Iran Launches Satellite Rocket

Iran Tests Satellite Rocket Launcher


TEHRAN (FNA)- Iran launched a domestically-built rocket as a test for sending the Islamic republic's first homemade research satellite into orbit by March next year.

The rocket blasted off from a launch pad in desert terrain in the northern Semnan province.

"We need to have an active and influential presence in space," President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in a televised ceremony ahead of the launch.

The satellite, called Omid (Hope), would be launched in the next Iranian year, which ends in March 2009.

In November Iran announced that it had built a new missile with a range of 2,000km, a step analysts at the time said could add more power to Iran's conventional arsenal.

Western capitals allege that Iran is seeking to master technology so it can build nuclear warheads, but Iran insists its plans are peaceful.

The US is at loggerheads with Iran over Tehran's independent and home-grown nuclear technology. Washington has laid much pressure on Iran to make it give up the most sensitive and advanced part of the technology, which is uranium enrichment, a process used for producing nuclear fuel for power plants.

Washington's push for additional UN penalties contradicted a recent report by 16 US intelligence bodies that endorsed the civilian nature of Iran's programs. Following the US National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) and a similar report by the IAEA head in November which praised Iran's truthfulness about key aspects of its past nuclear activities, Russia and China increased resistance to any further punitive measures by the Security Council.

Tehran says it never worked on atomic weapons and wants to enrich uranium merely for civilian purposes, including generation of electricity, a claim substantiated by the NIE and IAEA reports.

Iran has insisted it would continue enriching uranium because it needed to provide fuel to a 300-megawatt light-water reactor it was building in the southwestern town of Darkhovin.

Iran has also pledged to clear up all remaining questions over the program by late February.

Not only many Iranian officials, including President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, but also many other world nations have called the UN Security Council pressure unjustified, especially in the wake of recent IAEA reports saying Iran had increased cooperation with the agency.

US President George W. Bush, who finished a tour of the Middle East earlier this month has called on his Arab allies to unite against Iran.

But hosting officials of the regional nations dismissed Bush's allegations, describing Tehran as a good friend of their countries.

Bush's attempt to rally international pressure against Iran has lost steam due to the IAEA and US intelligence reports.

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what does FNA stand for?

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"Money" has no value - people do.

qrswave | Mon, 2008-02-04 20:26

Here's the link to the above story
http://www.farsnews.com/English/newstext.php?nn=8611150539

Knut: What has your comment to do with the story of Iranian Rocket launch???

awakenedgoyim | Mon, 2008-02-04 20:55

The jewish publisher of ArmsControlWonk is reporting that the Iranians may be having some technical problems with their rocket/missile program that have not been made public. Most of the contributors to the ArmsControlWonk website seem to be nuclear and rocketry engineers and technicians and a lot of what they have to say is far beyond my expertise, but for what it's worth:

Iran's February 4th launch of a Shahab-3 just keeps on getting more and more interesting; that is if you are interested in just how good of a missile the Shahab/No'dong is. Video from Iran's television show that there is a failure of the missile's thrust vector control system nineteen seconds into its powered flight. At that point, there is a brief flaring at the very end of the missile and an object is seen flying off for several seconds, until it leaves the video's frame as the camera continues to follow the missile. Tellingly, it doesn't just drop off the missile but is given quite a transverse boost.

What is happening? The most likely explanation is that a part of one of the graphite jet vanes, little fins that are stuck into the exhaust just outside the nozzle and are used to steer the missile both in its pitch program and to correct for unwanted deviations in its trajectory. Jet vanes must be manufactured from very hard and pure graphite otherwise it is subject to being "eaten" away by the corrosive effects of the exhaust.

Continued Here

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Jeder war ein großer Krieger
Hielten sich für Captain Kirk

I was glad to come
I'll be sad to go
So while I'm here
I'll have me real good time

Jonny Verdorben | Thu, 2008-02-14 07:40

just wanted to know the news source.

I guess it's Farsi News Association or something like that.

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"Money" has no value - people do.

qrswave | Thu, 2008-02-14 16:16

unclesam wakeup

Go, Rep. Kaptur!

Tell Wall Street to Go To Hell!!!

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