Updated With Video - Iran Makes First Move To “Weaponize Space” … Pentagon’s A Bit Concerned

Iran sends first home-built satellite into orbit
Iran said on Tuesday it has launched its first home-built satellite into orbit, raising fresh concerns among world powers already at odds with Tehran over its nuclear drive.
“Dear Iranians, your children have put the first indigenous satellite into orbit,” a jubilant President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on state television after a launch coinciding with the 30th anniversary of the Islamic revolution.
“With this launch the Islamic Republic of Iran has officially achieved a presence in space,” he said.
The Omid (Hope) satellite was sent into space on Monday evening carried by the home-built Safir-2 space rocket, local news agencies reported.
In the first foreign reaction, France expressed concern because the technology used was “very similar” to that employed in ballistic missiles.
“We can’t but link this to the very serious concerns about the development of military nuclear capacity,” foreign ministry spokesman Eric Chevallier said in Paris.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Robert Wood said the satellite programme could “possibly lead to the development of ballistic missiles.”
“That’s of great concern to us,” he said.
In London, British Foreign Office Minister Bill Rammell voiced “serious concerns” over the launch.
“This test underlines and illustrates our serious concerns about Iran’s intentions,” Rammell said in a statement issued by the Foreign Office, adding that Britain was still carrying out technical analyses.
The launch comes at at time when Iran is defiantly refusing UN Security Council demands to freeze sensitive nuclear work.
The West suspects Iran of secretly trying to build an atomic bomb and fears the technology used to launch a space rocket could be diverted into development of long-range ballistic missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads.
Iran vehemently denies the charges, saying its nuclear programme is for peaceful energy purposes and that it has the right to the technology already in the hands of many other nations including its archfoe the United States.
Ahmadinejad said the satellite carried a message of “peace and brotherhood” to the world and dismissed suggestions that Iran’s space programme had military goals.
“We have a divine view of technology unlike the dominating powers of the world who have Satanic views,” he said.
In Addis Ababa on the sidelines of an African Union summit, Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said the satellite would enable Tehran to receive “environmental data,” adding that “the technological capacity of Iran is meant to meet the needs of the country.”
Ahmadinejad has made scientific development one of the main themes of his presidency, asserting that Iran has reached a peak of progress despite international sanctions and no longer needs help from foreign states.
The state news agency IRNA said the satellite would take orbital measurements and would circle the Earth 15 times every 24 hours.
Iranian aerospace expert Asghar Ebrahimi said Omid has an elliptical orbit of minimum of 250 kilometres (156 miles) and maximum 400 kilometres.
The launch comes on the eve of a meeting in Germany on Wednesday of senior diplomats from six world powers who are are due to discuss the Iranian nuclear standoff, with Tehran still defying calls for a freeze on uranium enrichment.
New US President Barack Obama said last month shortly after taking office that he was willing to extend the hand of diplomacy to Iran, after 30 years of severed diplomatic relations.
Iran sent its first Safir rocket into space in August. It is about 22 metres (72 feet) long, with a diameter of 1.25 metres (a little over four feet) and weighs more than 26 tonnes .
Iran’s most powerful military missile, the Shahab-3, has a diameter of 1.30 metres and measures 17 metres in length. It has a range of 2,000 kilometres (1,250 miles) — putting archfoe Israel and US forces in the region within reach.
Last year Iran triggered concern in the West when it said it had sent a probe into space on the back of a rocket to prepare for a satellite launch, and announced the opening of its space station in a remote western desert.
Iran has pursued a space programme for several years, and in October 2005 a Russian-made Iranian satellite named Sina-1 was put into orbit by a Russian rocket.
Reza Taghipour, head of the Iranian space agency, said Iran would launch another satellite carrier by the end of the Iranian year on March 20, Fars said.
(AFP)
White House Spokesbot says:
The United States will use “all elements of our national power” to deal with Iran, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Tuesday after Tehran said it had launched a satellite into orbit.
(AFP)
FOX:
Pentagon: Iran’s Domestic Satellite Launch Is Grave Cause for Concern
Iran’s launch of its first satellite into space is a grave cause for concern, the Pentagon said Tuesday.
by Jennifer Griffin
Iran’s launch of its first satellite into space is a grave cause for concern to the U.S. as the Islamic Republic continues to work toward developing long-range missile capability, the Pentagon and White House said Tuesday.
Tuesday’s launch of its first domestically made satellite “does not convince us that Iran is acting responsibly to advance stability or security in the region,” said White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs.
Gibbs said any effort to develop missile delivery capability, continue an illicit nuclear program, threaten Israel and sponsor terror is an “acute concern to this administration.”
“It is certainly a reason for us to be concerned about Iran and its continued attempts to develop a ballistic missile program of increasingly long range,” Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell told reporters Tuesday.
“They (Iran) pose a real threat and it is a growing threat,” he said.
Iran sent its first domestically made satellite into orbit, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced Tuesday — claiming a significant step in an ambitious space program that has worried many international observers.
The satellite — called Omid or “Hope” in Farsi — was launched late Monday on the 30th anniversary of the 1979 Islamic revolution.
The launch came one day before Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met with foreign ministers to discuss Iran’s nuclear ambitions. She announced that senior U.S. diplomat William Burns will join officials from other major powers in Germany Wednesday to map out a strategy for thwarting Iran’s nuclear ambitions.
Clinton said Tuesday that the U.S. must adopt policies that show an openness to dialogue and diplomacy, but said it is imperative that Iran act similarly.
“We are reaching out a hand, but the fist has to unclench,” Clinton said at a news briefing with Britain’s Foreign Secretary David Miliband, repeating a line from Obama’s inauguration speech.
Miliband called the Obama administration’s willingness to talk to Iran a “new dimension” in international efforts to end Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.
“Anything which adds to the international tension should be of concern,” he said.
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier also expressed concern over the launch, saying that the reports — if confirmed — are an alarming development and an unsettling sign of Iran’s progress in transport technology.
“That’s why we must, with the new U.S. administration, intensify our efforts in the six-state group to dissuade Iran from the development of a militarily serviceable nuclear program,” Steinmeier said.
Earlier Tuesday, state Department spokesman Robert Wood also called the development notable and cause for “grave” concern.
“Developing a space launch vehicle that could be — could put a satellite into orbit could possibly lead to development of a ballistic missile system,” he said during a State Department briefing Tuesday.
“Unclench their fist”, eh???
The thing that has kept us safe the last 8 years is the unflinching ability to take to body, heart, mind, and soul the seriousness of this beast. (God bless George Bush and our military, upper and lower ranks)
Now the beast sees the gate has been opened …






It’s a good thing Obuma vowed to reduce spending on our national defense. Because it would be a real shame to offend his muslim brothers by impeding their efforts to kill us.
Fear not for Barack will talk to the Iranians. That should solve all of the problems.
When a Muslim says they have a divine view of he world….compared to the satanic views of everyone else, and they’re working on nuclear technology….it adds up to one thing…..a shit load of dirty laundry with suicidal tendencies holding the ability to destroy all life on the planet.
I was talking with my grandmother this morning and supposedly he’s already put spending cuts for the DOD in the economic stimulus package. For fuck’s sake we’re fighting a 2 front war here, and are about to move most of our forces from Iraq to Afghanistan. How the fuck are we going to win when Obama takes the money out of the fight. I’m sorry but we can’t win riding camels and throwing rocks. Typical liberal, he doesn’t care what war it is, if it’s America fighting we must loose. Afterall, the Death Cult is much better than us, America is evil.
Dont worry everyone, Hillary will make everything alright
with the likes of Obama bin Biden and Hillary at the helm, this ship is in trouble. Dumb and dumber
blind leading the blind
I guess they still have Iran registered as “troublesome”