Pages

Sunday, February 03, 2013

Iran unveils homemade fighter jet which it claims can evade radar


 Iran unveiled its newest combat jet, a domestically manufactured fighter-bomber, that military officials claim can evade radar. 

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in a ceremony today broadcast on state TV that building the Qaher-313, or Dominant-313, shows Iran's will to 'conquer scientific peaks'. 
The Qaher is one of several aircraft designs rolled out by the Iranian military since 2007. 
Unveiling the newest: Iran revealed today its latest combat jet, a domestically manufactured fighter-bomber that military officials claim can evade radar
Tehran has repeatedly claimed to have developed advanced military technologies in recent years but its claims cannot be independently verified because the country does not release technical details of its arsenals. 
The Islamic republic launched a self-sufficiency military program in the 1980s to compensate for a Western weapons embargo that banned export of military technology and equipment to Iran.
Since 1992, Iran has produced its own tanks, armoured personnel carriers, missiles, torpedoes, drones and fighter planes. 
Defence Minister Ahmad Vahidi said: ‘Qaher-313 is a fully indigenous aircraft designed and built by our aerospace experts. 
‘This is a radar-evading plane that can fly at low altitude, carry weapons, engage enemy aircrafts and land at short airstrips.’ 
 
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad unveiled Iran's newest combat jet, a domestically manufactured fighter-bomber, officials claim can evade radar
'Conquer scientific peaks': President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad unveiled Iran's newest combat jet, a domestically manufactured fighter-bomber, officials claim can evade radar
Some reports however suggest Iran's program relies on equipment supplied by major international defence contractors incorporating parts made abroad or reverse-engineered technologies into its domestic designs. 
Still photos of the Qaher released by the official IRNA news agency and pictures on state TV show a single-seat jet. They described it as a fighter-bomber that can combat both other aircraft and ground targets. 
Iran's English-language state Press TV said Qaher was similar to the American-made F/A-18, an advanced fighter capable of dogfighting as well as penetrating enemy air defences to strike ground targets. 
Physically the aircraft resembles the F-5E/F Tiger II, a much older American design that Iran has had in its arsenal since it was supplied to the U.S.-allied regime of the Shah before Iran's 1979 revolution, Press TV reported. 
 
State Press TV said the aircraft was similar to the American-made F/A-18 (pictured), which is capable of dogfighting as well as penetrating enemy air defences to strike ground targets
Advanced American fighter: State Press TV said the aircraft was similar to the American-made F/A-18 (pictured), which is capable of dogfighting as well as penetrating enemy air defences to strike ground targets
President Ahmadinejad told the inauguration ceremony in Tehran: ‘Development depends on our will. If we don't have a will, no one can take us there.
‘Once we imported cars and assembled them here. Now, we are at a point where we can design, build and get planes in the air.’
Iran unveiled what it said was its first domestically manufactured fighter jet, called Azarakhsh or Lightning, in 2007. In the same year, it claimed that Azarakhsh had reached industrial production stage. 
Saeqeh, or Thunder, was a follow-up aircraft derived from Azarakhsh. Iran unveiled its first squadron of Saeqeh fighter bombers in an air show in September 2010. 
 
Physically the aircraft resembles the F-5E/F Tiger II, that Iran has had in its arsenal since it was supplied to the U.S.-allied regime of the Shah before Iran's 1979 revolution
A much older design: Physically the aircraft resembles the F-5E/F Tiger II (pictured), that Iran has had in its arsenal since it was supplied to the U.S.-allied regime of the Shah before Iran's 1979 revolution.