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                                                                                            Updated January 9, 2020

Iran's Ballistic Missile and Space Launch Programs


On January 7, 2020, Iran launched 16 short-range ballistic
missiles that were fired from three different locations inside
the country and hit various targets on two Iraqi military
installations housing U.S. troops Al Asad Air Base and an
air base near Erbil in Northern Iraq. Experts argue that the
attack served as both Iranian retaliation for the U.S. killing
of Iranian's top military commander, Major General Qasem
Soleimani, as well as a warning to the United States against
further military action against Iran. No U.S. or allied
casualties were reported.

Iran has been acquiring, developing, and testing its ballistic
missile capabilities for decades and continues to invest in
developing ballistic missiles and in building an extensive
network of related facilities. The recent attack may have
demonstrated advances in the accuracy of Iran's missiles.
Short- and medium-range ballistic missile tests indicate that
Iran is focused on increasing the accuracy of its missiles.
Once forecasted to acquire an intercontinental-range
ballistic missile by 2020, Iran has not yet demonstrated this
capacity. Furthermore, Iran's space launch program
continues to experience significant delays, and may be
slowing.

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The majority of Iran's heavy artillery rockets and ballistic
missiles are tactical or short-range (less than 500
kilometers). Most of Iran's ballistic missiles are Scud-B and
Scud-C derivatives, with a majority likely being Scud-Cs.
Iran has less than 100 SRBM reusable transporter-erector-
launchers (TELs) and likely has hundreds of SRBMs. Iran
views its SRBM capability as necessary for battlefield and
tactical military purposes. Iran often test-fires these missiles
as part of its military exercises. Iran's SRBMs could strike
U.S. and allied bases in the Gulf region if moved from their
operating bases, as well as targets throughout Iraq, but they
could not reach Israel.

Iran has grown increasingly self-sufficient in producing
SRBMs, but still probably relies on outside sources, such as
North Korea, for some key components and materiel.
Stricter international enforcement of export controls and
broadening missile-related sanctions which are in place
under the Iran nuclear agreement have reportedly slowed
Iran's efforts.


The Qiam ballistic missile was first tested in August 2010,
and continues to be operational. UN Reports and U.S.
government reports released in recent years have
highlighted escalations in both its use by Iran and transfer
to regional forces allied with Iran. The Qiam was launched
from Iran targeting ISIL fighters in Syria in June 2017, and
modified versions of the SRBM have also been used in


Yemen on several occasions in 2018. The Qiam rocket is
road-mobile, liquid-fueled, and finless, and it is capable of
achieving a range of 800 km.

The Fateh-1 10 is a solid-fuel, road-mobile battlefield or
tactical ballistic missile with a range of about 250-300 km.
There may be four versions of the Fateh-1 10 in service; one
is apparently called the Khalij-Fars (Persian Gulf').


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Iran is developing and producing MRBM capabilities with
ranges estimated up to about 2,000 kilometers (some non-
U.S. government sources cite slightly higher ranges),
sufficient to strike targets throughout the Middle East.

According to the National Air and Space Intelligence
Center (NASIC) in 2017, Iran has perhaps fewer than 50
MRBM launchers and an unknown number of associated
missiles. Iran continues to develop, test, and build more
capable and increasingly accurate MRBMs. Iran argues
these missiles constitute an important deterrent and
retaliatory force against U.S. and other forces in the region
in the event of war. Iran has also constructed an
underground network of bunkers and silo-like missile
launch facilities, and is seeking improved air defenses,
presumably to enhance the survivability of their MRBMs
against preemptive attack.

Like the SRBM program, Iran relies to some extent on
others, particularly North Korea, for certain key missile
components and materials in its MRBM program. Export
controls and sanctions have made it increasingly difficult,
but not impossible, for Iran to acquire the best of such
items, causing Iran to try to exploit weaknesses in existing
export and nonproliferation regimes, or to try to find
foreign sellers willing to circumvent those laws.

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The Shahab-3 is a ballistic missile imported from the
DPRK and based on the No-dong 1. The Shahab-3 has been
given various names by Iran and others over time. There
reportedly have been several different versions of this
liquid-fueled missile flight tested with various other
modifications made to it, perhaps providing the Shahab-3
with ranges varying from about 800-1,000 km. The missile
is reportedly both road-mobile and silo-based. Because the
range of the Shahab-3 lies at the low end of an MRBM, Iran
has sought to develop, test, and deploy a much longer-range
ballistic missile. Iran's first efforts in extending the range of
the Shahab-3 manifested in what some have variously
referred to as the Ghadr-1. The Shahab-3 variant is road-
mobile, liquid-fueled, and single-stage, and it is believed by
some experts to carry a smaller payload and a modified
reentry vehicle (RV). Modified Ghadr MRBMs were


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