Iran tests 'flying boat'
2006-04-04 16:51
Tehran - Iran successfully tested a "super-modern flying boat" on Tuesday and the land-to-sea Kowsar missile that military analysts say is designed to sink ships in the Gulf, state media reported.
The tests came in the middle of the country's Gulf war games
that started on Friday.
State radio said the Kowsar could evade
radar and that its guidance system could not be scrambled.
The defence ministry was not immediately able to give
details of a "flying boat" that was shown on television.
The small propeller-driven aircraft floated on a trimaran
hull until it took off and flew low over the surface of the
water.
State television said it could reach speeds of 100 knots.
"A super-modern flying boat was successfully tested in the
'Great Prophet' war game in Persian Gulf waters," state
television said.
"Because of its hull's advanced design, no radar at sea or
in the air can locate it.
It can lift out of the water. It is
wholly domestically built and can launch missiles with precise
targeting while moving."
Iran rarely gives enough details of military hardware for
analysts to tell if it is making genuine advances or simply
producing defiant propaganda while pressure rises on its nuclear
programme.
Although Iran can draw on huge manpower, its naval and
air-force technology is largely dismissed as obsolete.
Iran's military technology might not be highly advanced, but
analysts say Iran would not need much know-how to cause chaos in
vital oil shipping channels.
They say Iran could be testing arms in the Strait of Hormuz,
a key tanker nexus, to dissuade Israel and the United States
from taking military action against nuclear-power sites.
'Defensive doctrine'
The United States said it was possible Iran had developed
weapons that could evade sonar and radar, but warned the Islamic
Republic had a tendency to "boast and exaggerate".
Earlier in the war games, Iran said it had tested a
radar-evading rocket and the Hoot (whale) underwater missile
which could outpace any enemy warship.
On Monday, Iran's revolutionary guard test-fired a torpedo
it said was being mass-produced in Iran.
"With intelligent missile terminals, Iran is capable of
confronting any assaults from forces outside the region," the
official IRNA news agency quoted revolutionary guards
commander-in-chief Yahya Rahim as saying.
Iran has been referred to the UN security council after
failing to convince the world its atomic scientists are working
exclusively on power stations and not branching into weapons.
Foreign minister Manouchehr Mottaki dismissed the West's
concerns about developments in Iran's missile capabilities.
"Iran's achievements will be used in order to preserve
stability in the region," he told reporters.
"Iran has never attacked any country. Our military doctrine
is defensive doctrine."