A senior Iranian commander says Tehran and Moscow want to find a solution to their dispute regarding the delivery of Russian-made S-300 missile systems to the Islamic Republic.
“Iranian and Russian Defense Ministries are pursuing the case of the S-300 missile systems and have reached good and positive points,” said Commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya Air Defense Base Brigadier General Farzad Esmaili on Sunday.
He made the remarks following a meeting with Russia’s Air Force Commander-in-Chief Lieutenant General Viktor Bondarev who arrived in Tehran earlier in the day for an official four-day visit aimed at expanding bilateral cooperation in the field of military and missile systems.
“In political disputes, it is government officials who must be answerable and follow up on such cases,” said the Iranian commander, adding, “The S-300 missile system is completely a defensive one and the issue of sanctions ... does not apply to this case and the Russian side has not raised this issue [either].”
Esmaili further underlined Iran’s great achievements in its defense sector, emphasizing that the Islamic Republic does not depend on the S-300 or similar systems to defend its airspace.
Under a contract inked in 2007, Russia undertook to provide Iran with at least five S-300 missile systems. However, Moscow refrained from meeting its obligations under the pretext that they were covered by the fourth round of the UN Security Council sanctions against Tehran.
Following Moscow’s failure to deliver the systems, Iran filed a complaint against the Russian arms firm, Rosoboronexport, with the International Court of Arbitration in Geneva.
The Iranian commander described his meeting with Bondarev as “positive,” saying that the two sides exchanged views on Tehran-Moscow “defense cooperation and the exchange of experience and knowledge between the two countries based on common interests.”
By Press TV
The Iran Project is not responsible for the content of quoted articles.