An Airbus A321 airliner landed in Tehran yesterday, the first to arrive out of the 200 Western-built aircraft ordered by IranAir following the lifting of sanctions on Iran last year.
“This is a historic moment for Iran, signalling the end of the sanctions era for the country...This is a prelude to the delivery of other aircraft and the renovation of Iran’s ageing air fleet,” state TV said.
Analysts say IranAir flies one of the world’s oldest fleets and has had to rely on smuggled or improvised parts to keep them operational.
Iran, which has not directly purchased a Western-built plane in nearly 40 years, has ordered 100 airliners from Airbus, 80 from Boeing and 20 turboprop aircraft from Toulouse-based ATR, which is jointly owned by Airbus and Italy’s Leonardo Finmeccanica.
The one exception was the sale of a plane to replace an Airbus jet shot down by the US Navy in 1988.
The arrival of the Airbus 321 yesterday comes just over a week before the January 20 inauguration of US President-elect Donald Trump, who is opposed to the deal struck by Western powers in 2015, which lifted sanctions against Iran in return for curbs on the country’s nuclear activities.
Republicans in the US Congress have also objected to the pact, which was signed by the US, Britain, Russia, France, China, Germany and Iran.
Iran’s pragmatist president Hassan Rouhani’s success in ending international sanctions by reaching the deal has also intensified a power struggle among the country’s faction-ridden elite, who have criticised the deal for a lack of tangible economic benefits since sanctions were lifted.
“This (aircraft) delivery was very crucial...especially the timing of it. Now people can see the result of lifting sanctions,” a senior Iranian official told Reuters on condition of anonymity. “It will increase Rouhani’s popularity...and his chances for re-election in May.”
IranAir chairman Farhad Parvaresh said in France on Wednesday in taking delivery of the Airbus plane that he hoped the US would not block the agreement.
Both Airbus and Boeing needed US export licences to deliver the jets because of the number of US parts they contain.
Both have received licences, but Boeing needs to have the majority extended due to the lengthy delivery period and analysts expect it to point to the Airbus delivery in order to press its case.
“Everything has been done according to the international regulations and rules up to now. We hope that nothing special happens to end this contract,” Parvaresh told reporters on Wednesday.


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