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Page 3 - சர்வதேச நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் மூலோபாய News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Iran Plans to Continue Developing Powerful Missiles (To Fight America?)

These missiles are a long-standing threat. They are also a source of contention between Iran and America. Here’s What You Need to Remember: Iran is continuing to develop increasingly long-range ballistic missiles and is firing some shorter-range missiles in combat despite demands from the U.S. government that the Islamic republic totally give up any weapons that could, in theory, carry a nuclear warhead. On Sept. 8 and Oct. 1, 2018, Iran launched Zulfiqar, Quim-1 and Fateh-110 rockets at enemies in Iraqi Kurdistan. The strikes together represent the most intensive Iranian missile attacks in nearly 20 years. The October strike, involving Zulfiqar and Qiam-1 rockets, targeted Islamic State militants near the eastern Syrian border town of Abu Kamal. The volley of Fateh-110 missiles in September struck Iranian Kurdish dissident groups based in Iraqi Kurdistan, killing at least 17 and wounding scores of people, including women and children.

Biden s Military Nightmare: Iran Fires These Missiles at the U S Military

Iran is continuing to develop increasingly long-range ballistic missiles and is firing some shorter-range missiles in combat. Here s What You Need to Remember: If the Trump administration truly wanted a diplomatic deal to curtail Iran s missiles, it wouldn t have torn up the JCPOA. The administration wants fewer arms-control regimes, even if rolling back decades of painstakingly negotiated agreements means a much greater risk of an out-of-control arms race that could end with nuclear war. Iran is continuing to develop increasingly long-range ballistic missiles and is firing some shorter-range missiles in combat despite demands from the U.S. government that the Islamic republic totally give up any weapons that could, in theory, carry a nuclear warhead.

Singapore banking on Austin, Suga and Musk

Singapore banking on Austin, Suga and Musk May 18, 2021 – 6.04pm Share Singapore | Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, US Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin and tech billionaire Elon Musk are figuring high in Singapore’s hopes this week after the World Economic Forum cancelled its plans to meet in the city state in August. The WEF said “the tragic circumstances unfolding across geographies, an uncertain travel outlook, differing speeds of vaccination rollout and the uncertainty around new variants” made it impossible to “realise a global meeting on the scale which was planned”. Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga is the headline act for the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue – if it happens. 

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