in

Iran Warns Its Air Defences Keeping ‘Watchful Eye’ Over Sensitive Airspace Amid Raging Gulf Tensions

Source: Sputnik News

Iran’s air defence troops are keeping “a watchful eye” over the country’s airspace and won’t allow any enemy aerial aggression to take place, Air Defence Force Commander Brig. Gen. Alireza Sabahifard has announced.

“With intelligence, vigilance and a watchful eye, the air defence units in the southeastern-most part of the country will not allow for any aggression by outsiders,” Sabahifard said, speaking at an air defence centre in the strategic southeastern Iranian port city of Chabahar on Wednesday.

The commander emphasised that the northern Indian Ocean and strategic areas of southeastern Iran were “completely covered” by his command’s air defence umbrella and enjoyed complete security.

Sabahifard pointed to the special importance of the Chabahar air defence group, whose mission includes monitoring and protecting the skies of an area over the Strait of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf to the west and the Indian Ocean and East Asia to the east.

“All manner of completely indigenous electronic interception, radar and missile systems…are stationed in this area and enemies know that we are very close to them in the region and even monitor as they breath,” the commander boasted.

Sabahifard stressed that Iran has means to detect, observe, and monitor any flying object of any radar cross section, as well as “powerful systems and weapons” to use against them in the event of enemy aggression.

“For the sake of our authority and dignity, we will not allow any mistake by enemies,” he stressed, adding that the use of fully indigenously-developed air defence systems and trained personnel at all levels serves to build confidence in Iran’s integrated air defence network.

Iran has pumped substantial resources into the creation of a multilayered air defence network, which is designed to defend against some of the best-armed and equipped potential adversaries in the world, including the United States, its regional proxies in the Gulf, and Israel.

These defences include several different kinds of domestically-developed stationary and mobile short-, medium-, and long-range radar, among them vehicle-mountable 3D phased-array systems capable of detecting small aircraft, drones, and micro-air vehicles (MAVs). The country also possesses long-range systems which it claims can “see into” US military bases near Iran’s borders at distances of up to 800 km.

Iran Army 800 km Range radar system dubbed Moraqeb & Persian Gulf
Iran Army 800 km Range radar system dubbed Moraqeb & Persian Gulf

They also include a large number of air defence artillery and man-portable systems for short-range defence, plus nearly two dozen missile-based air defence systems. These include legacy Western systems such as the MIM-23 Hawk and the Rapier, largely delivered to the country before the Islamic Revolution of 1979, plus Soviet and Russian systems including the SA-8, Tor, and the S-300 missile system.

In the past decade, Iran has made major strides in the creation of advanced indigenous missile defence systems, including the Bavar-373, the Ya Zahra, the Talaash, the Khoradad 3, and the Khordad 15.

An Iranian military truck carries a Bavar-373 air defence missile system during the Army Day parade in Tehran on April 18, 2015

©
AFP 2021 / BEHROUZ MEHRI
An Iranian military truck carries a Bavar-373 air defence missile system during the Army Day parade in Tehran on April 18, 2015

Combined, these systems have allowed Iran to create a significant multi-layered air defence network covering large swathes of the country, including all of its strategic cities and major population centres.

In June of 2019, amid raging tensions in the Persian Gulf region, Iran demonstrated the capabilities of its air defences when a Khordad 3 shot down a stealthy $220 million US reconnaissance drone which flew into the country’s airspace over the Strait of Hormuz. The drone’s destruction reportedly led Washington to consider airstrikes across the country, but the US backed down after then-President Donald Trump concluded that any retaliation would “not be proportionate.” Iran collected the drone’s remains, put it back together, and put it on display at Tehran’s National Aerospace Park in 2020.

Painstakingly reconstructed remnants of US drone shot down over Iran by a domestically-made air defence system in June 2019 on display at Tehran's National Aerospace Park.

©
Photo : YouTube / Ipna News
Painstakingly reconstructed remnants of US drone shot down over Iran by a domestically-made air defence system in June 2019 on display at Tehran’s National Aerospace Park.

Sabahifard’s comments on the state of Iran’s air defences comes amid renewed tensions in the Persian Gulf region, this time over a fatal attack on an Israeli-managed oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman in late July which killed the ship’s Romanian captain and a British bodyguard. Israel and it Western allies almost immediately blamed Iran for the attack, claiming it was carried out by Iranian suicide drones. Tehran vocally dismissed the allegations and urged the international community to be wary of Israeli “false flag operations.”

Leave a Reply

“It Was F***ing Crazy Sh**”: Videotape Shows Hunter Biden Purportedly Admitting Russians Have Blackmail Material on Him

“Defund The Police” Is A Problem; Not Prosecuting Criminals Is Worse…