
#12
eurasianet.org
March 26, 2002
RUSSIA'S RELATIONS WITH IRAN APPROACH A RECKONING POINT
By Alex Vatanka
Editor's Note: Alex Vatanka is a journalist specializing in Russian and
Central Asian affairs.
Iranian-Russian relations are approaching a reckoning point. In recent
months, Moscow has striven to remain on good terms with both the United States
and Iran, two countries whose own bilateral relations have been marked by
growing hostility. Russian President Vladimir Putin may soon have to make
difficult strategic choices, and he now appears reluctant to do anything that
would disrupt the emerging US-Russian partnership. At the same time, the Russian
leader seems intent on keeping his options open.
The postponement of Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi's visit to
Moscow, originally scheduled for mid February, was the first sign of discord in
Iranian-Russian relations. Kharrazi cited an overcrowded schedule as the reason
for the postponement, but some observers suggest the Iranian foreign minister
put off the visit after Putin declined to schedule a tete-a-tete meeting.
Putin's cagey approach towards Iran hints at the evolving nature of Russia's
foreign policy.
Putin's options are based on calculated risks. Iran has been a major
purchaser of Russian military hardware for almost a decade. Yet, while Russia
surely appreciates the income from Iranian arms sales, Putin evidently believes
that the United States has more potentially to offer.
The Russian leader has a number of reasons for not wanting to alienate the
United States at present. For one, Washington could play a key role in securing
Russian membership in the World Trade Organization. Putin also wants to retain
as much Russian leverage as possible over the ongoing NATO expansion debate.
Good bilateral relations would also improve the chances for stronger arms
control treaties.
Putin has offered unflagging support for the US-led anti-terrorism campaign,
in the face of increasingly vocal domestic opposition. [For background see the
Eurasia Insight archive]. The Russian president is now eager to see whether his
support for the United States since September 11 will pay off with concrete
American concessions. Putin's decisions may be influenced heavily by the outcome
of his scheduled May summit with US President George W. Bush.
While Russia is not prepared to surrender its Iranian ambitions entirely,
bonding with Iran ranks lower on the Russian list of priorities than pleasing
the United States. This dynamic reinforces others that are seriously limiting
the bounds of Russo-Iranian alliance.
The gradual improvement in bilateral relations between Iran and Russia over
the last decade was largely the result of a complex mix of geopolitical
developments. In part it came from Iran's international isolation in the 1980s,
ongoing US-Iranian tension and a Russian desire to secure a larger share of
global military trade. Iran, subject to US-led arms embargoes, needs a reliable
source of weapons and technology. Meanwhile, Russian authorities candidly assert
that arms exports are an economic priority.
Putin has linked arms export revenue to the country's budget for scientific,
engineering and manufacturing jobs and capacity. Indeed, Moscow wants to replace
Britain as the world's second-largest arms exporter by the end of this decade.
Iran remains a significant factor in Russian calculations in this regard.
Accordingly, Iran has ordered an estimated US$4 billion in Russian hardware,
technology and services since 1989 and may soon become the world's third-largest
buyer (after China and India) of Russian military equipment.
Despite this arms trade connection, experts believe Russia and Iran do not
make natural diplomatic partners. The two states have interests that overlap in
a few areas, including shared disdain for Afghanistan's deposed Taliban regime,
and an inherent suspicion of American, Turkish and Pakistani ambitions in
Central Asia.
However, Russian and Iranian objectives are divergent in several key areas,
including the development of energy resources and export routes. Russian and
Iranian diplomats have argued for months over the territorial division of the
Caspian Sea [For background see the Eurasia Insight archives]. In addition, the
two countries have competed over proposed pipeline routes. While Russia and Iran
might initially appear to have a mutual interest in counterbalancing America's
rising power around the Caspian, their own competition for the same clients will
probably block co-ordination of policy between them in the next several years.
Russian geo-strategic aspirations in the Middle East will not necessarily
encourage stronger ties. Moscow had stronger ties with Saddam Hussein's Iraq
than with Iran during the Soviet era, and this dynamic still seems intact. Like
its relationship with Iran, Russia's friendliness to Iraq plays out in economic
terms. Witness the Iraqi government's extensive concessions to Russian energy
and construction firms. In Iran, Russian participation in the energy sector is
minimal and the presence of Russian technicians is mainly limited to those
engaged at the construction of the Bushehr nuclear plant.
Russia and Iran also very often clash on crude oil price forecasts, even
though both states are major oil exporters dependent on oil revenues. Russia has
made it clear that it is interested in gaining more market share, while Iran -
seemingly always hawkish in promoting production cuts to sustain prices - is
looking to bring crude prices back up to the range of US$22-25 per barrel.
Meanwhile, Russian officials have said the country can live with oil prices at
US$18 per barrel or lower. (Iran's state machinery depends more on oil revenues
than Russia's does.) Both states in essence envisage themselves as major global
energy players, and to date there has been more rivalry between them than
collaboration.
So Moscow's relationship with Tehran looks opportunistic rather than
geopolitical. While US-Iranian hostilities persist, Moscow can continue to
pursue its lucrative business dealings with Tehran. However, the flow of Russian
military hardware to Iran in exchange for cash constitutes pretty much the only
natural symbiosis for the two states. Indeed, in the event that the US and Iran
normalize relations, Tehran seems more naturally destined to confront Moscow
than to court it.
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