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  • Russia, Iran set collision course

    Russia, Iran set collision course
    By Sergei Blagov

    Asia Times Online, Hong Kong
    May 26 2004

    MOSCOW - Despite differences between Russia and the United States over
    Tehran's nuclear ambitions, Moscow is still moving toward forging a
    "partnership" with Iran, which has been labeled by US President George
    W Bush as part of an "axis of evil".

    This month Russian President Vladimir Putin met with visiting Iranian
    Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi in Moscow and accepted an invitation
    to visit Tehran this year. Putin assured the Iranian chief diplomat
    that Iran remained Russia's "old and stable partner".

    When US Under Secretary of State for Arms Control John Bolton traveled
    to Moscow shortly afterward, he urged Russia not to supply nuclear
    fuel to Iran's Bushehr reactor until Tehran addressed international
    concerns that Iran might develop a nuclear-weapons program. Bolton
    told journalists in Moscow that "tactical" differences between the
    US and Russia remained over Iran's nuclear ambitions.

    In response, after a meeting with Bolton, the head of Russia's Nuclear
    Power Agency, Alexander Rumyantsev, reiterated that Russia abided
    by international agreements banning the proliferation of nuclear
    technology.

    Russia has long been under fire for its help in building the Bushehr
    nuclear plant on Iran's Persian Gulf coast. The US has insisted that
    the Russian technology could be used to develop nuclear weapons,
    but Moscow and Tehran argue that the plant will only be used for
    civilian purposes. Moscow has brushed off repeated US demands that
    it cancel Bushehr's 1,000-megawatt light-water nuclear-reactor project.

    Russia has said it would freeze construction on the US$1 billion
    Bushehr plant and would not begin delivering fuel for the reactor
    until Iran signed an agreement that would oblige it to return all of
    the spent fuel to Russia for reprocessing and storage. This agreement
    was reported as close to being signed last September, but so far an
    agreement has failed to materialize fully.

    This month Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov announced in Moscow
    that the issue of the return of the spent fuel to Russia had been
    solved. However, he conceded that "commercial" differences with Iran
    over the issue remained.

    Last October, Russia announced a delay for the launch of the Bushehr
    nuclear reactor until 2005 and urged Tehran to improve disclosure of
    its nuclear plans. However, there has been no talk in Moscow about
    dropping the Bushehr project. Last week, Russia's Nuclear Power
    Agency reportedly indicated it would finish a nuclear reactor in
    Iran regardless.

    For years, the Kremlin has resisted US pressure and declined to limit
    ties with Iran. In March 2001, Putin and Iranian President Mohammad
    Khatami signed a cooperation treaty. Subsequently, in October of
    that year, Moscow and Tehran signed framework agreements for $300
    million to $400 million a year of Russian military supplies to Iran,
    including spare parts for Russian-made weapons, new fighter jets and
    possibly air-defense, ground-to-ground and anti-ship systems.

    Apart from attempts to discourage Russia from fueling Iran's nuclear
    ambitions, the US has pursued its efforts to persuade Russia to
    join the US-backed non-proliferation initiative. The hawkish Bolton
    regularly visits Russia for non-proliferation talks. However, last
    week Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Kislyak announced after
    a meeting with Bolton that no agreement had been reached on Russia
    joining the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI).

    Moscow has so far refrained from a clear commitment to join the PSI.
    Russia is the only Group of Eight member that is yet to join the PSI,
    which was announced by Bush last May.

    Apart from the Bushehr project, Russia has other interests in
    Iran. Last Thursday, top railway executives of Russia, Iran and
    Azerbaijan met in Moscow and agreed to build a Kazvin-Resht-Astara
    rail link connecting the three nations. Gennady Fadeyev, head of the
    state-run Russian Railways Co (RZD), pledged to build a $100 million,
    340-kilometer link connecting Russia to the Persian Gulf via Azerbaijan
    and Iran. Fadeyev claimed that the link could funnel up to 20 million
    tons of freight to India and Pakistan.

    Russia and Iran have long discussed the restoration of a rail link
    between the two countries as a viable alternative to Red Sea routes.
    This alternative transport link from Asia to Europe - from Mumbai to
    the Caspian port of Olya in the Astrakhan region via Bandar Abbas in
    Iran - is expected to bring Russia billions of dollars in revenues.

    Russia, India and Iran signed an agreement on the development of this
    so-called North-South Corridor in September 2000. Russia estimates that
    the link could become a rival of the Suez Canal. Russia estimates that
    annual trade turnover through the corridor could reach $10 billion
    per year, with Russia and Iran becoming the main beneficiaries.

    Meanwhile, Moscow's "partnership" with Tehran could prove double-edged,
    notably after Iran clinched a controversial gas deal with Russia's sole
    ally in the volatile Trans-Caucasus region, Armenia. In mid-May, Iran's
    minister of oil, Bijan Namdar Zanganeh, traveled to Armenia and signed
    an agreement on the construction of a 114km Iran-Armenia gas pipeline
    that would cost $120 million. Iran reportedly agreed to supply 1.27
    trillion cubic feet (36 billion cubic meters) to Armenia from 2007-27.

    The Iran-Armenia pipeline could also be extended through
    Georgia to Ukraine and on to the European Union. The
    Iran-Armenia-Georgia-Ukraine-Europe gas pipeline, with a 550km
    underwater section from the Georgian port of Supsa to the Crimean
    town of Feodosia, has been estimated to cost $5 billion. The planned
    gas supply would amount to 2.12 trillion cubic feet (60 billion cubic
    meters) per annum, including 353 billion cubic feet (10 billion cubic
    meters) for Ukraine.

    Russia has been wary that the extended pipeline could be used to funnel
    Iranian gas to European markets. It could also allow Turkmenistan to
    circumvent Russia's gas-pipeline network. However, Armenia is yet to
    make a decision on the extended pipeline.

    Armenia is traditionally Russia's closest partner in the Caucasus.
    Sandwiched among hostile Azerbaijan and Turkey and volatile Georgia,
    Armenia has little option but to remain a supporter of Russia's
    geopolitical moves in the Caucasus. However, some divergent interests
    have emerged recently, notably Armenia's aspirations to limit its
    dependence on Russian energy supplies by building a gas pipeline from
    Iran to Europe. Therefore, Russia's "partnership" with Iran could
    have its limits after all, and not because of the United States.

    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/FE27Ag01.html
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