Iran says designs radar-evading military aircraft
By Fredrik Dahl
TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran has designed a radar-evading aircraft, the head of its air force said on Monday, the Islamic Republic's latest announcement of progress on military hardware amid persistent tension with the West over its nuclear plans.
Brigadier General Hassan Shahsafi was also quoted as saying the air force would later on Monday test an Iranian-made air-to-air heat-seeking missile with a range of 40 km, saying there were plans to extend it to 100 km.
Iran often says it has made advances in its arms but Western analysts say it is tough to assess the claims as few details are usually released. One analyst said the country's technology was still no match for U.S., European, Russian or Chinese designs.
Shahsafi told state radio that Iranian aerospace experts had designed the aircraft and military researchers were now seeking to make a small prototype.
"I think we will finish its research part by the end of the year and then we will get on with the production phase," he said, referring to the Iranian year that ends in March.
On the missile test, he said it "will seek and destroy a target fired by another plane," Fars News Agency reported.
Iran often stages war games or tests weapons to show its determination to counter any attack by the United States or Israel against sites they believe are to make nuclear arms.
Iran, the world's fourth-largest crude producer, says its uranium enrichment activities are aimed at making fuel for a network of planned electricity-generating nuclear power plants. Continued...
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