Russia is providing Iran with intelligence to strike American military targets in the Middle East, it has been reported.
Moscow began to pass the Islamic Republic information on the positions of US forces as soon as the war began on Saturday, the Washington Post reported, citing three US officials familiar with the matter.
The report, which The Telegraph has not been able to independently confirm, marks the first sign of Russia’s active participation in the expanding conflict.
One official said: “It does seem like it’s a fairly comprehensive effort.”
While Iran has only a small number of military-grade satellites, Moscow has many and has honed their capabilities in its war with Ukraine.
“Much [of Russia’s support to Iran] will be space based imagery,” said Mike Petersen, principal research scientist at the Centre for Naval Analyses, a federally funded organisation tied to the US military.
“This is good for knowing what bases are being used when, and what aircraft may be parked. It can allow Iran to temporarily slow or halt airfield ops,” he wrote on X.
“Russia may also provide locations on intelligence stations in the region, allowing Iran to put them under drone attack,” Mr Petersen added. Moscow’s satellites can also snoop on US communications so Iran can “understand strategic force dispositions”.
But Mr Petersen pointed out that the US had prepared to “operate in environments like this for years”, and would have “countermeasures for these eventualities”.
However, Beijing has not intervened to provide concrete assistance in the current conflict, two officials told the Washington Post.
Moscow has around 110 military satellites in orbit, while Iran has around 13 that are still operational, with three registered to the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps.
On Thursday, Adml Brad Cooper, the head of US central command, announced that US strikes had destroyed Iran’s military space force.
“We’ve also struck Iran’s equivalent of Space Command, which degrades their ability to threaten Americans,” he said.
However, experts doubt it had the ability to do so in the first place.
“They were not a threat in space capabilities,” Victoria Samson, head of the non-profit Secure World Foundation, told the Defense One website. “The threat that they have [is] for counter-space capabilities, they’re great at jamming and spoofing.”
According to the US space force, Russia’s own space capabilities have suffered in recent years. The number of satellite launches has declined amid “funding shortfalls, international isolation and broader societal problems”.
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