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Iran Gambles Over Georgia's Crisis

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  • Iran Gambles Over Georgia's Crisis

    IRAN GAMBLES OVER GEORGIA'S CRISIS
    By Kaveh L Afrasiabi

    Asia Times Online
    Aug 16, 2008
    Hong Kong

    Georgia is one of Iran's "near neighbors" and as a result of
    geographical proximity and important political and geostrategic
    considerations, the current Russia-Georgia conflict is closely watched
    by Tehran, itself under threat of military action by the US and or
    Israel, which may now feel less constrained about attacking Iran in
    light of Russia's war with Georgia.

    So far, Tehran has not adopted an official position, limiting itself
    to a telephone conference between Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki
    and his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, expressing Iran's desire to
    see a speedy end of the conflict for the sake of "peace and stability
    in the region". Tehran's dailies have likewise refrained from in-depth
    analyses of the crisis and from providing

    editorial perspectives, and the government-owned media have stayed
    clear of any coverage that might raise Moscow's objection.

    Behind Iran's official silence is a combination of factors. These
    range from Iran's common cause with Moscow against expansion of the
    North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), interpreting this crisis
    as a major setback for NATO's "eastward expansion" in light of the
    unabashed pro-West predilections of Tbilisi's government, to Iran's
    sensitivity to Russia's national security concerns. The latter are
    heightened by the US's plans to install anti-missile systems in
    Eastern Europe, not to overlook Iran's concern as not to give the
    Kremlin any ammunition that could be used against it in Tehran's
    standoff over its nuclear program.

    Representing a serious new rift in US-Russia relations, the conflict
    in the Caucasus, paralyzing the UN Security Council and igniting
    Cold War-type rhetoric between the two military superpowers,
    is simultaneously a major distraction from the Iran nuclear
    crisis and may even spell doom for the multilateralist "Iran Six"
    diplomacy. This involves the US, Britain, Russia, France, China
    and Germany in negotiations over Iran's uranium-enrichment program,
    which some believed is aimed at making nuclear weapons.

    Much depends on the scope and duration of the Georgia crisis and,
    yet, there is also the obverse possibility that Moscow, intent on
    polishing its tarnished image - as a rogue power coercing its smaller
    neighbors and violating their territorial sovereignty - may even
    double its efforts on other fronts to compensate for the damage to
    its international standing, given the US's threat of kicking Russia
    out of the Group of Eight.

    As far as Iran is concerned, the Georgia crisis is not confined to
    South Caucasus and has broader implications for region, including
    Central Asia and the Caspian area, that are both positive and
    negative. That is, it is a mixed blessing, one that is both an ominous
    development signaling a new level of Russian militarism as well as a
    crisis of opportunity, to forge closer ties with Russia and enhance
    its chance of membership in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization,
    the grouping dominated by Russia and China.

    Yet, the immediate gains for Iran may not exceed the net losses in the
    long run and Tehran may have blundered by not forcefully criticizing
    Moscow's violation of Georgia's sovereignty. Iran and Georgia have
    strong historical connections: Iran was in possession of Georgia for
    some 400 years until the humiliating defeats at the hands of tsarist
    Russia in the early 19th century, culminating in the Russia-Iran
    Treaties of Gulistan in 1813 and Turkmanchai in 1828. Under these,
    about a third of Iranian territory was ceded to Russia, including
    Georgia and Armenia.

    Then and now, Iran remains weary of Russia's imperial intentions and,
    more recently, this was evident seven years ago when in the aftermath
    of a failed summit on the division of Caspian Sea, the then-president
    Vladimir Putin ordered a massive naval maneuver in the Caspian Sea
    as a stern message to Iran.

    Should Putin, now premier, succeed with his "splendid little war"
    in South Caucasus, Russia's neighbors to the east must expect to
    see more samples of Russian power projection, again a prospect that
    simultaneously entices and yet terrifies Iran and is bound to have
    contradictory policy ramifications for Tehran's decision-makers.

    Thus, on the one hand, no matter how cordial present Iran-Russia
    relations may be, the big neighbor's power and increasing militarism
    impacts Iran's national security calculus and may strengthen the
    arguments of those who are in favor of a nuclear defense strategy.

    On the other hand, there is no doubt Russian Foreign Minister
    Sergei Lavrov's statement that the world "can forget about Georgia's
    territorial integrity" is unacceptable to Tehran, which has recently
    submitted a package of proposals focusing on international cooperation.

    Russia's exercise of power is substantively the same as the US's
    illegal post-September 11, 2001, invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq and,
    naturally, Iran cannot adopt one set of standards for one and another
    for the other, irrespective of Moscow's legitimate grievances about
    the US's and NATO's intentions and actions around it.

    Rather, Tehran must demonstrate consistency with its own foreign policy
    criteria, otherwise its international prestige and regional standing
    will suffer, no matter how the Kremlin may be displeased with a bold,
    yet principled, Iranian stance on this neighboring crisis.

    What is more, whereas Iran during the presidency of Mohammad Khatami
    offered to play a mediating role in the Chechen crisis, today there is
    a conspicuous absence of any similar gesture on Tehran's part. This
    is unfortunate since Iran can indeed play an effective role in
    "third-party" mediation.

    Mediation in international conflicts requires skilled negotiation and
    facilitation of dialogue between the hostile parties and, in this case,
    Iran could take advantage of its impartiality and proximity to the
    warring sides to act as a successful mediator, perhaps in tandem with
    other actors, such as the UN and the OSCE (Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe), in light of past Iran-OSCE collaboration
    with respect to the civil war in Tajikistan and the Armenia-Azerbaijan
    conflict over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Instead of adopting such proactive steps, Tehran has settled for a
    quiet diplomacy, as a passive bystander, thus causing an attrition
    of its image as a regional player, which it can remedy by a timely
    intervention as a mediator in line with its own foreign policy
    principles and standards.

    Russia's action against Georgia violates the UN charter and causes
    collateral damage on the integrity and security of the sovereign
    rights of Russia's other neighbors, including Iran, which a mere half
    a century ago was threatened by partition when the Soviet red army
    refused to leave northern Iran at the end of World War II.

    Clearly, as with the collapse of the Doha rounds of negotiations on
    world trade, the crisis in South Caucasus reflects a serious erosion
    of international law and growing anarchy in international affairs,
    a sliding back toward the Cold War bifurcations and the renewal of
    the big power sphere of influence politics, albeit rationalized as
    Russia's own "Monroe doctrine", precisely when such bifurcations and
    seemingly defunct doctrines and cliches appear a relic of a bygone era.

    The new post-Cold War era still remains a largely unfulfilled premise,
    or rather promise on the part of the big powers, which need to
    give up their propensity to use hard power to pursue their imperial
    intentions. But, old habits die hard and the US's NATO-led intervention
    in Russia's backyard has elicited in essence today's Russia's military
    gambit inside Georgian territory. This is a sobering lesson of how
    that premise still remains simply a potential, a wishful dream.

    Kaveh L Afrasiabi, PhD, is the author of After Khomeini: New Directions
    in Iran's Foreign Policy (Westview Press) and co-author of "Negotiating
    Iran's Nuclear Populism", Brown Journal of World Affairs, Volume XII,
    Issue 2, Summer 2005, with Mustafa Kibaroglu. He also wrote "Keeping
    Iran's nuclear potential latent", Harvard International Review, and is
    author of Iran's Nuclear Program: Debating Facts Versus Fiction. For
    his Wikipedia entry, click here.
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