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Armenia-Iran: Neighbors View Energy Development As Promising Area Fo

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  • Armenia-Iran: Neighbors View Energy Development As Promising Area Fo

    ARMENIA-IRAN: NEIGHBORS VIEW ENERGY DEVELOPMENT AS PROMISING AREA FOR COOPERATION
    By Naira Hayrumyan

    ArmeniaNow correspondent
    http://armenianow.com/commentary/analysis/30179/armenia_iran_ahmadinejad
    06.06.11 | 11:45

    A week ago in Tehran, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was
    receiving an Armenian delegation headed by Minister of Energy and
    Natural Resources Armen Movsisyan, and this week the Iranian leader
    himself was expected to visit Armenia.

    (However, the sides, reportedly by mutual agreement, postponed the
    visit and said it would take place at "a mutually agreeable time".)

    At the meeting in Tehran it was noted that energy is the most promising
    areas of cooperation between Iran and Armenia.

    However, judging by the fact that cooperation in the fields of energy
    and communications is developing very slowly, and lucrative investment
    projects remain on paper, experts believe that the visit of the
    Iranian president had been designed more for political purposes to
    prove that not all neighboring countries are unfriendly towards Iran.

    As recently as a few days ago Israeli President Shimon Peres said that
    it was time to encircle Iran with a reliable network of medium-range
    air defense. The United States did not respond to this statement,
    but Moscow sharply stated that there is no evidence that Iran is
    developing a nuclear weapon. "We have no evidence that Iran has made
    a political decision to produce a nuclear bomb," said Russian Foreign
    Minister Sergei Lavrov in an interview with American news agency
    Bloomberg. According to him, one should rely not on "new sanctions
    and threats, but on negotiations, like in any other situation in the
    world today."

    Armenia and Karabakh are perhaps the only neighbors of Iran where
    the West cannot easily deploy a missile defense system. Armenia
    hosts a Russian military base, and Karabakh, which de facto shares
    a 140-kilometer-long border with Iran, is in a shaky political
    situation. On June 25, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev will host a
    summit of the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan and this meeting
    may produce an agreement on basic principles of Karabakh settlement.

    Azerbaijan has already stated that at the initial stage it expects
    Armenian troops to withdraw from Aghdam and Fizuli. And Fizuli
    borders on Iran, which means that peacekeeping or other forces of
    third countries may appear there.

    Perhaps this was one of the reasons for which the Iranian president
    had planned his trip to Armenia - perhaps to convince Armenia to
    resist the pressure.

    Tehran views Armenia as a natural and quite reliable partner, and
    Armenia is also of interest as a country with fairly developed
    relations with both the West and Russia. In conditions of an
    unprecedented rapprochement between Turkey and Russia, Russia's
    ignoring the national interests of Armenia and Iran, Russia's
    cooperation in the military-technical spheres with Turkey and
    Azerbaijan, Armenia and Iran are thrust together, demonstrating their
    desire to establish closer relations, analyst Igor Muradyan believes.

    Turkey has already stated that it would not participate in
    possible sanctions against Iran. Now Armenia will closely watch the
    implementation of Iran's intentions to build a railway that will give
    Iran a pass to the Black Sea through Armenia and Georgia. Iran's
    Deputy Minister of Roads and Transport Reza Pilpayeh noted that
    Iranian builders can construct a railroad from Julfa to the border
    town of Nurduz and from the border to the town of Sisian in Armenia.

    According to Pilpayeh's estimation, the construction of a railway
    till Sisian will require more than $2.5 billion.

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