[FPSPACE] Iran launches first satellite
Charles Vick
cpvick at globalsecurity.org
Tue Feb 3 10:12:24 EST 2009
I agree with you jim that is correct. The second launch site is built and on
Google Earth 2003/4 images looked like the Taep'o-dong-2C/3 launch site
foundation and the last year launch attempts showed in the valley over the
hill the gantry umbilical tower is now built. This is in anticipation of
flight test late this year or in 2010 as the Iranian State scheduled
planning requires with North Korea expected to do an ICBM test flight and a
space launches between April and August 2009 out of its two launch sites
being finalized and updated. The Iranian satellite was indeed accomplished
within the present three year plan of the State.
cpvick
-----Original Message-----
From: fpspace-bounces at friends-partners.org
[mailto:fpspace-bounces at friends-partners.org] On Behalf Of James Oberg
Sent: Tuesday, February 03, 2009 9:53 AM
To: Mark Wade; fpspace at friends-partners.org
Subject: Re: [FPSPACE] Iran launches first satellite
> Duncan Lennox, editor of Jane's Strategic Weapons Systems, said: "Iran
> is just following what the United States, Russia and China did in the
> early stages of their missile programmes, transferring the technology
> from satellite launches to ballistic missiles."
Nonsense, he's got it precisely backwards.
The Safir-2 looks like an equivalent to a Jupiter-C... on the path
to serious long-range missiles, but not far along it.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mark Wade" <astronautix at gmail.com>
To: <fpspace at friends-partners.org>
Sent: Tuesday, February 03, 2009 8:15 AM
Subject: [FPSPACE] Iran launches first satellite
> Iran launches first satellite
>
> Film:
>
> http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article5649206.ece
>
>>From Times Online
> February 3, 2009
>
> Iran launches own space satellite to mark 30 years since
> revolutionMichael Evans, Defence Editor
> Iran has claimed success in launching its first home-built satellite
> into orbit, using a rocket which the West believes is part of its
> long-term ballistic missile programme.
>
> Until official satellite spotters confirm Tehran's claim, made by
> President Ahmadinejad, the Iranian leader, on state television, the
> announcement will be treated with a degree of scepticism. The first
> two attempts at launching an Iranian-built satellite, in February and
> August last year, failed.
>
> If the Iranian President's claim turns out to be true, however, it
> will provide further proof of Tehran's growing ability to master the
> technology for developing a long-range ballistic missile.
>
> Despite Mr Ahmadinejad's insistence that the satellite mission was
> purely for peaceful purposes, experts said there was an undeniable
> link between the rocket launch and Iran's military programme.
>
> Duncan Lennox, editor of Jane's Strategic Weapons Systems, said: "Iran
> is just following what the United States, Russia and China did in the
> early stages of their missile programmes, transferring the technology
> from satellite launches to ballistic missiles."
>
> Iranian news agencies reported that a Safir 2 space rocket launched
> the Omid (Hope) satellite into orbit, coinciding with the 30th
> anniversary of the Islamic revolution. "With this launch, the Islamic
> Republic of Iran has officially achieved a presence in space,"
> President Ahmadinejad claimed on state television.
>
> He dismissed as "old talk" the accusation by the West that Iran's
> space programme had military goals. The satellite, he said, carried a
> message of "peace and brotherhood" to the world.
>
> Manouchehr Mottaki, the Iranian Foreign Minister, speaking in Addis
> Ababa, said the satellite would enable Tehran to receive environmental
> data. The state news agency, IRNA, said the satellite would take
> orbital measurements and would circle the Earth 15 times every day.
>
> The announcement comes just a day before senior diplomats from the
> United Nations Permanent Security Council - Britain, the US, Russia,
> China and France - as well as Germany, are due to meet near Frankfurt
> to review Iran's continuing uranium-enrichment programme.
>
> The timing of the satellite launch will not be lost on the diplomats
> of the six countries who have to decide what extra measures might be
> necessary to try and persuade Iran to stop enriching uranium which the
> West, and Israel, believes is part of a clandestine ambition to build
> a nuclear weapon. The ballistic missile programme is seen as being
> inextricably linked to Tehran's nuclear goal.
>
> The Safir 2 appears to be a version of Iran's Shahab 3 ballistic
> missile which forms the basis of the weapons programme, although
> Tehran uses a number of different names for its missiles, including
> Ghadr 1, Ashoura and Sejjil.
>
> The Iranians say they have developed a ballistic missile with a range
> of 2,000-kilometres, but Mr Lennox said there was no evidence to back
> this claim. Russia has said that Iran has built a missile with a range
> of 1,500 kilometres, capable of reaching Israel.
>
> The Safir 2 is a two-stage, possibly three-stage, rocket which uses
> liquid propulsion. It's 72ft long and weighs more than 26 tonnes. The
> Shahab 3 is a one-stage liquid-propulsion missile.
>
> Last year, Iran caused concern in the West when it sent a probe called
> Kavoshgar (Explorer) into space on the back of a rocket which Tehran
> said was in preparation for a satellite launch. In October 2005, a
> Russian-made Iranian satellite named Sina 1 was put into orbit by a
> Russian rocket.
>
> Reza Taghipour, head of the Iranian space agency, said Iran would
> launch another satellite rocket on March 20.
>
>
>
> --
> Mark Wade
> Encyclopedia Astronautica
> http://www.astronautix.com/
> astronautix at gmail.com
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