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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 17 November 2024. Underground missile bases Missile Cities پایگاه های موشکی زیرزمینی ایران Unknown, multiple locations in Iran Type Missile bases Height zero, 500 m deep Site information Operator IRGC Aerospace Force According to Iranian authorities, Iranian underground missile ...
Oghab 44 or Eagle 44 (in Persian: عقاب 44) is an Iranian underground airbase unveiled in February It is the first tactical and secret airbase for the army's air force that accommodates the fighters, bombers, and Iranian UAVs.
Fordow, near the city of Qom, is the site of an underground uranium enrichment facility at a former Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps base. [22] [23] Existence of the then-unfinished Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant (FFEP) was disclosed to the IAEA by Iran on 21 September 2009, [24] but only after the site became known to Western intelligence services.
Part of Iran’s operations against Israel in October and April were carried out using this underground missile base, semi-official Iranian media outlet Mehr News reports.
The new Natanz facility is likely to be even deeper underground than Iran’s Fordo facility, another enrichment site that was exposed in 2009 by U.S. and other world leaders. That facility ...
DUBAI (Reuters) - Talks held in Geneva between Iran, Britain, France and Germany will see dialogue continue regarding Tehran's disputed nuclear programme, Iran's official news agency reported on ...
Smaller numbers of overseas military bases are operated by China, Iran, India, Italy, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates. The United States is the largest operator of military bases abroad, with 38 "named bases" [ note 1 ] with active duty, national guard, reserve, or civilian personnel as of September 30, 2014.
According to the Israelis, the documents and files (which it shared with European countries and the United States), [388] demonstrated that the Iranian AMAD Project aimed to develop nuclear weapons, [389] that Iran had a nuclear program when it claimed to have "largely suspended it", and that there were two nuclear sites in Iran that had been ...