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The Picture of the Monkey Iran Sent Into Space Will Likely Break Your Heart
Iran claims to have launched this monkey into space. (Photo: Mashregnews.ir via Washington Post)

The Picture of the Monkey Iran Sent Into Space Will Likely Break Your Heart

TEHRAN, Iran (TheBlaze/AP) -- Iran said Monday it has successfully sent a monkey into space, describing the launch as another step toward Tehran's goal of a manned space flight. This news comes after it failed in a similar mission in October 2011.

According to a brief report on state TV, the rocket dubbed Pishgam, or Pioneer in Farsi, reached a height of 120 kilometers (72 miles). The report gave no other details on the timing or location of the launch, but said the monkey safely returned to earth. What it didn't say was how the monkey responded to allegedly being in space. But, really, they didn't need to -- the monkey's face says it all.

Iran claims to have launched this monkey into space. (Photo: Mashregnews.ir via Washington Post)

Still images broadcast on state TV showed a small, gray-tufted monkey presumably being prepared for the flight, including wearing a type of body protection and being strapped tightly into a pod that resembled an infant's car seat.

Watch the AP's report:

The photos draw historical links to the earliest years of the space race in the 1950s when both the U.S. and Soviet Union tested the boundaries of rocket flight with animals on board, including American capsules carrying monkeys and Moscow's crafts holding dogs. Many of the animals on the flights perished because of equipment failure or technology unable to cope with re-entry from orbit.

Here are some photos from the monkeys sent by NASA into space:

Sam, a rhesus monkey sent into space. (Photo: Wikimedia/NASA)

Ham, a chimp sent by NASA into space. (Photo: Wikimedia/NASA)

Iran has long said it seeks to send an astronaut into space as part of its ambitious aerospace program, including plans for a new space center announced last year. In 2010, Iran said it launched an Explorer rocket into space carrying a mouse, a turtle and worms.

The U.S. and its allies worry that technology from the space program could also be used to develop long-range missiles that could potentially be armed with nuclear warheads. Iran denies it seeks atomic weapons and claims it is pursuing nuclear reactors only for energy and medical applications.

Tehran has announced several successful launches of satellites, dating back to 2005 in a joint project with Russia.

The Islamic Republic has not given details of its planned new space facility, but it already has a major satellite launch complex near Semnan, about 200 kilometers (125 miles) east of Tehran. A satellite monitoring facility is located outside Mahdasht, about 70 kilometers (40 miles) west of the Iranian capital.

Iran says it wants to put its own satellites into orbit to monitor natural disasters in the earthquake-prone nation, improve telecommunications and expand military surveillance in the region.

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