Iran’s ambassador to Poland: U.S. missile shield is a new version of Star
Wars
Tehran Times Political Desk
TEHRAN – Iran’s ambassador to Warsaw, Hadi
Farajvand, calls U.S. missile shield plan in Poland an “updated version of
the star wars” and says the plan does not pose “any threat” to Iran.
The reason behind the plan is that the United
States wants to “counter Russia” and establish its “strategic superiority”
in different parts of the world, the ambassador noted.
He said after the cold war Russia has been the only country which has been
challenging the U.S. strategic superiority and that is why Washington is
trying to modernize the proposed star wars in the form of a missile defense
shield.
“Therefore we should interpret this plan as a revised version of the star
wars,” the ambassador tells the Mehr News Agency.
Former U.S. President Ronald Reagan proposed on March 23, 1983, the creation
of the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), an ambitious project that would
construct a space-based anti-missile system. This program was immediately
dubbed ""Star Wars.""
The SDI was intended to defend the United States from attack from Soviet
ICBMs by intercepting the missiles at various phases of their flight.
After two years of difficult negotiations the United States and Poland
signed an agreement on the construction of components the missile shield in
Poland on August 20 in Warsaw.
The U.S. claims the missile system is intended to protect the West against
what it calls attacks from so-called 'rogue states' such as Iran and North
Korea.
The missile shield will consist of ten interceptor missiles in Poland and a
radar station in the Czech Republic.
Moscow has said the missile shield is aimed at Russia and is fiercely
opposed to it. The Russian Foreign Ministry said its response to the shield
""would go beyond diplomacy"" and said the deal was creating a new arms race
in the European ""continent and beyond its borders.""
-----Impacts of Georgia war on missile shield
On the impacts of the Russia-Georgia war on signing the missile deal, the
ambassador said, “It should not be forgotten that the Americans have been
trying to install this missile shield in Eastern Europe since a long time
ago.”
However, he said one should not underestimate this reality that the Georgia
conflict “accelerated the process of negotiations between Poland and the
U.S.”
He said it is in fact the Polish side who has been using the war between
Russia and Georgia as a pretext to ‘convince the public opinion’ to take a
‘practical step’ toward deploying U.S. interceptor missiles in Eastern
Europe.
The ambassador added Iran has not made any recommendations to the Polish
officials about the missile plan because it is a “domestic issue” and it by
no means poses any “threat” to Iran.
He also insisted that Tehran believes that the placing of the missile shield
in Poland will not be a threat to Iran because Iranian missiles “have
nothing to do with European countries” and even they don’t “reach Europe”
and Iran has “no plans to develop such long-range missiles”.
--------Iran-Poland ties growing
Farajvand further noted there is no problem which can halt a development of
ties between Iran and Poland.
He said Iran’s ties with Poland are growing.
The ambassador said that Iran-Poland relations are “friendly” which date
back to more than 500-years ago and have always been based on mutual respect
and the two sides are seeking to expand this relationship