The secret site where Iran is suspected of developing long-range ballistic missiles capable of reaching targets in Europe has been uncovered by new satellite photographs.
Iran's announcement that it launched a research rocket has called new attention to a space program that Tehran says is peaceful but which some fear aims to produce long-range ballistic missiles that could reach Europe or the United States. Exactly what Iran launched, or even what it aimed to do, remains the subject of debate, speculation and possible misinterpretation.
The Bush administration for the first time says it has intelligence proving detailed and ongoing collaboration between Iran and North Korea in the development of new ballistic missiles. The Pentagon has also just released previously secret intelligence data on new Iranian and North Korean ballistic missiles under development.
U.S. Navy Adm. William J. Fallon, the admiral in charge of American forces in Asia, said that he believes North Korea has no missile capable of reaching long distances and is unlikely to have one "for a while."
The major fallout from North Korea's series of missile launches and the malfunction of its long-range rocket is that its missile program now looks somewhat inept, weapons experts said yesterday.
South Korean intelligence officials have stated that while North Korea may have developed nuclear weapons, they lack the technology to deliver them by missile (even the short-range missiles that could threaten South Korea). They could, however, deliver the bombs by aircraft like the U.S. did during World War II.
The Russian newspaper "Kommersant" reports that Russia has agreed to launch Iran's two spy satellites later this year. Iran was intending to launch these spy satellites with their own technology but Russia convinced Iran that the launch could incite a U.S. military response.
North Korea could flight test at any time a ballistic missile potentially capable of reaching parts of the United States with a nuclear-weapon-sized payload, according to the State Department's top arms control official.
Iran has increased the range of its missiles to 1,250 miles putting parts of Europe within reach for the first time.
Low-cost technology, terrorism and increasing anti-American sentiment around the globe will lead to more capable ballistic missiles - a threat to U.S. troops and other nations according to defense experts at the Sixth Annual Space and Missile Defense Conference.