Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 1 – Russia will
help Iran do an end run around Western sanctions, something that Western
realists can be counted on to blame on the West’s support for Ukraine but in
fact an action that reflects a yet another rejection by Moscow of international
law and its own past commitments.
In today’s “Nezavisimaya gazeta,” Vladimir
Skosyryev says that Western sanctions on the two countries have contributed to “the
rapprochement of [their] positions on the Iranian nuclear program, the war in
Afghanistan, and the problems of the Middle East.” But the most important consequences lie
elsewhere (ng.ru/world/2014-09-01/1_iran.html).
The just-completed visit of Iranian
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif to Moscow has opened the way for “a
significant broadening of trade and economic cooperation by barter” between the
two countries, the Russian journalist says, a development that will undercut
the West’s sanctions on Iran and reduce the chances of reining in Iran’s
nuclear program.
The statements of Javad and his
Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov allow one to concude that “having encountered
with open antagonism from the side of the West, Russia and Iran have decided to
more closely coordinate their actions in the international arena,” even though
the two men did not specify “the parameters of this coordinate precisely.”
Elena Dunayeva, a specialist on Iran
at the Moscow Institute of Oriental Studies, told Shoksyryev that last month,
Moscow and Tehran agreed on a memorandum of mutual understanding and that next
week the two sides would meet in the Iranian capital to work out the details of
that accord. Some 100 Russian businessmen are scheduled to attend.
According to the Moscow scholar, “this
is an effort to advance trade and economic ties [between the two countries] to
a new level,” with Iran selling Russia oil and Russia in a barter exchange
selling Iran goods and services. Then Russia will resell Iranian oil abroad, something that is now possible but might not be if
sanctions on Moscow were broadened.
Also
required for this arrangement to work, Dunayeva says, is the development of new
infrastructure because Iran has exported most of its oil via the Persian Gulf
rather than the Caspian Sea, although it has some capacity in the latter which
could be expanded.
Talks
between the six and Iran about Tehran’s nuclear program have been going on for
eight years. Recently, according to the Russian journalist, the US has “begun
to insist on the introduction of such restrictions on the quantity of enriched
uranium” that Iran can have that Tehran considers “unacceptable.”
Those
American demands were behind the recent criticism of the US by Ayatollah
Hamenei, the supreme leader of the Islamic Republic, and that reaction helps to
explain why Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov said in his press conference with
his Iranian colleague that Moscow opposes the American proposals.
But as
Dunayeva points out, “the Russian position at the talks was always more
pro-Iranian than those of Western countries. Like Beijing, Moscow says that
Iran should be able to keep that part of its nuclear program which is directed
at the development of the peaceful use of atomic energy.”
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