TEHRAN – Iran plans to launch several home-built satellites by March 2012, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Monday after the unveiling of four new prototypes.
“I think from the end of this (Iranian) year (to March 20) and through the next year, we will see many launches” of domestically-built satellites, Ahmadinejad said at a ceremony in Tehran. The president’s remarks coincide with celebrations of the 32nd anniversary of Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution that falls on Feb 11.
Every year Iran uses the run-up to the anniversary to trumpet its scientific, technological and military achievements. Iran unveiled on Monday what it said were prototypes of four new home-built satellites — Rasad (Observation), Fajr (Dawn), Zafar (Victory) and Amir Kabir-1 and also engines of a Safir-B1 (Ambassador-B1) rocket, reports said.
The country does not have an operational satellite of its own but Defence Minister Ahmad Vahidi announced in December that two satellites, Fajr and Rasad-1, would be launched by the end of the current Iranian year to March 20. But on Sunday, Vahidi said a launch date for Fajr and Rasad-1 was “not fixed” yet, indicating their launch would likely be delayed.
Iran in February 2009 sent into space its first home-built test satellite Omid (Hope) carried by a Safir-2 rocket. Twelve months later, it launched a capsule carrying live turtles, rats and worms aboard a Kavoshgar-3 (Explorer-3) rocket in what was Iran’s first experiment to send living creatures into space.
Fajr, which was unveiled Monday, is a reconnaissance satellite constructed by the defence ministry, while Amir Kabir-1, the details of which were unavailable, is built by Tehran’s Amir Kabir university.