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  • Containing Iran Helps Putin's Russia

    CONTAINING IRAN HELPS PUTIN'S RUSSIA

    Payvand Iran
    March 26 2014

    By Shireen T. Hunter (source: LobeLog)

    Not long after the outbreak of the crisis over Ukraine and Crimea,
    many observers began asking the following question: what impact
    could renewed Russo-Western tensions have on the fate of the ongoing
    negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program? Will the Russians
    encourage Iran to become more obdurate and change its current and
    more flexible approach to negotiations with the P5+1 countries (the
    US, Britain, France, China, and Russia plus Germany), stop complying
    with sanctions on Iran, or even help it financially and militarily,
    for example by delivering the promised-but-withheld S-300 air defense
    system or even shipping the more advanced S-400?

    Other questions are also important. Notably, what impact has the West's
    treatment of Iran had on Russia's ability to pressure Ukraine and in
    general to regain its influence in independent states of the former
    Soviet Union, including the Caucasus and Central Asia? Indeed, the
    Western policy of containing Iran and excluding it from many regional
    and transnational energy and other schemes has facilitated Russia's
    policy of consolidating its position in the former USSR.

    A major tool that Russia has used in its quest to regain influence
    over its former possessions has been its vast oil and gas reserves.

    This is quite evident in Ukraine's case, where Russia has switched the
    gas spigot on and off as a way of pressuring Kiev. Iran is only second
    to Russia in its gas reserves and could have been an alternative to
    Russia in many countries of the former USSR, including Ukraine. Yet
    the Western policy of preventing any foreign investment in Iran's
    energy sector, coupled with preventing any transfer of Iran's oil
    and gas to Europe via various pipeline routes, has meant that Russia
    has gained an excessive share of the European energy market. Iranian
    gas could have easily been transported to Europe, especially the East
    European countries, through Turkey, Bulgaria and so on. Even Ukraine
    could have satisfied some of its energy needs through Iranian gas.

    The same has been true in the Caucasus. Both Georgia and Armenia
    have wanted more energy cooperation with Iran. However, they were
    discouraged by the West and, in the case of Armenia, also pressured
    by Russia. The result has been their greater vulnerability to Russian
    pressure.

    Meanwhile, preventing any of the Central Asian energy sources to
    pass through Iran, the only country with common land and sea borders
    with these countries (with the exception of Uzbekistan, which is
    a land-locked country), has made it more difficult for countries
    like Georgia to get, for instance, Turkmen gas. In other areas, too,
    excluding Iran from regional energy schemes, and discouraging Central
    Asian and Caucasian countries from cooperating with Iran, has worked
    either in Russia's favor or created opportunities for China.

    Even in the areas of security and conflict-resolution, Iran's exclusion
    and the West's encouraging regional countries to adopt anti-Iran
    policies has had negative effects. This has even given rise to new
    tensions and problems, for instance, between Iran and the Republic of
    Azerbaijan, as well as exacerbated sectarian tensions. For example,
    Azerbaijan's resulting animosity to Iran has led it periodically to
    favor Sunni radical Islamists. Consequently, today Azerbaijan has a
    serious Salafi problem, and sectarian tensions in the country have
    been on the rise.

    The experience described above provides important lessons for Western
    policy towards Iran and regional issues in Central Asia, the Caucasus,
    and South Asia. The first lesson is that a policy of containment on
    several fronts is not practicable, at least not in the long run. For
    twenty years, the US has tried to contain both Russia and Iran in
    these regions and to bar Iran's interaction with these regions,
    while also looking askance at China's progress.

    A second lesson is that excluding Iranian oil and gas from global
    markets inevitably limited Europe's and Central Asia's energy choices,
    making both more vulnerable to Russian pressures since, with the
    exception of Qatar, the Persian Gulf oil giants are not major players
    in the gas market.

    The last and the most important lesson is that the West should
    press forward with negotiations with Iran, toward a satisfactory
    conclusion to the nuclear dispute. This should be followed by lifting
    sanctions, encouraging the return of Western energy companies to Iran,
    and planning new networks of energy transport which would include
    Iran. In the long run, this kind of engagement would also translate
    into better political relations between Iran and the West and produce
    a positive impact on Iran's political evolution and hence issues of
    human rights and other freedoms in Iran.

    With regard to broader regional security issues, the West should
    work with Iran on a case-by-case basis wherever this serves Western
    interests, rather than making all aspects of relations with Iran
    hostage to its stand on the Palestinian question. As shown by the
    example of Afghanistan - where Iran supported US interests in toppling
    the Taliban, only to be deemed part of an Axis of Evil - isolating
    and excluding Iran harms the West as much if not more than it does
    the Islamic Republic. Right now, the only real winner is Vladimir
    Putin's Russia.

    About the Author:

    Shireen T. Hunter is a Visiting Professor at Georgetown University's
    School of Foreign Service. Her latest book is Iran Divided: Historic
    Roots of Iranian Debates on Identity, Culture, and Governance in the
    21st Century (Rowman & Littlefield, forthcoming September 2014).

    http://www.payvand.com/news/14/mar/1150.html
    Content-Type: MESSAGE/RFC822; CHARSET=US-ASCII
    Content-Description:

    MIME-Version: 1.0
    Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
    From: Katia Peltekian
    Subject: Containing Iran Helps Putin's Russia

    Payvand Iran
    March 26 2014



    Containing Iran Helps Putin's Russia

    By Shireen T. Hunter (source: LobeLog)

    Not long after the outbreak of the crisis over Ukraine and Crimea,
    many observers began asking the following question: what impact could
    renewed Russo-Western tensions have on the fate of the ongoing
    negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program? Will the Russians
    encourage Iran to become more obdurate and change its current and more
    flexible approach to negotiations with the P5+1 countries (the US,
    Britain, France, China, and Russia plus Germany), stop complying with
    sanctions on Iran, or even help it financially and militarily, for
    example by delivering the promised-but-withheld S-300 air defense
    system or even shipping the more advanced S-400?

    Other questions are also important. Notably, what impact has the
    West's treatment of Iran had on Russia's ability to pressure Ukraine
    and in general to regain its influence in independent states of the
    former Soviet Union, including the Caucasus and Central Asia? Indeed,
    the Western policy of containing Iran and excluding it from many
    regional and transnational energy and other schemes has facilitated
    Russia's policy of consolidating its position in the former USSR.

    A major tool that Russia has used in its quest to regain influence
    over its former possessions has been its vast oil and gas reserves.
    This is quite evident in Ukraine's case, where Russia has switched the
    gas spigot on and off as a way of pressuring Kiev. Iran is only second
    to Russia in its gas reserves and could have been an alternative to
    Russia in many countries of the former USSR, including Ukraine. Yet
    the Western policy of preventing any foreign investment in Iran's
    energy sector, coupled with preventing any transfer of Iran's oil and
    gas to Europe via various pipeline routes, has meant that Russia has
    gained an excessive share of the European energy market. Iranian gas
    could have easily been transported to Europe, especially the East
    European countries, through Turkey, Bulgaria and so on. Even Ukraine
    could have satisfied some of its energy needs through Iranian gas.

    The same has been true in the Caucasus. Both Georgia and Armenia have
    wanted more energy cooperation with Iran. However, they were
    discouraged by the West and, in the case of Armenia, also pressured by
    Russia. The result has been their greater vulnerability to Russian
    pressure.

    Meanwhile, preventing any of the Central Asian energy sources to pass
    through Iran, the only country with common land and sea borders with
    these countries (with the exception of Uzbekistan, which is a
    land-locked country), has made it more difficult for countries like
    Georgia to get, for instance, Turkmen gas. In other areas, too,
    excluding Iran from regional energy schemes, and discouraging Central
    Asian and Caucasian countries from cooperating with Iran, has worked
    either in Russia's favor or created opportunities for China.

    Even in the areas of security and conflict-resolution, Iran's
    exclusion and the West's encouraging regional countries to adopt
    anti-Iran policies has had negative effects. This has even given rise
    to new tensions and problems, for instance, between Iran and the
    Republic of Azerbaijan, as well as exacerbated sectarian tensions. For
    example, Azerbaijan's resulting animosity to Iran has led it
    periodically to favor Sunni radical Islamists. Consequently, today
    Azerbaijan has a serious Salafi problem, and sectarian tensions in the
    country have been on the rise.

    The experience described above provides important lessons for Western
    policy towards Iran and regional issues in Central Asia, the Caucasus,
    and South Asia. The first lesson is that a policy of containment on
    several fronts is not practicable, at least not in the long run. For
    twenty years, the US has tried to contain both Russia and Iran in
    these regions and to bar Iran's interaction with these regions, while
    also looking askance at China's progress.

    A second lesson is that excluding Iranian oil and gas from global
    markets inevitably limited Europe's and Central Asia's energy choices,
    making both more vulnerable to Russian pressures since, with the
    exception of Qatar, the Persian Gulf oil giants are not major players
    in the gas market.

    The last and the most important lesson is that the West should press
    forward with negotiations with Iran, toward a satisfactory conclusion
    to the nuclear dispute. This should be followed by lifting sanctions,
    encouraging the return of Western energy companies to Iran, and
    planning new networks of energy transport which would include Iran. In
    the long run, this kind of engagement would also translate into better
    political relations between Iran and the West and produce a positive
    impact on Iran's political evolution and hence issues of human rights
    and other freedoms in Iran.

    With regard to broader regional security issues, the West should work
    with Iran on a case-by-case basis wherever this serves Western
    interests, rather than making all aspects of relations with Iran
    hostage to its stand on the Palestinian question. As shown by the
    example of Afghanistan - where Iran supported US interests in toppling
    the Taliban, only to be deemed part of an Axis of Evil - isolating and
    excluding Iran harms the West as much if not more than it does the
    Islamic Republic. Right now, the only real winner is Vladimir Putin's
    Russia.


    About the Author:

    Shireen T. Hunter is a Visiting Professor at Georgetown University's
    School of Foreign Service. Her latest book is Iran Divided: Historic
    Roots of Iranian Debates on Identity, Culture, and Governance in the
    21st Century (Rowman & Littlefield, forthcoming September 2014).

    http://www.payvand.com/news/14/mar/1150.html

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