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This page includes weapons used by both the Ground Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran Army and the Ground Forces of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. From 1925 to the Iranian Revolution in 1979, Iran was primarily equipped with Western hardware and equipment.
2007 Iran upgraded all of their old S-200 missile name S-200 Fajr-8 increase its range 200–250 km and an Iranian home made version of S-200 missile name is S-200 Ghareh and increase its range 250–350 km. Now S-200 Ghareh Missile used with Talash-3 System and Bavar-373 System.
Iran established an arms development program during the Iran–Iraq War to counter the weapons embargo imposed on it by the U.S. and its Western allies. Since 1993, Iran has manufactured its own tanks, armored personnel carriers, missiles, radars, boats, submarines, unmanned aerial vehicles, and fighter planes.
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; Wikidata item; Appearance. ... Pages in category "Weapons of Iran"
In 1973, the Iran Electronics Industries (IEI) was founded to organize efforts to assemble and repair foreign-delivered weapons. [3] [4] Most of Iran's weapons before the Islamic revolution were imported from the United States and Europe. Between 1971 and 1975, the Shah went on a buying spree, ordering $8 billion in weapons from the United ...
Iran 600 Tons Domestically-built, commissioned in February 2024 [3] Sayyad Shirazi: FS313-03 Iran 600 Tons Domestically-built, commissioned in February 2024 Ra'is-Ali Delvari: FS313-04 Iran 600 Tons Domestically-built, commissioned in February 2025 [4] High-aspect-ratio twin-hull (HARTH) missile corvette (1) Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis: PC313-01 Iran
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Help. Ballistic missiles of Iran include ballistic missiles designed, built, or operated ...
The KH-2002 Khaybar (Persian: خیبر Khayber) is an Iranian-designed assault rifle, derived from the DIO S 5.56 assault rifle (an unlicensed clone of the Chinese Norinco CQ, [2] which in turn is an unlicensed copy of the American M16) and further developed by Iran's Defense Industries Organization (DIO).