Iran says missile work will not stop: State TV

Iran says missile work will not stop: State TV

ANKARA – Reuters
Iran says missile work will not stop: State TV

REUTERS Photo

A senior Revolutionary Guards commander has said that Iran’s ballistic missile program will not stop under any circumstances and that Tehran has missiles ready to be fired, according to Iranian state television. 

Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh made his comments after a series of ballistic missile tests conducted by guard units that drew international concern, including a call by U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton for new sanctions against Iran. 

The tests, which state television said ended on the night of March 9, were seen as a challenge to a United Nations resolution and last year’s nuclear accord with world powers under which Tehran agreed to curb its atomic program in exchange for relief from economic sanctions. 

“Iran’s missile program will not stop under any circumstances,” Hajizadeh said. “The IRGC has never accepted the U.N. Security Council resolutions on Iran’s missile work. 

“We are always ready to defend the country against any aggressor. Iran will not turn into Yemen, Iraq or Syria,” he was quoted as saying by state television. 

The Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) maintains an arsenal of dozens of short and medium-range ballistic missiles - the largest in the Middle East, according to the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies. 

Tehran says its missile program is solely for defensive use with conventional, non-nuclear warheads. 

Iran’s Foreign Ministry said on March 9 that the tests were not in violation of the nuclear agreement, which led to lifting of sanctions in January. 

The United States said on March 9 it was aware of and reviewing reports of an additional Iranian ballistic missile test and that the administration would determine an appropriate response. 

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry spoke with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif about the missile tests, a U.S. State Department spokesman said. 

But Iran’s Students News Agency ISNA said on March 10 that Zarif and Kerry had not discussed the issue. “John Kerry has sent emails to Zarif asking for a telephone call to discuss issues, including Iran’s missile tests, but it did not happen because Zarif is on an official visit,” ISNA quoted a source as saying.