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Iran Expanding Ties With Central Asian States To Counterbalance USGe

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  • Iran Expanding Ties With Central Asian States To Counterbalance USGe

    IRAN EXPANDING TIES WITH CENTRAL ASIAN STATES TO COUNTERBALANCE US GEOPOLITICAL PRESSURE
    Joshua Kucera

    EurasiaNet, NY
    April 13 2006

    In an effort to counter US attempts to geopolitically isolate Iran,
    officials in Tehran are trying to implement an ambitious program
    centering on trade and infrastructure investment in Central Asia and
    the Caucasus, two Iranian experts say.

    Tehran is focusing most of its attention on areas with which Iran has
    strong cultural and historical ties, such as Tajikistan and western
    Afghanistan. But the strategy also involves other countries in the
    former Soviet Union, including Uzbekistan and Armenia. Tehran's aim is
    to create a diffuse patchwork of regional ties and institutions that
    can serve as a counterweight to US geopolitical pressure, according
    to two Iranian academics, Mohsen Milani of the University of South
    Florida, and Abbas Maleki of the International Institute for Caspian
    Studies in Tehran. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The two outlined the Iranian countermoves at an April 5 talk in
    Washington, sponsored by the Central Asia Caucasus Institute at Johns
    Hopkins University.

    Iran's preferred mode of investment is via massive infrastructure
    projects. For instance, Iran is building the Anzab tunnel that will
    connect the northern and southern parts of Tajikistan, and will
    eventually provide a road corridor from China through Central Asia
    to the Persian Gulf. It is also constructing the Sangtudinskaya-II
    hydroelectric plant in Tajikistan as part of a total $700 million
    investment in electricity in that country. [For background see the
    Eurasia Insight archive].

    Iran is also among the leading donors to the reconstruction of
    Afghanistan. It pledged $560 million at the Tokyo donors' conference in
    2002 - all of which is expected to be disbursed by the end of 2006 -
    and promised another $100 million at the London conference held last
    January. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    In 2005, Iran completed the $43 million, 125-km road from the
    Dougharoun region of Iran to Herat, and has announced that it will
    build a 176-km railroad from Iran to Herat. It is also improving its
    own railroad infrastructure with the aim of attracting cargo from
    Russia, China and Central Asia via Iran to ports in the Persian Gulf.

    In 2004, Iran completed the 1000-km Bafq-Mashhad railroad, which cut
    two days off the rail journey from Central Asia to the Persian Gulf.

    Tehran has steadily increased trade in recent years with its regional
    neighbors, in particular Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. In addition,
    Iran is working with Armenia to build a natural gas pipeline. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Speaking at length about the Iranian-Afghan relationship, Milani
    noted that the growing volume of Iranian-Afghan trade - rising from
    $120 million in 2002 to $250 million last year - is enabling Tehran
    and Kabul to sweep political differences under the rug. Milani is
    publishing a paper in the upcoming issue of the Middle East Journal
    on Iran-Afghanistan relations.

    Iran still hosts more than a million Afghan refugees and is the
    destination of a significant amount of Afghanistan's opium output.

    Tehran also is concerned about the Disarmament, Demobilization and
    Reintegration program in Afghanistan, believing that it is sapping
    the power of Iran-friendly Dari-speaking militias. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive]. In addition, Afghan President Hamid
    Karzai has engaged in what Milani characterized a "Pashtunization"
    of the Afghan government, marginalizing Dari speakers, as well as
    representatives of other ethnic groups in Afghanistan. [For background
    see related Eurasia Insight article].

    Iran is now a major source of consumer goods in Afghanistan, and
    Iran-friendly power centers in Kabul are emerging, in particular the
    parliament, which is led by Speaker Yunus Qanooni, an ethnic Tajik.

    Maleki pointed out that Tehran also is keeping quiet about many
    sources of controversy in Central Asia, in particular the 2005 Andijan
    massacre in Uzbekistan, and the continuing US military presence in
    Kyrgyzstan. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. At the
    same time, Iran is active in the Economic Cooperation Organization,
    a trade and investment group that includes all the Central Asian
    countries plus Iran, Turkey and Pakistan.

    Tehran is also an observer to the Shanghai Cooperation Organization,
    a regional security group that aims to provide a counterweight to
    US power in Central Asia. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive].

    Editor's Note: Joshua Kucera is a Washington, DC,-based freelance
    writer who specializes in security issues in Central Asia, the Caucasus
    and the Middle East.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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