state television, adding that
the two jets would officially join the country's fleet of warplanes on
Saturday.
Armed forces chief Ataollah Salehi also said of the test flights:
"Iran, with its advanced equipment and capabilities, is fully prepared
for any possible aggression."
Iran said in September last year it had for the first time flown one of
the Saegheh planes, describing it then as a modification of a warplane
already in its fleet.
It did not say at the time on what plane the Saegheh was based, but
images shown of its test flight suggested it might be based around a
U.S.-built F-5, a plane bought from the United States when Iran was a
U.S. ally before the 1979 revolution.
State television said the Saegheh jet was a new generation of the
Azarakhsh (Lightning) fighter, which Iran said in August was now being
built on an industrial scale. Tehran says it makes tanks, armoured
personnel carriers and missiles and torpedoes.
"We have reached the cutting edge of designing new generation fighter
jets," the defence minister said.
Tehran says the Saegheh has similar capabilities to the U.S. F-18
fighter but is "more powerful".
Although Iran regularly says it has made major advances in its
weaponry, Western experts say it rarely gives enough detail to confirm
the capabilities.
The experts say Iranian weaponry, some of it modifications of equipment
bought from China and others, would be no match for U.S. technology but
say Iran could still deliver a punch by hitting strategic targets, such
as blocking the Gulf waterway.
An Iranian air force commander said on Wednesday Iran had plans for
bombing Israel if the Jewish state attacked first.
Original
Source
|
|
||||
|
Shabbat Times
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
||||
|
|
||||

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)