Following are excerpts
from a TV report on Iranian missiles, which aired on
Channel 2, Iranian TV:
Reporter: Have
you ever traveled to an unknown destination?
IRG officer: Guys,
please give us your cell phones and shut the windows until we arrive.
Reporter: Everything
is peculiar, even the meaningful silence of the people sitting next
to you. This is the real story of our trip. Our trip takes place with
special security measures to an unknown destination. Now we are in the
middle of nowhere in a car with tinted windows. All I know is that TV
reception is poor.
This seems very important
to me.
Sir, may I ask you a
question?
IRGC
officer: Go ahead.
Reporter: On the
airplane, you took my cell phone. We were flying for an hour and a half
with the windows shut, and we didn't know where we were going. Where
is this place? Where have you brought us?
IRG officer: This
place could be anywhere in Iran – in the northern forests, the central
salt desert, the western mountains, or somewhere with broad fields.
It could be any of these places.
Reporter: Okay,
but where are we?
Other
IRG officer: This is a place our enemy doesn't know about. Our enemy
can't even imagine where this place is, yet here we are.
Reporter: Let's
call it a subterranean trip in Iran.
Are we going even deeper?
We have to go further
down?
IRG officer: Keep
going.
Reporter: What
is this picture?
IRG officer: This
is a picture of our smiling youth at the beginning of the war [with
Iraq]. It shows the effect of the boycott by Western and Eastern countries.
The fueling equipment has broken down, and they are using a bucket instead.
Other IRG officer:
We started out with the most basic equipment, and look where we are
today.
Reporter: Is this
a rocket?
IRG officer:
Yes.
Unintelligible
Reporter:
This is definitely very surprising. This is a Shehab III, right? Is
this the launching pad?
IRG officer: This
is the launching pad and silo for long-range rockets.
Reporter: These
are beautiful and powerful images of the launching of these smart long-range
rockets, belonging to the Islamic Republic of Iran, from underground
rocket-launching silos. These silos and launching pads are ready 24
hours a day for the firing of rockets.
IRG officer: This
is a manifestation of two things: Wanting something and achieving it.
Only a few countries in the world are capable of building such a launching
silo. Building the silo is no less complex than planning and building
a missile.
Reporter: Upstairs,
I asked you where this place was, and you said we could be anywhere
in Iran. Does this mean we have such silos all over Iran?
IRG officer:
We have countless numbers of them. These silos prevent detection by
satellite. We have programmed targets for every silo, and they are ready
for launching whenever the order is given.
Reporter: Just
an order and then the launching?
IRG officer:
Yes.
[…]