Iran tests missile as election race starts

TEHRAN, (Reuters) – President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad  said yesterday Iran had tested a missile that defense  analysts say could hit Israel and U.S. bases in the Gulf, a  move likely to fuel Western concern about Tehran’s nuclear  ambitions.

Washington voiced concern after Ahmadinejad announced the  test on the same day campaigning for the Iran’s June 12  presidential election officially started.

U.S. President Barack Obama “has long been concerned” by  any development in Iran’s missile program, White House  spokesman Robert Gibbs said. A U.S. official said the test was  a “step in the wrong direction”.

One Western expert saw the missile test as Iran’s response  to the Israeli prime minister’s U.S. visit this week.

Coming a day after Iran’s supreme leader accused the United  States of promoting terrorism, the test was a further  disappointment for the Obama administration, which is seeking  rapprochement with Iran after three decades of mutual  mistrust.

“Iran just keeps going in the wrong direction. We want them  to engage with us, to talk about how we can make the region  more stable. This is just a step in the wrong direction,” the  U.S. official said.
U.S. patience is “not infinite”, the official added.

The United States and its allies suspect the Islamic  Republic is seeking to build nuclear bombs, a charge Tehran  denies, but Obama has offered a new beginning of diplomatic  engagement with Iran if it “unclenches its fist.”

A U.S. defense official confirmed the launch, although  Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman declined to say whether the  U.S. military had any evidence of an Iranian missile test.