by Times of Israel staff and AFP
Deal for S-300 batteries was blocked in 2007 amid strong opposition from US and Israel; system could hamper strike on nuclear facilities
President Vladimir Putin on
Monday lifted a ban on supplying Iran with sophisticated S-300 air
defense missile systems, the Kremlin said, after Tehran struck a deal
with the West over its nuclear program.
Israeli
officials responded with dismay to the report, saying the supply, if it
goes ahead, would change the balance of power in the region.
Israeli officials said supply of the system to
Iran could prevent any military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities,
Channel 2 news reported. The TV report also cited unnamed American
officials responding with concern to the news.
A decree signed by Putin removes a ban on “the
shipment from Russia to Iran” of the S-300 missiles, the Kremlin said
in a statement.
Russia signed a 2007 contract to sell Tehran
the S-300 system, but the weaponry was never delivered amid strong
objections by the United States and Israel.
Moscow blocked deliveries of the
surface-to-air missiles to Tehran in 2010 after the United Nations
slapped sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program barring hi-tech
weapons sales.
Iran then filed a $4 billion suit against Moscow at an arbitration court in Geneva.
The decision to lift the delivery freeze comes
after Tehran and international powers including Russia made a major
breakthrough this month by agreeing an outline deal aimed at curbing
Iran’s nuclear program.
The Lausanne framework marked a crucial
advance in a 12-year standoff between Iran and the West, which disputes
Tehran’s denial that it is seeking to build a nuclear bomb. However,
Israeli officials, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, have
strongly condemned the deal for placing inadequate limitations on Iran’s
ability to research and produce nuclear weapons.
Global powers must resolve a series of
difficult technical issues by a June 30 deadline for a final deal,
including the steps for lifting global sanctions imposed on Iran, and
lingering questions over the possible military dimensions of its nuclear
program.
Iran’s Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
who will have the final say on any deal, has plunged the accord into
doubt suggesting that “nothing is binding” while President Hassan
Rouhani demanded that sanctions be immediately lifted when any deal is
signed.
Global powers Britain, China, France, Germany,
Russia and the United States have said sanctions will only be gradually
eased and want a mechanism to ensure they can be swiftly reimposed if
Iran breaks its word.
Despite the dispute over the S-300 missiles,
Moscow and Iran have remained on good terms, with Russia agreeing to
build new nuclear reactors for Tehran and both sides supporting
President Bashar al-Assad in Syria.
The S-300, developed by the Soviet Union in
1979, is a series of Russian long-range surface-to-air missile systems
produced by NPO Almaz. The S-300 system was constructed for the Soviet
Air Defense Forces in order to defend against aircraft and cruise
missiles. Subsequent variations on the model were developed to intercept
ballistic missiles.
Times of Israel staff and AFP
Source: http://www.timesofisrael.com/israel-alarmed-at-news-russia-to-supply-iran-advanced-air-defense-system/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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