According to pictures published by ISNA news agency, S-300 missile tubes, radar equipment are shown during military parade held in Tehran. | |||||
TEHRAN
- Iran used its annual Army Day parade Sunday to showcase parts of a
long-awaited air defence system ordered from Russia, a move likely to
irk critics of the arms deal.
The S-300 system has been
on order since 2007 but Russia postponed the sale three years later
after the UN Security Council passed a resolution relating to Iran's
nuclear programme.
A deal between Iran and six world
powers over its nuclear activities which lifted sanctions in January
removed the barriers to delivery but the fully operational system is
still awaited.
According to pictures published by the
semi-official ISNA news agency, S-300 missile tubes and the radar
equipment were shown during the military parade held in southern Tehran.
Iran
insists the system is necessary to defend itself from threats of
attack, including possible bombing of its nuclear facilities, and the
S-300 would allow early detection of approaching aircraft.
Israel
and the United States have hit out at the sale, which is seen as a
means for Russia to maintain influence in the Middle East.
Iran
and Russia are also in talks on a sale of the Sukhoi SU-30 fighter,
another proposal criticised by the US. Iran's current air force fleet
dates from the pre-revolutionary era of the Shah.
Speaking
at Sunday's parade, President Hassan Rouhani insisted Iran's plans to
upgrade its military capabilities were defensive in nature, referring to
the worst conflicts in the Middle East.
"Our military,
political and economic power is not directed against neighbouring
countries and the countries of the Islamic world.
"When
Baghdad was threatened by terrorists, the Islamic Republic of Iran
responded to the call of the people, the army and the Iraqi government
to defend Baghdad and the holy places," he said, referring to the surge
of the jihadist Islamic State group in June 2014.
The
same action was taken in Syria, where Iran has supported President
Bashar al-Assad's regime with military and financial aid, he added.
The upgrading of Iran's military following the nuclear deal has also alarmed Saudi Arabia, Tehran's regional rival.
Riyadh routinely accuses Iran of interfering in Arab countries.
Saudi
Arabia cut diplomatic ties with Iran in January after a row broke out
over the execution of Shiite cleric and activist Nimr al-Nimr by the
Sunni kingdom.
Angry Iranian mobs stormed and set fire to Saudi Arabia's embassy in Tehran and its mission in Mashhad, Iran's second city.
The
attacks were immediately condemned by Rouhani and, a few weeks later,
by the Islamic republic's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
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Monday 18 April 2016
Iran shows off parts of S-300 missile system at army parade
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