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Pakistan: Tehran's diplomatic offensive to end isolation

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  • Pakistan: Tehran's diplomatic offensive to end isolation

    Daily Times, Pakistan
    Aug 8 2004

    Tehran's diplomatic offensive to end isolation

    The Iranian president, Mohammad Khatami, was in the trans-Caucasian
    state of Azerbaijan two days ago, the first visit by an Iranian head
    of state to Baku since 1993. The two sides have had strained
    relations on a number of issues, not least access to oil in the
    Caspian Sea. The Azeris are Shia Muslims and share the faith with
    Iran but they are ethnic Turkic and are closer to Turkey on that
    basis. As part of the Soviet Union until December 1991, they were the
    most secular and westernised of all the Muslim states. They also have
    a historic feud with Armenia, another Soviet republic which is now an
    independent state. That dispute in the nineties spilled over into war
    on the issue of the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan was
    defeated. Turkey could not do much on the side of the Azeris because
    of its own agreement with Moscow to stay out of the area. At the
    time, Iran and Turkey were also vying with each other for influence
    in the Central Asian republics.

    Tehran finds itself increasingly besieged by the Americans. Mr
    Khatami's Baku visit therefore appears to be the beginning of a
    diplomatic offensive in the region to re-establish good relations
    with Iran's neighbours. Pakistan-Iran relations have also been
    nose-diving since the first gulf war, the struggle in Afghanistan and
    Iran's growing fondness for India. Recently, Iran, finding itself
    hemmed in by America and the European Union on the nuclear issue,
    implicated Pakistan in the clandestine nuclear programme it is
    running. That created a major embarrassment for Islamabad. Therefore
    Pakistan has reason to be suspicious of Iran. Even so, given the
    contiguity and historical ties, there is every reason for the two
    countries to have good relations. However, the onus of taking the
    initiative to that end lies with Iran, not least because Tehran has
    involved India into this equation and is also embarked on a nuclear
    programme, which is a source of worry for the world and embarrassment
    for Pakistan.

    An additional problem with Iran is the internal struggle there
    between the hard-liners and the reformers, with most Iranians sick of
    the hard-liners for refusing to open up and disappointed with the
    reformers for being unable to deliver. It is difficult to figure out
    who Pakistan should talk to. Also, if Iran is trying to reach out now
    to end its isolation and keep America at bay on the nuclear question,
    then Pakistan may not have much to give Tehran because the latter's
    nuclear capability is a cause of concern for Pakistan too. *

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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