17-11-10 Iran military stages mock warplane interception

Iran staged a mock interception of enemy warplanes attacking its nuclear facilities as part of its biggest military exercises to improve the Islamic state's readiness to respond to aggression,media said on Wednesday.Iran started the five-day nationwide exercises on Tuesday to test its ability to deter air strikes."The exercise will improve our ability to confront possible threats to Iran's air space and the very populated,vital and nuclear centers," senior Revolutionary Guards commander Ahmad Mighani said.As part of the exercises,warplanes were scrambled to intercept an imaginary air attack."Hypothetical enemy planes crossed into Iranian air space ... Our artillery systems were immediately alerted,targets were identified," Commander Hamid Arjangi,a spokesman for the exercise,was quoted by IRNA as saying."Warnings were given and our jets carried out interception operations." Iran's official news agency IRNA said that during the exercise,warplanes "were trying to penetrate Iran's sensitive,industrial and particularly its nuclear regions".The remarks by Gen.Hamid Arjangi,a spokesman for the exercise,were the first Iranian claim of an intrusion.Initially,he had only said that foreign reconnaissance planes had approached Iran's air space.Arjangi said Iran's radar stations and observation posts picked up on the planes entering Iranian air space during the drill."There were six cases of intrusion by unidentified planes into the country," Arjangi was quoted as saying by IRNA."In all six cases, Air Force jet fighters took off and carried out interception operations ... artillery systems were alerted,targets were identified and necessary warnings were given." The Iranian exercise is meant to showcase the country's capabilities in defending its nuclear facilities from possible attack.It followed an announcement by the Iranian Air Force saying its troops earlier this year conducted an exercise at several facilities -- from the uranium enrichment plant at Natanz,the under-construction enrichment site at Fordo,to the nuclear conversion facility near Isfahan and the Bushehr nuclear power plant.Arjangi said thousands of surveillance outposts have been stationed along 4,400 miles (7,000 kilometers) of Iran's border,equipped with sophisticated communication systems capable of countering enemy jamming to transfer data to control command centers.He did not specify whether the figure,which is only a segment of the total Iranian borderline,referred to that in the Gulf.The United States and its European allies accuse Iran of embarking on a nuclear weapons program.Iran denies the charge and insists the program is only for peaceful purposes.Israel has not ruled out military action to stop Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.Iran,in turn,has said Israel would face a "devastating retaliation" if it attacked the Islamic Republic.Iran is expected to unveil a locally made radar system with a range of some 1,800 miles (2,900 kilometers) during the drill.Iran's armed forces conduct several war games every year and frequently unveil new weapons and military systems during those exercises.Iran restructured its military last year in an effort to improve its air defenses.The changes were part of a broader focus on bolstering the military amid concerns over U.S. military's presence in neighboring Iraq and Afghanistan.Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ordered a new branch to be split off from the air force last year to deal exclusively with threats to the country's air space.Mighani was appointed to head the branch.