Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Iran's Growing Interests And Influence In Central Asia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Iran's Growing Interests And Influence In Central Asia

    IRAN'S GROWING INTERESTS AND INFLUENCE IN CENTRAL ASIA
    Dario Cristiani

    World Politics Review
    http://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/articles/6369/irans-growing-interests-and-influence-in-central-asia
    Sept 10 2010

    In early August, at the fourth trilateral summit between Iran,
    Afghanistan and Tajikistan held in Tehran, Iranian President Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad urged the leaders of the other two countries to join in
    an alliance to counterbalance NATO's growing presence in Central Asia.

    Though any such formal alliance is unlikely, the declaration reflects
    Tehran's desire to play a larger role in Central Asia's regional
    dynamics.

    If Iran has always been geographically part of the regional context
    of Central Asia and the Caucasus, Tehran's geopolitical orientation
    has historically been focused southward, on the Persian Gulf. For more
    than a century, Iranian interests in the area were limited to dealing
    with Russia's -- and later the Soviet Union's -- expansionism. The
    end of the Cold War and the implosion of the Soviet Union opened new
    opportunities on Iran's northern borders, even if Iran remained more
    preoccupied with the need for domestic reconstruction following the
    war with Iraq.

    In the past 15 years, however, Tehran has been particularly active in
    trying to create a deep net of institutional and economic links in the
    region, in part to counter the increasing reach of Turkey, perceived
    as an American proxy, and of Pakistan, historically an enemy of Iran.

    Such an approach has been characterized by the "pragmatism" typical
    of Iran's post-revolutionary leadership. Eschewing the idea of
    exporting revolution, Iran has instead tried to improve ties with all
    the countries of the region, focusing on those with which it shares
    cultural and historical links. This explains the strong attention paid
    by Tehran to Tajikistan and Afghanistan, which represent cornerstones
    of the Iranian strategy in the region. At the same time, a clear
    example of Iran's pragmatism is the close relationship it has forged
    with Armenia, cemented by the common interest of containing Azerbaijan.

    Iran's ultimate goal is to become a technological and economic power
    in the region, and to this end, Tehran is supplementing its cultural
    and historical links with a more resolute economic presence, including
    investments in massive infrastructure projects. These include the
    Anzab tunnel in Tajikistan, built by an Iranian company and financed
    in part by Tehran, as well as railroad and highway construciton in
    western Afghanistan. Central Asia and Afghanistan have also become
    prime targets for Iran's increasingly refined use of soft power.

    Scholarships for students from the Muslim world, economic aid --
    Iran is a leading donor to Afghanistan -- and support for economic
    and cultural projects are all elements of a renewed public diplomacy
    that now plays an important role in Iran's foreign policy.

    One of the main geopolitical paradoxes of the past decade has been
    the outcomes of the American-led wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, where
    in spite of the longstanding hostility between Washington and Tehran,
    Iran has emerged as the main beneficiary. With regard to Afghanistan,
    Iran has historically been the main supporter of the country's Shiite
    groups, perceiving the Taliban as an existential threat. So avoiding
    a Taliban return to power represents one of Tehran's key interests
    in Afghanistan.

    Nevertheless, Tehran faces a strategic dilemma. On one hand, Iran is
    clearly interested in a stable Afghanistan: Iran and Afghanistan are
    linked by a "strategic geography," and problems due to instability
    in one country can easily affect its neighbor. For example, Iran is
    already deeply concerned about drug trafficking, refugee flows and
    crime along its borders with Afghanistan. Only a stable government
    in Kabul can reduce such threats.

    On the other hand, Tehran perceives the longstanding presence of
    American troops at its borders as a strategic threat. Moreover, the
    ability to undermine American interests in Afghanistan can provide
    Tehran with leverage over Washington on other issues, such as the
    confrontation over its nuclear program. As a result, Tehran could
    potentially see an interest in destabilizing Afghanistan in order to
    affect the American military effort there.

    This same unresolved ambiguity in Tehran's approach can also be seen,
    if to a lesser extent, in Iran's relationships with Russia and China.

    Moscow and Beijing have been Tehran's main supporters at the U.N.

    Security Council in countering U.S. efforts to impose stiffened
    sanctions over its nuclear program. However, both still view Iran
    with suspicion. For example, Iran's application for full membership
    in the Shangai Cooperation Organization, a Sino-Russian instrument
    of influence in Central Asia, was recently rejected due to the U.N.

    sanctions targeting the country, leaving Iran with its current
    status as an observer. There were also reports that Russia and China
    blocked an invitation to the Iranian president to this year's summit,
    although Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov denied the claims,
    stating that Ahmadinejad had been invited but decided not to come.

    In short, rivalries and diverging interests on other issues are
    preventing Iran from working with the three main global players
    involved in the region -- the U.S., China and Russia -- toward the
    stabilization of Afghanistan, one of the few global geopolitical
    goals they all share.

    Although for years Tehran's main focus was on its southern borders,
    it has increasingly turned its attention to its northern and
    eastern borders, regions with which it shares geographic, cultural
    and historical ties. As a result, its influence in those areas has
    increased and Tehran is now playing a major political and economic
    role there -- one that can either reduce or exacerbate tensions
    between Iran and the great powers involved in the region.

    Afghanistan -- where Iran is investing significant amounts of money
    and is one of the major diplomatic players determining the country's
    future -- is a prime example. Iran, the U.S., China and Russia --
    along with other countries -- have a common interest in a stable
    Afghanistan free from Taliban rule. The same is true for a variety
    of regional issues. But considerations related to external issues,
    such as the negotiations over Iran's nuclear program or the persistent
    mistrust existing between Iran and these countries -- above all the
    U.S. -- could jeopardize this enormous opportunity for cooperation.

    Dario Cristiani is a doctoral candidate in Middle East and
    Mediterranean studies at King's College, University of London, and
    a freelance political analyst on Mediterranean and global affairs.

    Previously, he has was a teaching fellow in political science and
    comparative politics at the University of Naples "L'Orientale" in
    Italy, and a political analyst with the Power and Interest News Report
    (PINR).




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X