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Iranian missile test launch raises new concerns

Thursday, May 21, 2009

WASHINGTON (AP) — The missile test-fired by Iran is the longest-range solid-propellent missile it has launched yet, a U.S. government official said Wednesday, raising concerns about the sophistication of Tehran’s missile program.

The U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss technical details of Iran’s missile program, said Tehran has demonstrated shorter-range solid-propellent missiles in the past.

Solid-propellent rockets are a concern because they can be fueled in advance and moved or hidden in silos, the official said. Liquid- propellent rockets have to be fueled and fired quickly, which makes preparations for launches easier to monitor and would allow a preemptive strike if necessary.

But according to Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who Wednesday provided the first official U.S. confirmation of the Iranian launch, the Iranian missile had a range of 2,000 to 2,500 kilometers.

That translates to 1,200 to 1,500 miles, putting Israel, U.S. bases in the Mideast, and parts of Eastern Europe within striking distance.

“The information that I have read indicates that it was a successful flight test,” Gates told the House Appropriations Committee nearly eight hours after the test was announced by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Gates added that “because of some of the problems they’ve had with their engines, we think, at least at this stage of the testing we think it’s probably closer to the lower end of that range. Whether it hit the target that it was intended for, I have not seen any information on that.”

U.S. officials said that government analysts and other specialists were still assessing information from the launch.

“Obviously, that’s concerning,” White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said of the launch.

Iran’s launch comes less than a month before Iran’s presidential election and just two days after President Barack Obama declared a readiness to seek deeper international sanctions against Tehran if it did not respond positively to U.S. attempts to open negotiations on its nuclear program. Obama said earlier this week that Tehran had until the end of the year to show it wanted to engage with Washington.

But both U.S. government officials and independent American missile experts said Wednesday that the Iranian missile itself did not appear to be a new model.

Charles Vick, a senior technical analyst for GlobalSecurity.org, analyzed photos and videotape of the launch released by Iran.

“I’m not all that impressed,” Vick said. “It’s just another test that confirms they’ve got the system that was operational last summer.”

“Obviously, we’ve seen reports,” Gibbs said. “You all know the concerns that the president has about Iran’s missile-development programs .... and the strong belief that the pursuit of those programs does not strengthen the security of Iran but instead make them less safe.”

“Obviously, the president has been long concerned about it,” he said. Gibbs noted that Obama and visiting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had “both agreed on Monday that engaging the people and the leaders of the Islamic Republic of Iran, something that hasn’t been tried for the past many years, is something that makes sense.”