Friday, August 5, 2022

Russia's Assistance To Iran For Satellite Launch And Technology Highly Significant - The March To Ezekiel 38-39 Continues

How significant is the latest Russia-Iran satellite launch? - analysis




For the second time in three months, Russia is making noise about its assistance to Iran in the satellite technology sphere.

Any such cooperation and progress greatly concerns Israel and the US because aspects of satellite technology can be dual-use applied to nuclear weapons delivery as well as possibly greatly enhancing the Islamic Republic’s intelligence collection capabilities.


How much of a game changer is the latest news?

On Wednesday, Russia announced that it will launch an Iranian satellite into space next week.


Moscow’s Roscosmos agency developed the Khayyam remote-sensing satellite which will provide "accurate spatial data" to Iran to improve agricultural productivity, monitoring of water resources, management of natural disasters and monitoring of mines, according to Iranian media.


However, wrapped up with agricultural and water, reports also indicated that the satellites would help monitor Iran’s borders and other unspecified uses. This is the part that will cause anxiety in Jerusalem and Washington.

Will Russian assistance to Tehran make it harder to infiltrate Iran’s borders – which might be necessary to carry out crucial operations to hold off its nuclear weapons program, as well as its efforts to carry out terror operations against Israel, the US and moderate Sunni states?

And will Russian help lead to a jump forward in the Islamic Republic’s independent satellite launch capabilities – which will transfer to stronger capabilities for delivering future potential nuclear weapons?


In mid-June, The Washington Post reported that Russia was preparing to provide Iran with an advanced satellite that would enable it to track potential military targets across the Middle East, sending shudders through much of the region.


According to the report, Moscow would launch and then deliver control to Iran of a Kanopus-V satellite equipped with a high-resolution camera within months.

Anonymous Israeli officials told KAN that they were concerned by the report, while US officials in public did little to dispel the mystery surrounding the issue. In addition, officials were worried that Tehran might acquire photos and pass them on to proxies like Hezbollah and Hamas to increase the accuracy and effectiveness of their destructive power.


At the time, Russian President Vladimir Putin strongly denied the report, calling it “garbage,” which does distinguish it from the current developments that Moscow is proudly trumpeting.  


The mid-June report had said that the new satellite would allow "continuous monitoring of facilities ranging from Persian Gulf oil refineries and Israeli military bases to Iraqi barracks that house US troops," citing three unnamed sources - a current and a former US official and a senior Middle Eastern government official briefed on the sale.


Though the Kanopus-V is marketed for civilian use, seemingly similar to the announcement of next week’s satellite launch, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps officials have reportedly made several trips to Russia since 2018 to help negotiate the agreement.


Further, the report said that Russian experts traveled to Iran this spring to train crews who would operate the satellite from a newly built facility near Karaj, west of Tehran.



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