Iran receiving orders for destroyers: Navy chief
TEHRAN- Iran has received orders from many countries for destroyers as advanced as Dena, the Iranian Navy commander has announced.
“Today many countries are seeking help from Iran in areas of education and production of vessels” in the naval industry and Iran has also got “many orders for destroyers” at the level of Dena, Rear Admiral Shahram Irani explained.
Admiral Irani also said that the naval forces under his commander would soon get a new destroyer built domestically.
Speaking to students at the Sharif University of Technology in Tehran on at an event remembering Iraq’s imposed war against Iran in the 1980s, he added that the destroyer will be outfitted with far more sophisticated and advanced equipment than the military vessels that have already been displayed.
Irani mentioned that the domestic military vessel, known as Deylaman, will soon join Iran’s naval fleet. He added that the Dena destroyer was not quite as advanced as Deylaman.
Dena is apparently the fourth destroyer of the Jamaran class built by the naval industry of the Defense Ministry.
The Iranian destroyer is outfitted with a variety of defensive and offensive systems, is built to go great distances in the oceans, and is armed with the ability to monitor, identify, and strike a variety of airborne, surface, and subsurface targets. Helicopters could also be carried on the deck of Dena.
In a televised interview on Thursday, Irani noted, “Our future plan is to proudly hoist the Iranian flag in Antarctica, and undertake collaborative military and scientific efforts in that region.”
He stressed that the Iranian Navy planned to establish a permanent station in Antarctica to carry out military and scientific operations.
“It is not just military work. There has to be scientific work and our dear scientists are preparing to implement a joint effort in line with the guidelines of Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei,” the top naval officer added.
According to the commander, such an ambitious future plan demonstrates the Iranian Navy’s immense potential.
“Last year, in compliance with the guidelines of the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, we tried to establish a strong maritime presence across the globe. This came even with various challenges along the way, the most notable of which was that we had no experience of such a task at all,” Irani said.
The Navy commander continued by highlighting the ongoing efforts made by some foreign nations to obstruct Iran’s presence in open seas, asserting that “within the Navy, we overcame these obstacles and fears, and could accomplish the tremendous honor of deploying the 86th flotilla of warships in international waters despite foreign conspiracies.”
Despite multiple attempts by foreign nations to block the naval operation, the admiral said, the Navy personnel were able to successfully defuse all hostile schemes by employing domestic military equipment and exerting tremendous efforts.
The 86th Iranian naval fleet, which set sail from the southern port city of Bandar Abbas on September 20, 2022, came home on May 20, 2023, after circumnavigating the globe. It broke the record for the longest distance traveled by an Iranian flotilla in international seas.
High-ranking Iranian authorities and commanders welcomed the flotilla’s return, including Ayatollah Khamenei, who commended the “courageous forces of the 86th flotilla of warships of the Islamic Republic of Iran Army on their great and successful voyage.”
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