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  • Iran's Caucasus Strategy

    IRAN'S CAUCASUS STRATEGY
    by Sergei Markedonov, Political and Military Analysis Institute
    Translated by Elena Leonova

    Source: Izvestia, August 15, 2006, p. 6
    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say Part A (Russia)
    August 16, 2006 Wednesday

    Iran, Russia, and the Caucasus region: past and present; The radical
    Islamist groups that Iran supports all over the world regard Chechnya
    as part of their global jihad, and portray religious extremists in
    the North Caucasus as fighting for their faith. This is the fact that
    makes Tehran-Moscow strategic cooperation problematic.

    Politicians and experts worldwide are now focusing their attention
    on Iran. The second war in Lebanon has demonstrated Iran's increased
    capacities as a participant in the Great Game in the Middle East. As
    Russian Orientalist Georgy Mirsky puts it, "Iran is the only state
    in the world that can be completely satisfied with the current
    situation." Firstly, the war in Lebanon has pushed Iran's nuclear
    program into the background. Secondly, it has demonstrated Tehran's
    ability to use others against its chief geopolitical opponents.

    Meanwhile, Iran's strategy in the Caucasus isn't receiving due
    attention. Iran, like Turkey, is among the oldest participants in the
    Great Game in the Caucasus. In ancient and medieval times, various
    territories of what is now called the Caucasus were controlled by
    Persian monarchs. Between the 16th and 18th centuries, Turkey and Iran
    continually fought for dominance in the Caucasus region. But Iran's
    expulsion from the South and North Caucasus resulted from the Russian
    Empire's policies. Following a series of Russian-Persian wars in the
    late 18th and early 19th centuries, Russia established control over
    Southern Dagestan, Eastern Armenia, and Northern Azerbaijan.

    Even after losing its former influence, however, Iran remained -
    and still remains - an important participant in Caucasus political
    processes.

    Since the break-up of the USSR, Iran has had common borders
    with the new state formations of the South Caucasus, Armenia
    and Azerbaijan, as well as a border sector with the unrecognized
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. But the problem of Iran's presence in
    the Caucasus isn't restricted to geography. To a significant extent,
    the American-Iranian confrontation has been continuing in the South
    Caucasus. The post-Soviet elite in Azerbaijan looks to Turkey (an
    established ally of the Americans and Israel) and the United States.

    Iranian influence in Azerbaijan is not very great. Moreover, relations
    between Azerbaijan and Iran in the 1990s and the present decade have
    been notably conflict-plagued. Azeri leaders have regularly criticized
    Iran for supporting radical Islamists in Azerbaijan and attempting to
    replace the secular system of government with an Islamic state. Another
    sore point in relations between post-Soviet Azerbaijan and Iran is
    the problem of Southern (Iranian) Azerbaijan. All the same, Iran was
    one of the first countries to recognize Azerbaijan's independence as
    a state. Iranian politicians spoke of the need for such a move even
    before the collapse of the USSR.

    In the 1990s, the Iranian Foreign Ministry assisted to some extent in
    establishing Azerbaijan's diplomatic service, as well as Azerbaijan's
    membership of the Organization of the Islamic Conference. Both
    countries took part in establishing the Organization of Caspian
    States. Iran is now one of Azerbaijan's leading economic partners.

    Over the past few years, the escalating American-Iranian confrontation
    has led Baku to take a more balanced position with regard to
    Iran. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has made a visit to Baku
    in 2006.

    Iran's relations with Armenia are developing more successfully.

    Iran's Armenian diaspora (which also has some influence in Yerevan)
    has a significant positive influence on this relationship. Iranian
    Armenians are a loyalist ethnic minority, traditionally enjoying the
    patronage of the Iranian authorities. Despite the Islamic nature of
    its statehood and continual calls for solidarity among all Muslims on
    the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, Iran has shown goodwill to the Armenian
    (Christian) side. Iran declared that it would not take sides in the
    conflict, and expressed commitment to political regulation of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh problem. In 1992-94, Iran played a significant role
    as a mediator in regulating the Armenian-Azeri armed conflict. With
    Iran's help, Armenia essentially gained a corridor to the outside world
    during a blockade on the part of Azerbaijan and Turkey. The Iranian
    media reported the destruction of Armenian khachkars ("cross-stones,"
    medieval carved memorial stones) on the territory of Azerbaijan's
    Nakhichevan (Old Julfa).

    Russian-Iranian relations in the Caucasus region are, as a rule,
    restricted to the Caspian format. Russia, Iran, Azerbaijan,
    Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan agreed in 1997 to establish a new
    legal regimen for the Caspian Sea, accepted by all five states. As
    for the Chechnya problem and the situation in Dagestan, Tehran's
    representatives have made every effort to emphasize that religious
    extremism in the Russian North Causaus is linked not to Shiite Islam,
    but to Salafite (Wahhabi) Islam. In the Islamic world, Iran is regarded
    as a religious and political opponent of Salafite Saudi Arabia. All
    the same, the radical Islamist groups (such as Hezbollah) that Iran
    supports all over the world regard Chechnya as part of their global
    jihad, and portray religious extremists in the North Caucasus as
    fighting for their faith. This is the fact that makes Tehran-Moscow
    strategic cooperation problematic.

    Politicians and experts in South Caucasus countries are now considering
    whether the conflagration of the Middle East conflict will spread to
    the Caucasus region. At present, this prospect seems unlikely. Firstly,
    Iran itself would probably prefer to fight Israel via Hezbollah's
    terrorist network, rather than directly. Secondly, given the chill
    in Israeli-Turkish relations following the Iraq campaign of 2003,
    It's hard to imagine the situation surrounding Israel and Lebanon
    somehow being extended to Armenia and the entire South Caucasus.
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