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Iran launches satellite that is part of a Western-criticised programme as regional tensions spike

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Tehran said it had conducted a successful launch of a satellite into its highest orbit yet, in a space programme that the West fears will improve the country’s ballistic missile capabilities.
Iran said Saturday it had conducted a successful satellite launch into its highest orbit yet, the latest for a programme the West fears improves Tehran’s ballistic missiles.
The announcement comes as heightened tensions grip the wider Middle East over Israel’s continued war on Hamas in the Gaza Strip, and just days after Iran and Pakistan engaged in tit-for-tat air strikes in each others’ countries.
On Saturday, a missile strike flattened a building used as a base of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards in Damascus, Syria, killing five Guards and an unspecified number of Syrian troops.
Iran vows revenge as Israel strike in Syria kills 5 Revolutionary Guards
Also on Saturday, the United States conducted new strikes on Yemen’s Houthi rebels, who have been targeting shipping in the Red Sea over the war, and Iranian-backed militias in Iraq struck a base housing US troops, wounding several personnel.
The Iranian Soraya satellite was placed in an orbit about 750 kilometres above the Earth’s surface with its three-stage Qaem 100 rocket, the state-run IRNA news agency said. It did not immediately acknowledge what the satellite did, though telecommunications minister Isa Zarepour described the launch as having a 50-kilogram payload.
The launch was part of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards’ space programme alongside Iran’s civilian space programme, the report said.
Footage released by Iranian media showed the rocket blast off from a mobile launcher, with a religious verse referring to Shiite Islam’s 12th hidden imam written on its side.
An Associated Press analysis of the footage suggested the launch happened at the Guard’s launch pad on the outskirts of the city of Shahroud, about 350 kilometres east of the capital, Tehran. Iran’s three latest successful satellite launches have all happened at the site.
There was no independent confirmation Iran had successfully put the satellite in orbit.

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