Iran has
tested anti-air and anti-ship missiles and unveiled a new drone, its powerful
Revolutionary Guards said on Monday, in a show of military readiness for a war
with Israel their chief says is inevitable.
Medium-range
surface-to-air missiles designed to knock attacking aircraft out of the sky at
a range of 50 kilometers (30 miles) were successfully fired on Monday, the
Guards said in a statement on their official Sepahnews website.
The new,
Taer-2 missiles were part of an anti-air defense system known as Ra'ad
(Thunder), the statement said.
The Fars
news agency called the domestically made missiles "more advanced"
than the Russian-made Buk family of missiles they were based on.
Rear
Admiral Ali Fadavi, the commander of the Guards' navy, also said that on Sunday
a naval drill was held in which four missiles hit a warship-sized target,
sinking it in 50 seconds, according to Fars.
"We
have missile systems that cover all the Persian Gulf coasts and the American
bases [in the region]," he was quoted as saying.
He added
that the Revolutionary Guards would in the next six months hold "big naval
maneuvers in the Strait of Hormuz," the strategic, narrow channel at the
Gulf's entrance through which a third of the world's seaborne traded oil
passes.
Brigadier
General Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the commander of the Guards' aerospace division
charged with missile defense, also announced a new drone, dubbed Shahed 129,
with a range of 2,000 kilometers (1,200 miles).
"It
is able to carry bombs and missiles... it has the ability to fly non-stop for
24 hours, it does surveillance," Fars quoted him as saying.
State
television showed images of the unmanned aircraft.
On
Saturday, the head of the Revolutionary Guards, General Mohammad Ali Jafari,
said war between Iran and Israel "will eventually happen, but it is not
certain where and when."
It was
the first time a senior Iranian official had acknowledged the probability of
war breaking out between the two arch-foes.
Israel
in recent weeks has ratcheted up its threats to possibly launch air strikes on
Iranian nuclear facilities, with or without help from its US ally.
Iran's
Revolutionary Guards commanders have said they would view any Israeli attack as
being carried out with US authorization, and warned they would hit US military
bases in Afghanistan, Qatar and Bahrain in retaliation.
Hajizadeh
told Iran's Al-Alam television network on Sunday that an Israel-Iran war would
be unpredictable - "and it will turn into World War III" as other
countries were sucked into it.
The
disconcertingly bellicose language from the Revolutionary Guards contrasted
with the stated position of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's government, which
has publicly dismissed Israel's threats as a bluff.
Ahmadinejad,
in New York for a UN General Assembly, reiterated that stance in interviews
with US media.
"While
the Iranian people are ready to defend ourselves, I don't believe the [Israeli]
threats are of fundamental importance," he told US media bosses in a
meeting on Monday.
Israel,
the Middle East's sole though undeclared nuclear weapons state, views Iran's
nuclear program as a threat to its existence and its prime minister, Benjamin
Netanyahu, has strongly intimated he could order strikes against Iranian
facilities.
Iran has
repeatedly denied Western suspicions it is seeking nuclear weapons capability,
insisting its atomic program is exclusively for peaceful, civilian uses.
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