Russia could deliver S-300 missile systems to Tehran this year, says Iran

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A senior Iranian official said on Tuesday that Russia could deliver sophisticated missile systems to Tehran this year after Moscow lifted a ban on supplying the weapons.

“I think that they will be delivered this year,” Ali Shamkhani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, was quoted as saying by Russian news agencies ahead of a meeting in Moscow.

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday removed a freeze on delivering sophisticated S-300 air defence missile systems to Iran after Tehran struck a landmark framework deal with the West over its nuclear programme.

While Iran welcomed the development, it sparked strong condemnation from Israel and triggered concern in Washington.

The secretary of Moscow’s national security council, Nikolai Patrushev, on Tuesday said that it would likely take Russia’s arms manufacturer “a minimum of half-a-year” to ready the missiles for delivery, Russia’s Interfax news agency reported.

The decision to unblock deliveries comes before any sanctions have been lifted from Iran, with difficult technical talks potentially resuming next week following the April 2 deal with six world powers aimed at curbing Tehran’s nuclear drive.

Moscow had blocked deliveries of the S-300 Tehran in 2010 after the United Nations slapped sanctions on Iran over its nuclear programme barring hi-tech weapons sales.

Iran then filed a $4-billion suit at an arbitration court in Geneva over the cancellation of the $800 million order by Russia, which has long been Iran’s principal foreign arms supplier.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov insisted the missile deliveries were not covered by UN sanctions, and that the progress in the nuclear talks meant there was no longer any need for Russia to maintain the ban.

Meanwhile, the Kremlin confirmed on Tuesday that an oil-for-goods barter deal between Russia and Iran was being implemented and said all legal barriers had been removed to Moscow supplying S-300 missile systems to Tehran.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov declined to give any details of the barter deal. But asked whether a senior Foreign Ministry official was correct when he said on Monday that the exchange had begun, Peskov told reporters: “Absolutely. Of course.”

Peskov also said no legal barriers remained to supplying the advanced Russian air defence system S-300 to Iran after President Vladimir Putin signed a decree on Monday lifting a ban on such deliveries.

“One the whole you can say one thing – from the juridical point of view there are no longer any constraints (on deliveries) now that the decree has been signed,” Peskov said in a conference call with reporters.