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Moscow should deliver S-300 defense system to Iran: Russian official

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  • Moscow should deliver S-300 defense system to Iran: Russian official

    Moscow should deliver S-300 defense system to Iran: Russian official

    Chairman of the Russian Defense Ministry's Public Council Igor Korotchenko

    PRESS TV
    Sat Jul 7, 2012 9:0AM GMT


    Chairman of the Russian Defense Ministry's Public Council Igor
    Korotchenko has called on Moscow to fulfill its contractual
    obligations to Tehran and deliver the S-300 air defense systems to
    Iran.


    In a Thursday interview with Russia's state-run RIA Novosti news
    agency, Korotchenko urged Russia to sell the S-300 defense system to
    Iran, arguing that the move does not run counter to any UN mandates.


    The Russian defense official pointed to Moscow's dispute with the NATO
    member states over the military alliance's 2010 plan to establish a
    missile system in eastern Europe, the Syrian crisis and Uzbekistan's
    withdrawal from the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) of
    ex-Soviet nations on June 28 and underscored the necessity of Moscow's
    support for friend nations against the backdrop of the ensuing
    geopolitical developments.

    CSTO, headquartered in Moscow, consists of Armenia, Belarus,
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. The
    organization was created in 2002 and has been developing rapid
    reaction forces along with constructing drones.

    Korotchenko went on to say that Iran and Russia share a lot of common
    positions on international developments and argued that the delivery
    of the S-300 defense systems to Iran will be a `logical step' for
    maintaining Moscow's geopolitical interests in the region.

    Earlier in July, Iran's Defense Minister Ahmad Vahidi said Tehran's
    2011 complaint against Russia at the International Court of Justice
    over Moscow's refusal to ship the S-300 air defense systems to the
    Islamic Republic is under examination at the relevant international
    legal bodies.


    Under a contract signed in 2007, Russia was required to provide Iran
    with at least five S-300 air-defense systems.

    However, Moscow's continuous delays in delivering the defense system
    drew criticism from the Islamic Republic on several occasions.

    Russia has been refusing to deliver the system to Iran under the
    pretext that the selling of the system is banned by the fourth round
    of UN Security Council resolutions against Iran.


    Korotchenko lashed out at the West for leveling allegations against
    Iran's nuclear energy program as a pretext to put Tehran under
    pressure and argued that there has been no evidence of military
    diversion in the Islamic Republic's nuclear energy program.

    The United States, Israel, and some of their allies accuse Tehran of
    pursuing military objectives in its nuclear energy program.

    Iran has strongly rejected the US-led allegations, arguing that as a
    signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and a member of the
    International Atomic Energy Agency, it is entitled to develop and
    acquire nuclear technology for peaceful purposes.

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