TEHRAN: President Mahm-oud Ahmadinejad said yesterday that he is ready “to be the first man in space” under Iran’s ambitious programme which aims to send a human being into orbit by 2020.
“Our youth are determined to send a man into space within the next four, five years and I’m sure that will happen,” he said during a ceremony in Tehran where two new Iranian-made satellites were unveiled, according to ISNA news agency.
“I’m ready to be the first Iranian to be sacrificed by the scientists of my country and go into space, even though I know there are a lot of candidates,” Ahmadinejad quipped.
He added to the buoyant atmosphere, saying he was willing to “auction (himself) and donate” the money to the Iran’s space programme, which has shrunk because of international economic sanctions over Tehran’s controversial nuclear drive, ISNA reported.
Iran, which last week announced it had successfully sent a small monkey into space, has said it wants to send a man into orbit by 2020.
Ahmadinejad unveiled yesterday two small satellites, named “Nahid” and “Zohreh” (“Venus” in Farsi and Arabic, respectively). Nahid, an observation satellite equipped with solar panels, is intended to orbit at an altitude of between 250km and 370km. Iran has put three other small satellites into the same orbit since 2009. Zohreh is a geostationary communications satellite that will be placed at an altitude of 36,000km, something Iran has never tried before. No launch date was given.
Iran’s space programme deeply unsettles Western nations, which fear it could be used to develop ballistic missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads they suspect are being developed in secret, despite denials from Tehran.
The technology used in space rockets can also be used in ballistic missiles. The Security Council has imposed an almost total embargo on the export of nuclear and space technology to Iran since 2007. Tehran denies its space programme has any link with its alleged nuclear ambitions.
Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said that he saw US Vice-President Joe Biden’s offer this weekend of bilateral dialogue between their two countries as a sign of a change in approach to Tehran by Washington. “As I have said yesterday, I am optimistic, I feel this new administration is really this time seeking to at least divert from its previous traditional approach vis-a-vis my country,” Salehi told the German Council on Foreign Relations.
Agencies