using the same vernier engines seen on the North Korean KN-10 Musudan. The missile, given the first stage propulsion's brightness, is stabilized only by the "thrust vectorcontrol" system, as clearly seen
https://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/iran/khorramshahr.htm
Musudan.”
The Khorramshahr is likely a derivative of the North Korean Musudan missile. “That missile name has been used exactly once, by the Defense Minister if I recall correctly. He provides no details in September but said the missile would enter production in March. Now, another (presumably different) official told Reuters that the missile was the same type as Iran tested in July. What did Iran test in July?” Lewis said. “At the time, an official told Fox that it was a BM-25, which is the export name that North Korea gave the variant of the Musudan that it sold to Iran. So. If everyone is right—and let's keep in mind that humans are frail things—then the Khorramshahr is a variant of the Musudan family.”
Assuming that Lewis is correct, if Iran possessed a compact nuclear weapon, a Musudan variant could be armed with such a warhead. “All missiles are nuclear capable. The only question is can you make the bomb small enough,” Lewis said. “In this case, no question. The U.S. IC [intelligence community] estimated the range of the Musud
https://nationalinterest.org/blog/t...as-donald-trump-steaming-mad-born-north-19293
يوجد موضوع سابق عن تجربه صاروخ خرمشهر ذكرت فيها ان وصول تقنيه هذا الصاروخ تطور كبير وخطير ولكن خرجت اخبار فيما بعد تقول ان التجربه مزيفه