Iran reportedly bought an in-orbit Chinese satellite to target US military sites in the Middle East — purchase agreement included ongoing ground control services based in China

Satellite
(Image credit: Getty)

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) Aerospace Force reportedly acquired a Chinese Earth-observation satellite in late 2024 after it was already launched into space from China, in what was called an “in-orbit delivery” deal. According to the Financial Times, leaked Iranian documents showed that it bought the TEE-01B Earth observation satellite in 2024 from Earth Eye Co., a Chinese commercial aerospace company “dedicated to advancing the export of China’s commercial space industry,” while it also received access to commercial ground stations located in China through Emposat, a satellite ground station services provider that allowed the IRGC to control its satellite remotely.

This gave the country the ability to capture satellite imagery at a resolution of 0.5 meters. By comparison, Iran’s existing Noor-3 satellite was only capable of a 5-meter resolution, while the older Noor-2 delivered 12 to 15 meters. The TEE-01B’s higher resolution allowed the IRGC to identify individual aircraft and ground vehicles, as well as use it to see infrastructure details. In fact, the leaked data included logs that showed the satellite capturing images of various U.S. bases in the Middle East, with some of them being hit by drone strikes soon after.

Earth Eye Co. is not a defense contractor, with the company website saying that its satellites are built for “agriculture, ocean monitoring, emergency management, natural resource supervision, and municipal transportation.” However, the remote sensing data that it gathers for civilian use can also be deployed for military operations. This dual-use application highlights the grey area between military and civilian hardware applications, especially as this Chinese satellite was used to target Iran’s neighbors — a somewhat sensitive issue for China as it’s the largest buyer of oil from the Middle East and is also one of the largest trading partners of the region.

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Even though both Earth Eye Co. and Emposat are commercial companies within China, many of their founders and senior executives have ties to the country’s military-industrial complex. Furthermore, the Chinese space industry is usually tightly controlled by Beijing. “There is no way that any Chinese company could do something like launch a satellite without somebody in the administration giving it the go-ahead,” one former senior Western intelligence official told FT. “I think it’s been very clear for some time that China has been helping the Iranians with intelligence, but trying to keep the hand of government hidden.”

In response to rumors that China is providing weapons and other military supplies to Tehran, U.S. President Donald Trump said that he wrote a letter to Chinese President Xi Jinping to dissuade Beijing from providing weapons to Iran. “I wrote him a letter asking him not to do that, and he wrote me a letter saying that, essentially, he’s not doing that,” Trump said on an interview with Fox Business News.

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Jowi Morales
Contributing Writer

Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.

  • usertests
    Still, neither Tel Aviv nor Washington can strike Emposat’s ground stations located deep within China without seriously expanding the scope of the regional war.
    Now that's an understatement.
    Reply
  • Zaranthos
    It's trivial to blind or disable a satellite, at least for the more advanced global powers that generally don't share their best tech with anyone else.

    We should all hope that none of them ever unleash the full capabilities of any of it on a large scale unrestrained because it wouldn't be pretty. If warfare ever returned to what it used to be without the more modern global societal restraints it's likely nobody could conceive the devastation that could be unleashed. I don't count Iran in the global power category at all, at best they were a regional power, but more like the neighborhood bully, in my opinion.
    Reply
  • thesyndrome
    You mean two countries that feel slighted by the US have decided to work together against the US? I'm shocked, SHOCKED!
    .....Well, not *that* shocked
    Reply
  • SmokyBarnable
    Excellent news.
    Reply
  • 3ogdy
    "Iran reportedly bought..."
    You mean Iran simply got access to Chinese technology again, without paying a dime.
    Reply
  • USAFRet
    As expected, this has gone far too deep into Offtopic Land.
    As such, closed.
    Reply