Iran needs ‘no permission’ to develop missile program: Zarif. (IranFrontpage).
Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif says the Islamic
Republic will continue to develop its missile program and that Tehran
needs “no permission” to enhance the country’s defense capabilities.
“We have announced that we
will not ask permission from anyone to [strengthen] our defense and
missile capability,” Zarif said in an interview with Iranian Students’
News Agency, ISNA, on Sunday.
The top Iranian diplomat went on to say
that the country’s missile program does not breach the July nuclear
agreement struck between Tehran and six world powers and that the deal
does not ban Iran from boosting its defense capabilities.
Zarif said that Iran’s missile program will continue apace and will be provided with all necessary materials and equipment.
He further dismissed as “unacceptable”
claims by US officials that the Islamic Republic’s missile tests are in
breach of the UN Security Council Resolution 2231, saying none of the
Iranian missiles have been designed to carry “nuclear warheads.”
On October 11, Iran’s Islamic Revolution
Guards Corps (IRGC) successfully test-fired its first guided ballistic
missile dubbed Emad. Washington slammed the test, claiming the
projectile is capable of carrying a nuclear warhead.
In January, the US Treasury Department
said in a statement that it had imposed new sanctions on several
individuals and firms over Iran’s ballistic missile program, claiming
that the program “poses a significant threat to regional and global
security.”
The statement said five Iranian citizens
and a network of companies based in the United Arab Emirates and China
were added to a US blacklist.
Iranian officials say
none of the country’s missiles, including ballistic ones, have been
“designed to carry nuclear warheads,” and thus their production and test
are not in contravention of Resolution 2231.
The Islamic Republic has
repeatedly said that its defense doctrine is based on deterrence and
Iran’s military power poses no threat to other countries.
Touching upon Iran’s relations with the United States, Zarif told ISNA that the US should abandon its “mentality of sanctions.”
“We are still waiting to see whether the US is serious in its commitments” concerning the lifting of sanctions, he noted.
Zarif further criticized
Washington’s “wrong” policies in the Middle East region. “US policies
even harm their own interests in the region since they have caused
unrest and created Daesh [terrorist group],” he noted.
Zarif said that Iranian
officials have reached no agreement with US officials on regional
issues, saying Tehran would take a decision on extending talks with the
US should Americans “correct their policies.”
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