Iranian space officials announced Jan. 28 that they successfully launched a live monkey into space, inching closer to the Islamic Republicโ€™s goal of a manned mission, according to news reports.

The space capsule, called Pishgam, which means โ€œpioneerโ€ in Farsi, reportedly returned the monkey alive after a suborbital flight to space and back, according to Iranian state-run media.

โ€œThe Islamic Republic of Iran has sent a monkey into space aboard an indigenous bio-capsule as a prelude to sending humans into space,โ€ the Islamic Republic News Agency reported.

Space officials in the country have previously said that they hope to send a human into space by 2020 and put an astronaut on the Moon by 2025.

Iranโ€™s defense minister, Ahmad Vahidi, told state TV that the success โ€œpaves the way for other moves,โ€ according to Agence-France Presse.

โ€œThe monkey which was sent in this launch landed safely and alive and this is a big step for our experts and scientists,โ€ Vahidi said.

Iran failed in a 2011 effort to launch a live monkey into space. News reports out of the country at the time did not explain what went wrong, but the plan had been to send a rhesus monkey into orbit atop a Kavoshgar-5 rocket.

Iran has made progress in spaceflight technology in recent years. The country sent its first domestically built satellite into space in February 2009 and launched a Kavoshgar-3 rocket in 2010 that delivered a rat, two turtles and a worm into space. Iran also sent Earth-observing satellites into orbit in 2011 and 2012.

Western critics have expressed concern over the potential military applications of Iranโ€™s rocket program, since boosters developed to reach space could also be used as long-range ballistic missiles. The Islamic Republic has denied such ambitions for its space program.