Iran
plans to send missiles, drones to Russia for Ukraine war, officials say
By
JOBY WARRICK, ELLEN NAKASHIMA AND SHANE HARRIS
THE
WASHINGTON POST • October 16, 2022
An Iranian Qods Mohajer-6 drone, posted on Twitter
by the Ukrainian Defense Ministry Oct. 3, 2022. Ukrainian officials said the
drone was launched to coordinate an attack on Odesa. (Ukraine Defense
Ministry/Twitter)
Iran is strengthening its commitment to supply
arms for Russia’s assault on Ukraine, according to U.S. and allied security
officials, secretly agreeing to send not only attack drones but also what some
officials described as the first Iranian-made surface-to-surface missiles
intended for use against Ukrainian cities and troop positions.
The increased flow of weapons from Tehran could
help offset what Biden administration officials say have been huge losses in
Russian military equipment since Moscow invaded in February, and a rapidly
dwindling supply of precision-guided munitions of the kind used in last week’s
strikes against multiple Ukrainian cities.
Independent news outlets in recent days published
photos of the remains of what appear to be Iranian-made drones used in strikes
against Ukrainian targets, calling into question Iran’s repeated denials that
it has supplied such weapons to its ally Russia. Pentagon officials also
publicly confirmed the use of Iranian drones in Russian airstrikes, as well as
Ukraine’s success in shooting some of the drones down.
In an apparent sign of Iran’s expanded role as a
military supplier to Moscow, Tehran dispatched officials to Russia on Sept. 18
to finalize terms for additional weapons shipments, including two types of
Iranian surface-to-surface missiles, according to officials from a U.S.-allied
country that closely monitors Iran’s weapons activity.
An intelligence assessment shared in recent days
with Ukrainian and U.S. officials contends that Iran’s armaments industry is
preparing a first shipment of Fateh-110 and Zolfaghar missiles, two well-known
Iranian short-range ballistic missiles capable of striking targets at distances
of 300 and 700 kilometers, respectively, two officials briefed on the matter
said. If carried out, it would be the first delivery of such missiles to Russia
since the start of the war.
The officials spoke on the condition that their
names and nationalities not be revealed because of the extreme sensitivities
surrounding intelligence-collection efforts.
In August, the same officials identified specific
Iranian drones, the Shahed series and the Mohajer-6, that Tehran was beginning
to supply to Russia for use in Ukraine. The remains of both types have been
recovered, analyzed and photographed by Ukrainian forces in recent weeks.
Russia appears to have repainted the weapons and given them Russian names.
The officials briefed on the planned missiles
shipment said Iran also is preparing new deliveries of unmanned aerial vehicles
for Russia, including “dozens” of additional Mohajer-6s and a larger number of
Shahed-136s. The latter, sometimes called “kamikaze” drones because they are
designed to crash into their targets, are capable of delivering explosive
payloads at distances of up to 1,500 miles. Iranian technical advisers have
visited Russian-controlled areas in recent weeks to provide instructions on
operating the drones, the officials said.
U.S. intelligence agencies declined to comment on
the reports of pending Iranian shipments to Russia. Russian and Iranian
officials did not respond to requests for comment on Saturday on reports of
Russian-bound Iranian missiles.
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