Iran unveils drone aircraft to counter “aggressors”

TEHRAN, (Reuters) – Iran unveiled a prototype  long-range unmanned bomber yesterday, the latest in a stream of  announcements of new Iranian-made military hardware as tension  mounts over its nuclear programme.

On a stage in front of military officials, President Mahmoud  Ahmadinejad pulled a sheet away from the aircraft, called the  Karrar, which Iran says is its first long-range drone.

With the United States and Israel saying they do not rule  out a military strike to stop Iran getting a nuclear bomb, the  Islamic Republic has showed off new mini-submarines, and a  surface-to-surface missile and announced plans to launch  high-altitude satellites over the next three years.

The presentation of the drone came a day after Iranian and  Russian technicians began loading fuel into Iran’s first nuclear  power station, something Israel called “totally unacceptable”.

In a speech at the unveiling ceremony, Ahmadinejad said Iran  should seek the ability to make pre-emptive strikes against a  perceived threat, although he said it would never strike first.

“If there is an ignorant person or an egoist or a tyrant who  just wanted to make an aggression then our Defence Ministry  should reach a point where it could cut off the hand of the  aggressor before it decided to make an aggression,” he said.

“We should reach a point when Iran would serve as a defence  umbrella for all freedom-loving nations in the face of world  aggressors.

We don’t want to attack anywhere, Iran will never  decide to attack anywhere, but our revolution cannot sit idle in  the face of tyranny, we can’t remain indifferent.”