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The American / English
hypocrisy continues. Just like the Shah time, they have supported Iran
to be another POLICE in the area.. At the same time they weep and
scream falsely about the threat it created..  

They manged to destroy Iraq, and its space program too, to support Iran..

S1000+



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KG71jdlaPX8

Iraq Space Rocket Al-Abid - 1989




                        
                                biomedical23
                                 (4 months ago) wrote: 
                        

        
                        
 














        

                        
                

                        
                                
                                        
This is the first Arab trials for launching space rocket to an
geodestic orbits, attempt in 5 December 1989, I was 10 years old when I
saw this great achievement.
God bless Iraq
                                        
                                
I added this comment on the Video:

Thank you very much for this information. Now it is forgotten sadly.
BTW this was ahead of Japan and Israel and India ( to reach space) (although 
info below says otherwise) . I
wish we can obtain the photos of the control room for that news. Sumerian100

==============================

Spaceports Around the World:




Iraq's Al-Anbar Space Research Center ( Destroyed by Americans 1992 /2003 
S1000+)











Iraq is a spacefaring nation. On December 5, 1989, the Middle eastern
nation became the tenth to launch an artificial moon to orbit above
Earth.


The satellite was the 48-ton, third stage of a three-stage
rocket in a flight from Al-Anbar Space Research Center 50 miles west of
Baghdad to a six-orbit spaceflight.




Six Revs. A U.S. nuclear-attack-warning satellite spotted fiery
exhaust from the rocket as it blasted up and away from Iraq. While the
rocket did not leave a separate satellite in orbit, it's third stage
swept around the Earth for six revolutions before falling out of orbit.
North American Aerospace Defense Command tracked the third stage around
the globe.


The launch made Iraq the tenth nation with a rocket powerful
enough for space launches. It was the first time Iraq had exposed its
space research.


The previous nine to launch satellites to orbit had been, in
order, the USSR, the United States, France, Japan, China, Great
Britain, the combined nations of Europe, India and Israel.




Scout-like. Iraq's 75-ft., three-stage rocket probably was similar to a U.S. 
Scout rocket used to send small satellites to low orbits.




Military missiles. Iraq's space booster may have been a modified
version of Argentina's Condor ballistic missile. Such a missile could
carry a nuclear warhead 1,240 miles. Iraq also had a 600-mi. missile
built around the USSR's Scud.
Scuds were launched by Iraq against Iran during their eight-year war in the 
1980's.



Iraq again launched Scuds, against Israel and Saudi Arabia, in the first 
Persian Gulf War in 1991.



Iraq launched a few ballistic missiles against Kuwait and the opposing 
Coalition Forces in the second Persian Gulf War in 2003.


Al-Anbar Space Research Center and other Iraqi launch
sites were damaged in the 1991 war, bringing to a halt Iraq's ability
to continue in the Middle East space race with Israel.


http://www.spacetoday.org/Rockets/Spaceports/Iraq.html


=================



News 
Alert
6:14 AM EDT Wednesday, May 20, 2009 




Iran 
Says It Tests Missile, Israel Within Range ( And Saudia Too ... S1000+)
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said 
Iran test-fired a new advanced missile Wednesday with a range of about 1,200 
miles, far enough to strike Israel and southeastern Europe. 


For more 
information, visit washingtonpost.com 


=======
  S1000+ 
  =======


=======
  S1000+ 
  =======



--- O
==========================

USA helping INIDIANS against Muslim countries and against China:
India's Missiles - With a Little Help from Our Friends

 By Gary Milhollin
 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

November 1989, pp. 31-35
 Last May 22, India became the first country to test a strategic missile derived
  from a civilian space program. The missile's first-stage rocket motor, heat
  shield, and guidance system all came from India's space effort -- generously
  launched and sustained by foreign help.
 Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi claimed that the missile, called "Agni" (fire),
  is "an R&D vehicle, not a weapons system." Then he qualified the assertion. 
"Agni
  is not a nuclear weapons system," he said. "What Agni does is to afford us
  the option of developing the ability to deliver non-nuclear weapons with high
  precision at long ranges."
 In the May test, the missile reportedly flew 625 miles. But it is designed
  to carry a one-ton payload 1,500 miles, far enough to hit cities in southern
  China. Carrying a half-ton atomic bomb, the Agni would be able to fly about
  2,200 miles, far enough to hit Beijing.
 Whether Agni eventually carries nuclear or conventional weapons, the missile
  should destroy any illusions about sharing technology in the interest of 
peaceful
  uses of outer space. The story of the Agni's development shows how difficult
  it is to separate civilian and military uses of technology, and just how 
futile
  may be the recent, belated attempts to control the proliferation of military
  missile technology. A control regime established by seven Western nations in
  1987 seeks to prevent precisely this sort of development. [See the June 1988
  Bulletin.] Yet the regime has no provisions for enforcement, and the Indian
  program continued
  full speed ahead, with some foreign - particularly West German - cooperation,
  after the regime was adopted.
 Lessons in America
 Agni's foreign ancestry dates from the 1960s. In November 1963, the United
  States began India's space program by launching a U.S. sounding rocket from
  Indian soil. (Sounding rockets fly straight up into the atmosphere to conduct
  scientific experiments. They are too small to launch satellites.) The United
  States was followed by others. Between 1963 and 1975, more than 350 U.S., 
French,
  Soviet, and British sounding rockets were launched from India's Thumba 
Range,[1]  which the United States helped design. Thumba's first group of 
Indian engineers
  had learned rocket launching and range operation in the United States.
 Among them was the Agni's chief designer, A. J. P. Abdul Kalam. In 1963-64,
  he spent four months in training in the United States. He visited NASA's 
Langley
  Research Center in Virginia, where the U.S. Scout rocket was conceived, and
  the Wallops Island Flight Center on the Virginia coast, where the Scout was
  being flown. The Scout was a low-cost, reliable satellite launcher that NASA
  had developed for orbiting small payloads.
 Soon afterward, in 1965, the Indian government asked NASA how much it would
  cost and how long it would take to develop an Indian version of the Scout,
  and whether the United States would help. NASA replied that the Scout was 
"available
  . . . for purchase . . . in connection with scientific research," but warned
  that "transfer of this technology . . . would be a matter for determination
  by the Department of State under Munitions Control."[2] NASA nevertheless sent
  India technical reports on the Scout's design, which was unclassified. India's
  request should have raised some eyebrows: it came from Homi Bhabha, head of
  the Indian Atomic Energy Commission.
 But Kalam had the information he needed. He returned to India and built the
  SLV-3 (Space Launch Vehicle), India's first satellite launcher. Its design
  is virtually identical to the Scout's. Both rockets are 23 meters long, use
  four similar solid-fuel stages and "open loop" guidance, and lift a 
40-kilogram
  payload into low earth orbit. The SLV's 30-foot first stage would later become
  the first stage of the Agni.
 NASA officials say U.S. aid to India in rocketry was limited to the program
  in the 1960s. In 1988, however, the United States agreed to supply an advanced
  ring laser gyroscope to help guide a new Indian fighter plane.[3] It is not
  clear what will prevent India from using it to guide missiles. The highly 
accurate
  device is essentially solid state, making it easy to adapt to the demands of
  missile acceleration.
 French lessons: liquid fuel
 France also launched sounding rockets from India, and in the late 1960s allowed
  India to begin building "Centaure" sounding rockets under license from Sud
  Aviation. But France's main contribution has been in the field of liquid 
propulsion.
  Under a license from France's Societe Europeene de Propulsion (SEP), India
  is building its own version of the Viking high-thrust liquid rocket motor,
  used on the European Space Agency's Ariane satellite launcher.[4] Indian 
engineers
  helped develop the Viking in the mid-1970s, then began a program of their own.
  India has now built an experimental model of the Viking engine, called the
  Vikas.
 The training in liquid propulsion seems to have paid off. Just over a year
  before testing the Agni, Kalam tested a smaller predecessor, the "Prithvi" 
(earth),
  which uses a liquid-propelled motor to carry a one-ton payload 150 miles. It
  resembles the widely sold Soviet Scud-B. Indian sources say that the Agni's
second stage is a shortened version of the Prithvi.[5] A German intensive 
tutorial
 The aid of the United States and France, however, was quickly dwarfed by
  West German help in the 1970s and 1980s. Germany gave India help in three 
indispensable
  missile technologies: guidance, rocket testing, and the use of composite 
materials.
  All were supposed to be for the space program, but all were equally useful
  for military missiles.
 The German government's aerospace agency DLR (Deutsche Forschungsanstalt
  fur Luftfahrt und Raumfahrt e.V.) began tutoring India in rocket guidance in
  1976.[6] The first step was to put a German interferometer on an Indian 
sounding
  rocket. An interferometer works by using antennas placed at different 
locations
  on the rocket to measure the phase of a radio signal received from the ground.
  The phase difference among the antennas reveals their relative positions on
  the rocket and thus the rocket's attitude, which can be monitored and 
corrected
  from the ground. The first launch of an Indian rocket with a German 
interferometer
  was in 1978. By 1981 the project had been expanded to include an on-board DLR
  microprocessor. In April 1982, India tested its own version of the same 
interferometer.
 The next step was to make a navigation system that did not depend on signals
  from the ground, one that could guide a payload through space by determining
  its position and speed at any moment. The "autonomous payload control 
system," which
  India proposed in July 1981, would provide "full autonomous navigation 
capability
  to spaceborne sensors," determining "position, velocity, attitude, and 
precision
  time in a real-time mode." India would supply the rockets and satellites; 
Germany
  would provide the brains of the guidance system. The key component would be
  an on-board computer, using a microprocessor based on the Motorola family M
  68000, and the software to run it.
 It must be noted that an inertial navigation system that can guide satellites
  can also guide warheads. The United States used NASA's experience in guiding
  the Titan II transtage, a "bus" designed for multiple satellite launchings,
to develop a bus that would accurately deliver small nuclear warheads.[7] The 
German-Indian plan was carried out. By January 1982, the two countries
  had agreed on a series of joint projects for the program. But at the same 
time,
  India announced that it was designing a new navigation system for its own 
space
  rockets: it would replace the "open loop" system used on its first launcher,
  the SLV-3, with a "closed loop" system for its Advanced Space Launch Vehicle
  and its Polar Space Launch Vehicle. An open loop system can only correct the
  rocket's attitude, not deviations from the planned flight path. A closed loop
  system can correct both, because it senses and determines the rocket's 
position
  in space. It amounts to an autonomous navigation system.
 So while India's program with Germany, called APC-Rex for Autonomous Payload
  Control Rocket Experiment, was developing autonomous navigation for a 
satellite,
  India would develop autonomous navigation for its own rockets. India would
  need a brain for its space rockets' new closed loop system, which it would
  provide by developing the "Mark-II" onboard processor  - "based on [the] 
Motorola
  6800 microprocessor with 16-bit word length" - the same as that used in the
  German program. (Although Indian reports repeatedly refer to the Motorola 
"6800," according
  to Motorola the 16-bit chip is the M 68000.) The timing of subsequent events
  showed continued parallel developments in the two programs.
 The German aid in guidance is apparently continuing, despite the Agni launch.
  In May 1989, a DLR official said that "the APC-Rex program has not yet been
  concluded, but it will come to an end in 1989."[8] West Germany was one of
  the seven countries that adopted the Missile Technology Control Regime in 
1987,
  an agreement not to export items useful in making long-range missiles. That
  agreement barred the export of technology capable of real-time processing of
  navigation data, unless specific assurances could be given that the technology
  would not be used for, or transferred to, missile programs. If, as the 
evidence
  suggests, technology from APC-Rex has been used in India's rocket and missile
  programs, Germany may have violated the agreement.
 India has not described the Agni guidance system. But when the missile was
  assembled in 1988, Indian rocket scientists had studied and developed only
  one brain for rocket guidance: the German system based on the Motorola 
microprocessor
  and its software. Over a decade, Germany's guidance tutorial helped India 
build
  and test a navigation package based on that system. Did that system go into
  the Agni, or did India invent from scratch some other system, not mentioned
  in any Indian space program report? If the latter, did the Indian rocket 
scientists
  block from their minds everything they had learned from the Germans? The 
evidence
  is strong that the Agni owes its brain to German engineering.
 Interchangeable parts
 The Indian space program first mentions the Agni in its 1982-83 annual report
  as a booster rocket for the Polar Space Launch Vehicle: six identical Agni
  boosters will lift the missile's first stage. The boosters, in turn, are 
adaptations
  of the first stage of the SLV-3.[9] Indeed, the SLV-3 is the only large 
booster
  motor that India has: it carries nine tons of solid propellant, as does the
  Agni first stage; no other Indian booster carries anything close to that 
amount.
  India has used the same booster to lift the Advanced Space Launch 
Vehicle.[10]  After the Agni launch a number of sources, Indian as well as 
foreign, reported
  that the Agni first stage was identical to the SLV-3 first stage. Thus, the
  main rocket for India's missile program has come from India's space program.
 This same rocket, in turn, owes much to German help. Wind tunnels are essential
  to the design of any rocket. In 1974-75, DLR tested a model of the first stage
  of the SLV-3 in its wind tunnel at Cologne-Portz. DLR also helped India build
  rocket test facilities, furnishing a complete facility design and training
  Indian engineers in high-altitude testing. India has said it will use this
  technology to test the liquid-fueled upper stage of the Polar Space Launch
  Vehicle, and it may already have done so. India may also have used it to test
  the Agni's liquid-fueled second stage, which must have been tested somewhere.
 In June 1988, two Egyptian military officers were indicted for trying to
  smuggle carbon fiber composites out of the United States. Export of the 
composites
  was strictly controlled: the strong, lightweight, heat-resistant materials
  were being used for the nozzles and the nosecone of the MX, Trident, and 
Minuteman
  nuclear missiles.
 But DAR began giving Indian scientists on-the-job training in composites
  at Stuttgart and Braunschweig in the mid-1970s. Subjects ranged from "glass
  fibre reinforced plastics via impregnated materials" to "carbon fibre 
reinforced
  composites." The Indians learned "composition, manufacturing processes, 
quality
  control, and error detection."
 The German training allowed India to make rocket nozzles and nosecones of
  its own, which could be for either missiles or space launchers. To help the
  Indians use the composites, DAR supplied the documentation for a precision
  filament-winding machine, which India built and commissioned in 1985-86.
 After the Agni test, Prime Minister Gandhi affirmed that one of the goals
  was to test "atmospheric reentry." Lower-ranking officials were more specific.
They said that the goal was to test a "domestically developed heat shield."[11] 
Target: China
 No country, including India, has ever spent money on long-range rockets simply
  to explore space. The "satellites" launched by the SLV-3 were little more than
  flight monitors, used to transmit data on rocket performance, which was 
India's
  true interest. To launch real satellites, India could and did hire other 
providers
  of that service. The Soviets launched India's first two satellites; France's
  Ariane rocket and the U.S. space shuttle have launched others.
 Nor has any country developed long-range missiles simply to deliver 
conventional
  bombs. The large cost of missile development is only justified by the ability
  to inflict strategic blows, which conventional warheads cannot do.
 The Agni, therefore, can only be interpreted as a step toward a long-range
  nuclear strike force. As India progresses in guidance, the Agni's range should
  extend gradually to most targets in China.
 India apparently has the material and skill to mass produce the Agni and
  arm it with nuclear warheads. The result will be a new nuclear equation in
  Asia. Across a common border, nuclear-armed rivals will confront each other,
  each with missiles, one or both vulnerable to a first strike from the other.
 When India exploded an atomic bomb in 1974, the world was shocked. India
  had taken a Canadian reactor and U.S. heavy water both imported under 
guarantees
  of peaceful use and used them openly to make plutonium for a nuclear blast.
  That blast destroyed illusions about the "peaceful atom" and prompted changes
  in nuclear export policy. It is not surprising that India has again taken 
advantage
  of civilian imports and technology to further what appears to be a nuclear
  weapons program. What is surprising is that, given India's record, it was so
  easy.
 How a Satellite Guidance System Gets into a Missile
 (Excerpts from program reports)
 1982-83

APC-Rex (German-Indian missile program satellite guidance program): received
    Motorola 68000 microprocessor
Indian space and missile program: "An engineering model of the Mark-ll
    based on the Motorola 6800 [sic] has been integrated and exhaustive tests
    are being carried out."

 1983-84

APC-Rex (German-Indian missile program satellite guidance program): "Development
    of an on-board computer for autonomous payload control is in progress."
Indian space and missile program: "Design review was conducted on inertial
    navigation systems with the participation of international experts."

 1984-85

APC-Rex (German-Indian missile program satellite guidance program): "Design
    of the on-board [guidance] packages was completed."
Indian space and missile program: "Design of on-board processors for SLV
    based on 16-bit microprocessors has been completed."

 1986-87

APC-Rex (German-Indian missile program satellite guidance program): "Development
    and validation of hardware and software packages for APC-Rex are in their
    final stages."
Indian space and missile program: "Breadboard models of on-board computers
    based on microprocessors have been realized."

  
Sources:
 1. P.D. Bhavsar et al., "Indian Sounding Rocket Program," Proceedings of
  the 4th Sounding Rocket Technology Conference (Boston: American Institute for
  Aeronautics and Astronautics, June 23-26,1976), pp. 101-07.
 2. Letter from Arnold W. Frutkin, assistant administrator for international
  affairs, NASA, to Homi J. Bhabha, chairman, Indian Atomic Energy Commission,
  March 10, 1965.
 3. Steven R. Weisman, "U.S. Clears Vital Gyroscope for Indian Jet Fighter," New
    York Times, April 7, 1988, p. A12.
 4. David Velupillai, "ISRO, India's Ambitious Space Agency," Flight 
International (June
  28, 1980), p. 1466.
 5. "India's Agni Success Poses New Problems," Jane's Defence Weekly (June
  3,1989), p. 1052.
 6. Many of the following details of the German-Indian space program are found
  in the proceedings of a January 27, 1982, colloquium of the DAR (then called
  DFVLR) and the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) in Bangalore, India, 
"A
  Decade of Cooperation in the Field of Space Research and Technology," and in
  annual reports of the Indian government's Department of Space.
 7. Ted Greenwood, Qualitative Improvements in Offensive Strategic Arms:
    The Case of the MARV(Cambridge: Center for International Studies, 
Massachusetts
    Institute of Technology, Aug. 1973), p. 278.
 8. Letter from Dietmar Wurzel, head of DAR's Washington, D.C., office, to
  Gary Milhollin, May 1, 1989.
 9. "India The Way Forward," Spaceflight (Dec.1986), p. 434.
 10. "India Aims for Self-Sufficiency in Space," Flight International (June
  14,1986), p. 45.
 11. Barbara Crossette, "India Reports Successful Test of Mid-Range Missile," 
New
    York Times, May 22, 1989, p. A9.



http://www.wisconsinproject.org/pubs/articles/1989/indiasmissiles-dodging.htm







      


      
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