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On September 03, 2020, Iranian Defense Minister Brigadier General Amir Hatami said his country is capable of manufacturing more than 38,000 military equipment and hardware parts. [14] In February 2023, Iran reported that had tripled its military products exports in 2022 while its self-sufficiency in military needs had reached 93%. [15]
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.
Companies from Iran, Israel, China, Russia and the United States will showcase military equipment at an arms expo in Hanoi in December, Vietnam's defence ministry said on Tuesday, a rare case of ...
China Iran: Oghab: Rocket artillery: N/A: 1985–present China Iran: An upgraded Chinese Type-83 rocket, created with Chinese assistance. Naze'at: Rocket artillery: N/A Iran: Zelzal: Tactical ballistic missile: 3800+ Iran [110] Fateh-110: Tactical ballistic missile: 4500+ 2002–present Iran [111] Fath 360: Tactical ballistic missile 100+ 2022 ...
China banned the export of dual-use products to over two dozen US defence contractors, targeting top players like Lockheed Martin and Raytheon, as it objected to Washington’s latest arms sales ...
State media also said last year that Iranian non-oil exports to China fell 68% in the first five months of 2023 while Iran's imports from China rose 40%. By contrast, Chinese companies committed ...
[1] [2] 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 States alone. This alarmed many in the U.S., which strengthened a 1968 law on arms exports in 1976 and renamed it the Arms Export ...
The bill still restricts the export and transfer of technology to China, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Sudan, and Syria." [60] The political changes in 2012 came after several years of a gradual shift in thinking. In 2010, the Congress formally requested "an assessment of the national security risks of removing satellites and components from the USML.