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  • Foreign Weapons, Iranian Threats: Caspian Basin in Iran's Gunsights

    FOREIGN WEAPONS, IRANIAN THREATS: THE CASPIAN BASIN IN IRAN'S GUNSIGHTS

    CENTRAL ASIA - CAUCASUS ANALYST
    Wednesday / April 19, 2006

    By Stephen Blank

    As the tension surrounding Iran grows, the possibility of military
    action in and around its territory also grows commensurately. While
    most attention focuses on conflict scenarios in Iran, the Gulf, or the
    Straits of Hormuz because of their strategic significance; a fuller
    assessment cannot and should not neglect the Caspian dimension of this
    crisis. This is because Iran's present capabilities and the possible
    development of a nuclear weapon are ultimately fungible. Although
    today America and Israel are its main enemies and the likely target of
    Iranian scenarios, the Iranian strategic calculus, like every other
    government's, is not immutable for all time. Therefore these
    capabilities could ultimately be targeted on Central Asian, Caucasian
    states, Arab states in and around the Persian Gulf, Russia, or
    Turkey. Turkey is already revising its force structures to deal with
    the possible consequences of Iranian nuclearization.

    BACKGROUND: Although its policies in the Caspian basin have generally
    been circumspect, Iran is not necessarily a status quo power in this
    region. It attacked Azerbaijani oil platforms in 2001 and subsequently
    threatened Kazakh explorations in the Caspian in disputes over who
    owns that sea's waters. Since then, in 2002 the U.S. Central Command
    (USCENTCOM) uncovered intelligence showing that elements of Iran's
    clerical army, the Pasdaran, were secretly providing training and
    logistic support to the al-Qaeda affiliated Islamic Movement of
    Uzbekistan. Iran is also tied to support for radical religious and
    separatist movements in Azerbaijan, and in 2005 the London Sunday
    Telegraph reported that Pasdaran had begun secretly training Chechen
    rebels in sophisticated terror techniques to enable them to carry out
    more effective attacks against Russian forces. These examples
    illustrate the multifarious nature of the geopolitical threats to
    security in this region and Iran's capability to seriously expand
    them. And since the ability of all states and energy producers to
    survive and/or produce that energy is tied to the presence or absence
    of such shocks, the geostrategic situation here is crucial beyond
    Central Asia's borders.

    Iran's threats include the use of conventional or potentially nuclear
    weapons to threaten local governments and to provide what might be
    called extended deterrence for insurgent groups among them whom it
    already has cultivated and supported. Although Iran's conventional
    arsenal pales relative to those of Moscow and Washington; a nuclear
    capability greatly augments its deterrence capability and potentially
    frees it as it did Pakistan to conduct guerrilla campaigns against
    hostile governments in its neighborhood. In its most recent exercises
    conducted in the Straits of Hormuz, named `Holy Prophet', in the first
    week of April 2006, Iran attempted to send Washington a message of its
    capability made up of what has also become habitual Iranian boasting
    about its new conventional capabilities. While virtually every foreign
    analyst dismissed the announcement of new weapons as nothing new or as
    being mainly for domestic and local consumption, the fact remains that
    even if these weapons are not as potent as Iran claims they are,
    possession of them enhances its capabilities in the Caspian Sea as
    well as in the Straits of Hormuz. In those exercises Iran claimed to
    have tested a new radar-invisible, stealth multiple-head ballistic
    missile, Fajr-3 with a range of 1200 Kilometers, the Kowsar land to
    sea anti-ship missile. It also claims to have tested the world's
    fastest torpedo, a rocket-propelled torpedo called the Hoot (whale),
    from which no ship can escape, evidently based on the Russian Shkval,
    and a `super-modern flying boat', possibly a derivation from a Russian
    wing in ground platform (WIG), as well as jets and helicopters.
    Although Iran claims to have made all these new missiles itself, again
    foreign analysts believe that they largely derive from Russian,
    Chinese, or North Korean models or from assistance provided through
    the acquisition of Western technology, not domestic ingenuity.

    IMPLICATIONS: The address of the recent Iranian saber-rattling is
    clear: General Yahya Rahim Safavi, head of the elite Revolutionary
    Guards, said on April 5 that the U.S. must recognize Iran as a big
    regional power. Since Iran's capabilities to attack shipping and
    energy platforms in the Caspian, threaten neighboring governments with
    missiles, and defend against their air attacks are real enough, if
    they were buttressed by nuclear weapons Iran's ability to incite
    mischief in the area would grow enormously. Azerbaijan in particular
    is already increasingly uneasy about what might happen if the United
    States and Iran come to blows. In advance of President Ilham Aliyev's
    U.S. visit in late April, the Azerbaijani media candidly referred to
    perceptions of intense U.S. pressure to join an anti-Iranian alliance
    despite statements by Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov that
    Azerbaijan would not join a coalition against any particular
    power. Nonetheless, Azimov did indicate Baku's concern about Iranian
    activities in the disputed sector of the Caspian Sea. He also made
    clear that Iran's nuclear program as well as the Armenian nuclear
    power reactor evoke serious apprehensions in Azerbaijan.

    At the same time, the Azerbaijani press reports charged that if
    Azerbaijan did ally itself with Washington and allow U.S. forces
    overflight and even limited basing rights there, Iran would probably
    hit it with multiple acts of sabotage and insurgency form within. Iran
    could also invade its air space and strike it with its missiles,
    including its oil industry. Azerbaijan's Minister of National
    Security, Eldar Makhmudov, also charged that Al-Qaeda was seeking to
    recruit local girls to be Shakhids, (martyrs) and carry out suicide
    terrorist operations. It is hardly inconceivable that Iran could also
    recruit terrorists from within Azerbaijan for such purposes based on
    existing or future cells that it develops within the country.

    CONCLUSIONS: Even a cursory assessment of Iran's present capabilities
    makes clear that it does have the means to make a great deal of
    trouble for many South Caucasian and Central Asian governments and
    even for Russia, especially in the North Caucasus. The pressure
    generated by Iran's nuclearization and America's determination to
    prevent it are also narrowing the space for maneuver available to
    local governments. But if Iran were to successfully become a nuclear
    power, their space for maneuver would narrow even further. It is quite
    clear that a nuclear capability, added to Iran's regionally potent and
    growing conventional capability, and its highly developed terrorist
    connections constitutes a considerable threat capability directed
    against all of its neighbors, and not just in the Gulf. This
    development also bears out the old axiom and paradox that nuclear
    capability and deterrence actually in some sense heighten the
    possibility for conventional wars at smaller scales of the spectrum of
    conflict. Iran's growing capabilities and unmitigated belligerence
    highlights the folly of the Russian and Chinese policies of supplying
    it lavishly with weapons and technology. As Russian analysts are now
    coming to realize more than ever before, the capabilities transferred
    to Iran could be used to threaten Moscow's vital interests and
    possibly even Beijing's as well. Whatever the consequences of Iran's
    nuclearization or of the campaign to stop it might be in the Middle
    East and Persian Gulf, they will be no less important insofar as the
    Caspian littoral and Greater Central Asia are concerned.


    AUTHOR'S BIO: Professor Stephen Blank, Strategic Studies Institute,
    U.S. Army War College, Carlisle Barracks, PA. The views expressed here
    do not represent those of the U.S. Army, Defense Dept. or the
    U.S. Government.

    http://www.cacianalyst.org/view_article.php?artic leid=4171
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