Iran tests medium-range ballistic missile

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Saturday said Iran
tested a medium-range ballistic missile, violating a United Nations resolution.
The launch itself, however, did not appear to
determine any capabilities that the US was not aware of, and it did not pose a
direct threat, according to a defense official directly familiar with the
initial data from the launch.
The launch also doesn't constitute a violation of
the UN measure, according to the language of the resolution.
The official tells CNN they are continuing to assess
the intelligence.
The missile, according to a statement from Pompeo,
has the capability of carrying multiple warheads and "has a range that
allows it to strike parts of Europe and anywhere in the Middle East."
"This test violates UN Security Council
resolution 2231 that bans Iran from undertaking 'any activity related to
ballistic missiles designed to be capable of delivering nuclear weapons,
including launches using such ballistic missile technology ...'" Pompeo
said in the statement.
The UN body adopted the resolution, which endorsed
the implementation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, also known as the
Iran nuclear deal, in 2015. It does not, in fact, ban Iran from undertaking any
activity related to ballistic missiles, a point of criticism for opponents of
the deal.
Instead, it says "Iran is called upon not to
undertake any activity related to ballistic missiles," language that does
not forbid Tehran from testing or make it a violation if it does so.
A spokesperson for Iran's Foreign Ministry, Bahram
Qassemi, rejected Pompeo's claim that the missile test contravenes the UN
Security Council resolution, saying "the country's missile program is just
for defense," according to a statement on the ministry's website on
Sunday.
"No UN Security Council resolution has banned
Iran's missile program or missile tests," Qassemi said.
Addressing Pompeo, Qassemi said in the statement,
"The interesting and of course farcical point here is that you are
referring to a resolution that you have not only violated by unilaterally and
illegally withdrawing from the JCPOA, but also you urge others to breach it,
and even threaten to punish or slap sanctions on them if they implement the
agreement."
The Iran nuclear deal, although highly
controversial, was considered one of the Obama administration's major legacies.
The agreement has the backing of most major US allies, apart from Israel,
though many in Israel's defense establishment supported it.
President Donald Trump, who had been highly critical
of the agreement, announced in May that the United States would be pulling out
of the deal.
Last month, the United States reinstated all the
previous penalties that had been lifted as part of the agreement.
US Strategic Command tracked the Iranian missile
test using a satellite network that traces ballistic missile launches, a senior
administration official told CNN.
"As we have been warning for some time, Iran's
missile testing and missile proliferation is growing," Pompeo said in the
statement. "We are accumulating risk of escalation in the region if we
fail to restore deterrence. We condemn these activities, and call upon Iran to
cease immediately all activities related to ballistic missiles designed to be
capable of delivering nuclear weapons."
Defense Secretary James Mattis echoed Pompeo's
statement.
Mattis said "the threat from Iran is
multifaceted," adding that "right now the strategic level of threat
from Iran is less worldwide than Korea's, but it is certainly significant
regionally and it could grow beyond that if it's not dealt with."