Iran unveils its own-designed hypersonic missile
Iran has unveiled the regime's first hypersonic missile, called Fattah. ”, which could potentially be a major problem for Israel and Western leaders.
On Tuesday, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps unveiled a new weapon that can move at five times the speed of sound at a ceremony where President Ebrahim was present. Raisi and the top military leaders of the regime.
Iran claims the missile can both bypass and destroy air defense systems, posing a major security headache for Israel, Iran's archenemy in the region.
It will also cause deep concern among Western leaders, who are increasingly wary Iran's growing military capabilities, in particular its new security pact with Russia, which is helping to invade Ukraine.
The missile «could bypass US anti-missile systems»
An Iranian state television report on the ceremony claimed that the missile could destroy «the enemy's advanced anti-missile systems and is a great leap forward in missile development.»
«It can bypass the most advanced anti-missile systems. — ballistic missile systems of the United States and the Zionist regime, including Israel's Iron Dome, the report says.
How a hypersonic missile works
The Fattah system has a range of 1,400 km, can enter and exit space and , according to one Iranian general, is capable of hitting targets in Israel in just 400 seconds.
Israel and Iran are engaged in an escalating shadow war in which they attacked each other's ships as well as other key infrastructure. Israel is also suspected of a series of covert attacks on Tehran's nuclear program, which it considers an existential threat.
The weapon is called Fattah.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly said that he could take decisive military action against the nuclear program in the near future, a move that could escalate into an open regional war.
This comes after Iran announced the end work on a hypersonic missile that, according to some Israeli media reports, could be achieved with Russian technological support.
Since Russia invaded Ukraine, Iran has provided hundreds, not thousands, of drones and missiles to Vladimir Putin's troops . In return, Moscow will send powerful fighter jets to Tehran and could help the regime build up military power in other areas.































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