DEZFUL | Medium-Range Ballistic Missile

DEZFUL | Medium-Range Ballistic Missile


DEZFUL | Medium-Range Ballistic Missile

دزفول | Named after the city of Dezful

Dezful, a city in Iran’s Khuzestan province, endured more Iraqi ballistic missile strikes than any other Iranian city during the Iran–Iraq War. Between 1985 and 1988, it was hit by more than 150 Iraqi Scud missiles.

The Dezful missile is a direct evolution of the Zolfaghar, extending its range from 700 km to 1,000 km while retaining the solid-fuel rapid-launch capability that made the Zolfaghar operationally important.

Key specs:

Range: 1,000 km (places all of Israel, U.S. Gulf bases, and Riyadh within reach)

Warhead: 500+ kg HE or submunitions

Fuel: Solid propellant

Launch platform: Road-mobile TEL

CEP: Estimated 50–100 m, precision-class at this range

The critical development is solid fuel at the 1,000 km range class. The Shahab-3 can reach similar targets but requires up to an hour of fueling before launch. The Dezful, by contrast, can be deployed and fired within minutes, significantly reducing the window for detection and interception.

Vulnerability:

The trade-off is warhead size. At roughly 500 kg, the payload is lighter than the 1,200 kg warhead of the Shahab-3, sacrificing destructive mass for speed of launch, survivability, and precision.

Combat use:

The missile was publicly unveiled in February 2019 by IRGC Aerospace Force commander Amir Ali Hajizadeh inside an underground missile facility.

There is no confirmed operational use in direct strikes so far. However, it belongs to the same missile inventory Iran has drawn from in major operations, including the January 2020 strike on Ain al-Asad airbase and the April 2024 direct attack on Israel.

@DDGeopolitics

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