Four Western allies have called Iran’s recent launch of a satellite-carrying rocket “a threatening and provocative step” that is “inconsistent” with a UN resolution endorsing the 2015 agreement to rein in its nuclear programme.
In a letter to the UN Security Council, obtained by the Associated Press, the US, the UK, France and Germany complained that Iran’s Simorgh space launch vehicle, if configured as a ballistic missile, would have the range and “payload capacity to carry a nuclear warhead”.
They said this is “inconsistent” with a provision in the 2015 resolution adopted by the Security Council calling on Iran “not to undertake any activity related to ballistic missiles designed to be capable of delivering nuclear weapons”.
On July 27, Iran successfully launched the country’s most advanced satellite-carrying rocket into space, marking the most significant step forward for the Islamic state’s young space programme.
Iran’s foreign ministry said the missile programme is part of the “domestic policy of the country, deterrent and at service of regional peace and security”.
The four countries, who brokered the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran along with China, Russia and the European Union, countered that Iran’s long-standing programme to develop ballistic missiles “continues to be inconsistent” with the UN resolution “and has a destabilising effect in the region”.
They said the Simorgh, if configured as a ballistic missile, would be capable of delivering a 500kg payload to a range of at least 300 kilometres (186 miles), and is “inherently capable of delivering nuclear weapons”.
“We call on Iran to immediately cease all activities related to ballistic missiles designed to be capable of delivering nuclear weapons, including launches using such ballistic missile technology,” the four countries said.
They said the international community must send “a clear message to Iran“ when its actions violate or are inconsistent with the 2015 resolution – and it must continue to insist that legally binding measures in the resolution restricting outside support to Iran’s ballistic missile programme are fully implemented.
The four Western allies asked secretary-general Antonio Guterres to “report fully and thoroughly on Iran’s ballistic missile and space launch activity”.
They also proposed that the next Security Council meeting on the 2015 resolution consider the launch and “discuss appropriate responses”.