Military

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Reveals Mission of New Nour-3 Satellite

The Nour-3 (lit. ‘Light-3’) space satellite was blasted off into orbit aboard a Qased (‘lit. Messenger’) carrier rocket on Wednesday. Previous satellites in the series were met with mockery and derision from Pentagon officials, but the ridicule soon stopped after Iran showed off the spacecraft’s impressive capabilities.
Sputnik
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) will be using its Nour-3 satellite to collect military intelligence, IRGC Chief Hossein Salami has confirmed.
“We use the collection of what we receive from the satellite and [the information] it gathers from the Earth to meet the IRGC’s intelligence demands,” Salami said in a meeting in Tehran on Wednesday.
Separately, IRGC Aerospace Force Commander Amir-Ali Hajizadeh said that the Nour-3 would be “involved in signal collection,” and revealed that by the end of the current Iranian calendar year (in March of 2024), Iran has plans to launch “two more satellites.”
“With the progress we are making in this direction, in the not-so-distant future, we will have a constellation of satellites in orbit,” Hajizadeh said.
Iranian Minister of Communications and Information Technology Issa Zarepour announced earlier in the day that the Nour-3 had been successfully launched into orbit, some 450 km above the Earth’s surface.
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Iran is one of just a handful of countries in the world with the capability to develop, produce, launch and independently operate satellites, and has arguably the best-developed space-based capabilities in the Muslim World. Iran’s space endeavors are split between a civilian and military program, with the latter operated by the IRGC.
The Nour-3’s successful launch follows the deployment in space of the Nour-2 in 2022, and the Nour-1 in 2020. The latest satellite in the series weighs some seven kilograms more than its predecessor, and according to IRGC chief Salami, features superior onboard imaging technology allowing for better quality and resolution snapshots of the Earth from space.
US officials have offered a bipolar assessment of Iran’s space program, vacillating between criticism of Tehran’s rocket and satellite launches based on claims that they could be used to further the development of the Middle Eastern nation’s missile program, and mockery of the Islamic Republic’s space capabilities compared Washington’s.
In 2020, shortly after the launch of the first Nour-series satellite, then-US Chief of Space Operations Jay Raymond derided the spacecraft as a mere “tumbling webcam in space” that would be “unlikely” to provide Iran with any usable intelligence. Raymond was showed up by the Iranians months later when the IRGC released detailed images snapped by the Nour-1 of Al-Udeid Air Base – the Qatar-based home of US Central Command and the largest US military base in the Middle East.
The Nour-2 followed up in 2022 by sending back a detailed panoramic image centered on the headquarters of the US Fifth Fleet in Manama, Bahrain, with Iran receiving previously unprecedented capabilities to monitor US military activities in its backyard in crisp detail with its Nour series spacecraft.
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