News
Iran Missiles Don’t Have Capacity To Reach Kenya, Envoy Assures as William Ruto Condemns Middle East Attacks
President Ruto on Monday condemned the widening conflict, warning that its regionalisation poses a grave threat to international peace and security.
Iran’s ambassador to Kenya has sought to calm anxiety over the escalating conflict in the Middle East, assuring that Tehran’s missile systems do not have the capacity to reach Kenyan territory.
Speaking in Nairobi, Iranian envoy Ali Gholampour said Iran’s ballistic missile programme is capped at a maximum range of about 2,000 kilometres, placing East Africa well outside its operational reach. He described the limitation as deliberate and intended to demonstrate what he termed Iran’s defensive military posture.
“Our missiles will not reach the Kenyan territory. The range has been deliberately limited for defensive purposes,” he said, adding that Tehran has no intention of extending hostilities beyond the current theatre of confrontation.
The envoy urged the United Nations Security Council to convene urgently to push for de-escalation, warning that continued escalation risks heavy civilian casualties and long-term regional instability.
His remarks come against the backdrop of intensifying exchanges of airstrikes and missile attacks across the Gulf region, following coordinated military action by the United States and Israel against Iranian targets.
Security analysts note that a 2,000-kilometre range covers much of the Middle East, including parts of southern Europe and western Asia, but does not extend to East Africa.
Kenya lies several thousand kilometres beyond the furthest publicly acknowledged range of Iran’s medium-range ballistic missiles.
The ambassador also addressed speculation that countries hosting United States military installations could be drawn into the conflict.
He said Iran considers bases used to launch attacks against it as American territory, but expressed confidence that Kenya would not allow its soil to be used to strike Iran.
“I do not believe that Kenya will provide such a facility to attack Iran from its land,” he said, citing what he described as longstanding diplomatic relations between Nairobi and Tehran.
On the economic front, the envoy acknowledged that a prolonged war could disrupt global trade and energy supplies.
He referred to the strategic Strait of Hormuz, a vital corridor for global oil shipments, saying Iran continues to monitor the waterway but has not closed it.
He said Tehran does not intend to interrupt the flow of essential commodities, including energy exports bound for African markets, even as tensions remain high.
President Ruto on Monday condemned the widening conflict, warning that its regionalisation poses a grave threat to international peace and security.
In a statement, he called for urgent multi-stakeholder engagement to prevent further escalation and underscored the importance of multilateral institutions in resolving the crisis.
“The regionalisation of this conflict poses a grave threat to international peace and security. At this defining and perilous moment in global history, longstanding multilateral institutions remain indispensable frameworks for the resolution of the current crisis in the Middle East,” President Ruto said.
The crisis intensified after airstrikes that Iran says killed its Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, along with several senior officials. The strikes triggered retaliatory missile and drone attacks across the region.
United States President Donald Trump has said he remains open to talks with remaining Iranian leaders, even as hostilities continue. Iran has maintained that it will respond to what it calls aggression while rejecting negotiations under pressure.
As global powers exchange accusations and mobilise forces, Kenya has positioned itself on the side of dialogue and restraint.
For now, Tehran insists East Africa is outside the reach of its missile systems, but Nairobi continues to monitor developments closely amid growing uncertainty in the Middle East.
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