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Saudi targeting Iran, Israel with missiles: Jane’s Review

Published: 12 Jul 2013 - 02:58 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 03:53 pm


This handout image received from IHS Jane’s Intelligence Review/DigitalGlobe yesterday shows satellite imagery from March 21, 2013 showing the Al Watah DF-3 complex surface to surface missile facility in Saudi Arabia.

LONDON: Saudi Arabia appears to be targeting regional rivals Iran and Israel with ballistic missiles from a previously undisclosed desert base, a British-based defence analysis group said yesterday.

Satellite images show launch pads with some markings pointed towards potential Iranian targets and others towards possible locations in Israel, IHS Jane’s Intelligence Review said.

If confirmed, the base deep in the Saudi desert would be the third missile base identified in the kingdom.

“Our assessment suggests that this base is either partly or fully operational, with the launch pads pointing in the directions of Israel and Iran respectively,” said Robert Munks, Deputy Editor of the Review. It could also function as a training and storage complex, it said.

The launch pads are designed for Saudi’s lorry-launched DF-3 missiles, which are not self-guiding and need to be aligned before being fired, the Daily Telegraph said in a report on the base. The facility has two launch pads, one on a bearing of 301 degrees aimed at Israel and the other at 10 degrees pointing towards Iran, the Jane’s said.

“We cannot be certain that the missiles are pointed specifically at Tel Aviv and Tehran themselves, but if they were to be launched, you would expect them to be targeting major cities,” Munks said.

“We do not want to make too many inferences about the Saudi strategy, but clearly Saudi Arabia does not enjoy good relations with either Iran or Israel.”

Saudi Arabia has repeatedly voiced fears about the nuclear threat posed by Shia-dominated Iran, and denounced Israel’s atomic capacity. Munks said a missile base like the apparently new Saudi one would also help Riyadh if it sought to acquire nuclear weapons, as its former intelligence chief Prince Turki Al Faisal suggested in 2011. AFP