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#13 - JRL 9043 - JRL Home
Experts Say Russia Will Experience Problems Trying to
Regain Mideast Peace Role
MOSCOW. Jan 30 (Interfax) - Political scientists in Russia think Moscow will
experience serious problems while trying to regain its full- fledged role in the
Middle East settlement.
Konstantin Simonov, general director of the Political Studies Center, said
intensification of Russia's Middle East policy may cause Russia and the United
States' interests to collide.
"In my opinion, this visit and Syrian President Bashar al-Asad's recent visit
to Moscow are linked in a way. Moscow is 'appraising' the Arab leaders who, in
turn, are studying Russian proposals right at the scene," Simonov told Interfax
ahead of new Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas's visit to Moscow, to
begin on Sunday.
"By assisting Arab regimes, Moscow is demonstrating to the West that it is
determined to regain its positions in the Middle East," said Simonov.
"However, the U.S. is not at all interested in Russia's strengthening
positions in this region. The U.S. views the Middle East as nearly the most
important region in its foreign policy. This can be judged from U.S. Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice's decision to pay her first visit in her new capacity
precisely to that region," he said.
"A certain risk exists that rifts will grow between Moscow and Washington,
and the U.S. will start putting spokes in Russia's wheels in the Middle East and
elsewhere in the world," Simonov said.
"This can also be seen from a scandal over rumors that Russia is supposedly
planning to export Iskander-E tactical missiles to Syria. Reaction was the
sharpest in the U.S., not in Israel, and the U.S. State Department hastened to
make an official statement on this score," he said.
President of the Institute of Israel and Middle East Studies Yevgeny
Satanovsky said "it is quite feasible to bring all Palestinian groupings
together at one negotiating table, but there is little hope for a consensus
between them, given strong external pressure."
"There are many other forces, besides the U.S., that are active in this
region: Israel, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and other Islamic countries,"
Satanovsky told Interfax.
"In this situation, Russia's place is in the periphery, in the interests of
Palestine, and we cannot hope that our proposals will be seriously accepted for
the sake of Palestine's future. The fact that Moscow's proposals were mostly
playing into the hands of Palestine, not Israel, is not giving political points
to Russia, since this has strongly undermined its reputation of a mediator in
the settlement process," said Satanovsky.
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