Iran to maintain missile tests, denies violation

Iran to maintain missile tests, denies violation
Iran to maintain missile tests, denies violation

The Daily Star

 

Iran said Sunday it would continue missile tests to build up its defenses and denied this was in breach of U.N. resolutions, following U.S. allegations that Tehran had tested a new missile capable of carrying multiple warheads.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo over the weekend condemned what he called Iran’s testing of a medium-range ballistic missile in violation of the 2015 international agreement on the Iranian nuclear program, from which Washington has withdrawn.

“Missile tests … are carried out for defense and the country’s deterrence, and we will continue this,” Brig. Gen. Abolfazl Shekarchi, spokesman for Iran’s armed forces, was quoted as saying by the semiofficial Tasnim news agency.

“We will continue to both develop and test missiles. This is outside the framework of [nuclear] negotiations and part of our national security, for which we will not ask any country’s permission,” Shekarchi said. He did not confirm or deny Iran had tested a new missile.

Earlier, U.S. national security adviser John Bolton tweeted: “Iran just test-fired a … ballistic missile capable of reaching Israel and Europe. This provocative behavior cannot be tolerated.”

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qasemi also said Iranian missiles were purely defensive and added, “There is no Security Council resolution prohibiting [a] missile program and missile tests by Iran.”

Separately, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif accused the United States of arming militant groups that fight against the Tehran-backed Syrian government and the Iran-aligned Houthi movement in Yemen. “US [is] proliferating advanced weapons to extremists incl Al Qaeda & ISIS [Daesh],” Zarif said on Twitter, referring to a British newspaper report that said many arms supplied by Britain and the United States had ended up in the hands of militias fighting in the Yemen war.British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said on Twitter that he was deeply concerned by “Iran’s test-firing of a medium range ballistic missile. Provocative, threatening and inconsistent with UNSCR 2231.”

“Our support for [the Iran nuclear accord] in no way lessens our concern at Iran’s destabilizing missile program and determination that it should cease,” Hunt added.

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