Defense Minister Says It's 'Normal' for Iran to Test Missiles
Iran’s defense minister said on Wednesday it was
“normal” for the country to test missiles as part of its defense research,
Iranian media reported, after Washington said Tehran had test-fired a
medium-range missile last week.
Brigadier General Amir Hatami stopped short of
explicitly confirming the test. A US defense official said last week Iran had
launched what appeared to be a medium-range ballistic missile that traveled
some 1,000 km (620 miles), and added that the test by Washington’s arch-foe in
the Middle East posed no threat to shipping or US personnel in the region.
“Such things are normal across the world,” Hatami
was quoted by the semi-official news agency ISNA as saying, after being asked
about the reported missile test.
“The research programs of the armed forces are drawn
up and carried out every year...including missile tests.”
US President Donald Trump left world powers’ 2015
nuclear deal with Iran last year, arguing that he wanted a wider accord that
not only limited Iran’s nuclear activity but also curbed its ballistic missile
program and reined in its support for proxies in Syria, Iraq, Yemen, and
Lebanon. Trump tightened sanctions on Iran in May to try to scuttle its oil
exports.
Iran has ruled out talks with Washington over its
military capabilities, particularly the missile program that it says has only
defense and deterrent purposes. The Islamic Republic denied that its missiles
are capable of being tipped with nuclear warheads and says its nuclear program
is peaceful.
The Trump administration has said its policies are
aimed at changing Iran's behavior in the region, not its government.
In a related development, Iran dismissed Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo's offer to visit and address the Iranian people as a
"hypocritical gesture."
"You don't need to come to Iran," Foreign
Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on the sidelines of a Cabinet meeting
Wednesday, in remarks directed at Pompeo. He suggested Pompeo instead grant
visas for Iranian reporters to travel to the US and interview him, accusing him
of having rejected their requests.
On Monday, Pompeo tweeted: "We aren't afraid of
(Zarif) coming to America where he enjoys the right to speak freely."
"Are the facts of the (Khamenei) regime so bad
he cannot let me do the same thing in Tehran?" he said, referring to
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. "What if his people heard the
truth, unfiltered, unabridged?"
Zarif, a relative moderate within Iran's
clerically-overseen political system, was an architect of the nuclear
agreement. The US and Iran cut off all diplomatic relations after the 1979
Islamic Revolution, but the US allows Iranian officials to visit the United
Nations headquarters in New York.