Report: Russia Preparing to Give Iran Advanced Satellite System
Russia is set to deliver an advanced satellite system to Iran that will vastly improve its spying capabilities, according to a US media report.
Moscow is preparing to give Iran a
Kanopus-V satellite with a high-resolution camera, the Washington Post reported
Thursday.
It will allow the Islamic republic
to monitor facilities of its adversaries across the Middle East, the paper
said, citing current and former US and Middle Eastern officials.
The report comes just days before
Russian President Vladimir Putin meets his American counterpart Joe Biden for
June 16 talks in Switzerland on the US leader's first foreign tour, AFP
reported.
It could add to a long list of
grievances in Washington ahead of the talks, from election interference to
hacking operations linked to the Russian government.
The officials said the launch of
the satellite could happen within months, and is the result of multiple trips
to Russia by leaders of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards.
The satellite would be launched in
Russia and contain Russian-made hardware, according to details shared by the
officials.
While not of the capability of
American satellites, Iran could "task" the new satellite with spying
on specific locations.
There are fears that it would
share such imagery with its proxies in Yemen, Iraq and Lebanon, one official
said, among other concerns about Iran's ballistic missile and drone development.
Russian trainers have helped
ground crews who would operate the satellite from a new site near the northern
Iranian city of Karaj, The Post reported.
The deal could allow Tehran
greater monitoring of the Persian Gulf, Israeli bases and America's troop
presence in Iraq.
Details of the sale also come at a
delicate time when world powers are meeting to bring the US back to the Iran
nuclear deal and Tehran back into compliance with it.
The 2015 landmark accord has been
hanging by a thread since the US left it in 2018 and re-imposed sanctions,
leading to Tehran to step up its nuclear activities long curtailed by the deal.