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Besides simply boosting Iran's military muscle with more powerful missiles, the suspected BM-25s would give Iranian technicians a firsthand look at large missile designs and systems toward possibly developing long-range, or intercontinental ballistic missiles, with ranges of up to 3,400 miles (5,800 kilometers) and beyond. The State Department memo said Iran could view the BM-25 components as "building blocks" for long-range missile development. Paul Rogers, an expert in defense affairs at the University of Bradford in Britain, said Iran could be seeking to move from its main arsenal of liquid-fueled missiles
-- that would include the suspected BM-25s -- toward longer-range, solid-fueled rockets such as the current known top weapon, the Sajill-2. The main advantages of solid-fuel missiles are mobility and the ability to fire quickly, he said. They are also more accurate. Liquid fuel takes time to load and cannot remain in the missile indefinitely. Such missiles also need to be near a fuel depot and cannot easily be moved. "The issue here is whether they are trying to make the leap from liquid fuel to solid fuel," said Rogers. In February, Iran unveiled a light, two-stage booster rocket it claimed could carry a satellite weighing 220 pounds (100 kilograms) up to 310 miles (500 kilometers). It came a year after Iran claimed it launched a small satellite into orbit for 40 days
-- part of an ambitious space program that has worried Western powers because they fear the same technology could also deliver warheads. Meir Javedanfar, an Iranian-born political analyst now based in Israel, said the leaked memo on suspected North Korean missile sales could "strengthen the voice of those who want military action" against Iran. "They could say that with such cooperation, sanctions and diplomacy are not going to work," he said. Many other internal State Department exchanges among the WikiLeaks trove cite Gulf Arab allies and others expressing deep fears about Iran's nuclear ambitions and urging America to consider military strikes. In Tehran, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad dismissed the State Department documents as "without value" and claimed the leaks were an effort to sour relations between Iran and its neighbors.
[Associated
Press;
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