Iran is claiming that it has a new missile with a range of 900 miles on Wednesday, allowing the weapon to reach nearby US bases within the Middle East and the Gulf states and potential targets within Israel.

This report comes after the eighth round of US-Iranian talks resumed in Vienna regarding the Iran nuclear deal. This was after US President Biden promised to restore the agreement (known officially as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), while gaining opposition from both the Republican and Democrat parties.

Iran’s military chief Mohammad Bagheri and IRGC Aerospace Force Commander Amir Ali Hajizadeh unveiling the “Kheibarshekan” missile at an undisclosed location (IRGC/WANA/Handout/REUTERS via Arab News)

The Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) reported that the new surface-to-surface missile named “Kheibarshekan” (also known as Kheibar Shekan) or “Castle Buster” was unveiled with Chief of Staff of Iranian Armed Forces Major-General Mohammad Bagheri and IRGC Commander of the Aerospace Force Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh in celebration of the 43rd anniversary of the Islamic Revolution in Iran last February 1979, which is the foundations of the modern-day Islamic Iran Government.

The name “Kheibarshekan” was allegedly a homage to the Battle of Kheibar in 628 when Islamic warriors took an oasis located in modern-day Saudi Arabia from Jewish tribes which originally had control over the oasis. Therefore, the missile’s name literally means the Muslim defeat of a Jewish tribe or a Jewish tribe defeated by the Muslims.