Iran Adviser Hints at Expansion of Missile Range, Nuclear Doctrine Review after Israel Strikes

 Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei speaks during a meeting in Tehran, Iran, October 27, 2024. (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via Reuters
Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei speaks during a meeting in Tehran, Iran, October 27, 2024. (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via Reuters
TT

Iran Adviser Hints at Expansion of Missile Range, Nuclear Doctrine Review after Israel Strikes

 Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei speaks during a meeting in Tehran, Iran, October 27, 2024. (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via Reuters
Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei speaks during a meeting in Tehran, Iran, October 27, 2024. (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via Reuters

Kamal Kharrazi, an adviser to Iran's supreme leader, said on Friday that Tehran is likely to increase the range of its ballistic missiles and possibly review its nuclear doctrine, amid growing tensions with arch-enemy Israel and tit-for-tat missile and airstrikes.

Asked by Lebanon-based pro-Iran broadcaster Al-Mayadeen whether Iran was ready if conflict were to expand after the recent strikes, Kharrazi said Iran was likely to up the range of its ballistic missiles beyond a self-imposed limit of 2,000 km (1,250 miles).

He said that although Iran has the technical capability to produce nuclear weapons, it is currently held back by a fatwa, or religious decree, issued in the early 2000s by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

Khamenei, who has the last say on Tehran’s nuclear program, banned the development of nuclear weapons in that fatwa.

Tehran has long denied that it is trying to build nuclear weapons and insists its nuclear work is solely for peaceful purposes.

Iranian officials have said Tehran has no need to increase the range of its ballistic missiles beyond 2,000 km as they could already reach US forces stationed in the region.

Kharrazi said Iran would respond to Israel at a time and in a manner of its choosing in retaliation for Israel's airstrikes near Tehran and other areas last week that followed an Iranian missile barrage on Oct. 1.



Berlin: Germans Should Leave Iran or Risk Being Held Hostage

FILED - 28 October 2024, Berlin: A woman takes part in a rally held in front of the Federal Foreign Office for the German-Iranian Djamshid Sharmahd, who was executed in Iran. Photo: Christophe Gateau/dpa
FILED - 28 October 2024, Berlin: A woman takes part in a rally held in front of the Federal Foreign Office for the German-Iranian Djamshid Sharmahd, who was executed in Iran. Photo: Christophe Gateau/dpa
TT

Berlin: Germans Should Leave Iran or Risk Being Held Hostage

FILED - 28 October 2024, Berlin: A woman takes part in a rally held in front of the Federal Foreign Office for the German-Iranian Djamshid Sharmahd, who was executed in Iran. Photo: Christophe Gateau/dpa
FILED - 28 October 2024, Berlin: A woman takes part in a rally held in front of the Federal Foreign Office for the German-Iranian Djamshid Sharmahd, who was executed in Iran. Photo: Christophe Gateau/dpa

Germany has long had a travel warning for Iran and asked nationals to leave because, as seen from the execution of a German-Iranian national, Tehran takes German citizens hostage, said a foreign ministry spokesperson in Berlin on Friday.

"We have long had a travel warning for Iran and a request to Germans in Iran to leave the country because we saw from the Jamshid Sharmahd case that Iran is taking German citizens hostage," said the spokesperson at a government news conference.

"We want to spare other German citizens this fate."

Germany ordered the closure of all three Iranian Consulates in the country on Thursday in response to Sharmahd’s execution.

Sharmahd, 69, was put to death in Iran on Monday on terrorism charges, the Iranian judiciary said. That followed a 2023 trial that Germany, the US and international rights groups dismissed as a sham.

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said on X Friday that Germany's closure of Iran's consulates in the country amounted to a "sanction" against Iranians residing in Germany.