Iran and Russia
have been uneasy allies in the Syrian Civil War, providing
aid to the Assad regime in its attempt to regain control of
the country from jihadist rebels.
Russia is also
attempting to serve as a buffer between the Iranians and
Israelis, who are seemingly on the brink of war inside Syria
– no easy task.
For
now, both Iran and Israel need Russia as a shield between
one another. Moscow is trying to convince the two enemies to
preserve a status quo of moderation: Iran has to restrain
the Shi’ite militia Hezbollah’s provocative actions, and
Israel needs to restrain its assertive responses and
pre-emptive air raids.
Russia
is concerned with the state of relations between Israel and
Iran, “in light of mutual threats and rejection by both
countries,” Russia’s outgoing ambassador to Israel,
Alexander Shein, has stated.
Russia
is preoccupied with finding a comprehensive formula to
keep the parties from feeling endangered. But this is a
tricky tightrope to walk.
As Irina Zvyagelskaya, member of the
Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of
Sciences, put it, “The situation for Russia is difficult as
our country has good relations with Iran and Israel, which
share deep differences.”
The secretary of Russia’s Security Council,
Nikolai Patrushev, met separately on April 24 with his Israeli
and Iranian counterparts, Eytan Ben-David and Ali Shamkhani.
The
meetings were held in the Russian resort town of Sochi, and
Patrushev discussed Middle East developments with the two
officials. He visited Israel
this past January, and reported he had tried to prevent harm
from coming to Iranian installations in Syria.
“What
is important to understand is that the Russians are very
pragmatic players,” Israeli Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman
said recently at the Washington Institute for Near East
Policy. “At the end of the day, they are reasonable guys.”
There is even
a “hotline” between the Russian Khmeimim air base in Syria and
the Israeli Kirya command center in Tel Aviv.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
on May 9 met with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow.
Netanyahu
claimed that he was able to persuade Putin to delay the sale
of advanced weapons, including S-300 missiles, to Syria. It
was Netanyahu’s eighth visit to Moscow in three years. Next to
the United States, Russia is the country to which he travels
most frequently.
Israeli warplanes
struck Iranian targets inside Syria the very next day,
suggesting that Netanyahu may have given Putin advance
notice of the attack.
Also on May 10,
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov met with
Iran’s deputy foreign minister for political affairs, Abbas
Araghchi, in Tehran.
Iranian
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has praised Russia’s
dealings with Israel: “I believe Israeli aggression has been
resisted and will be resisted, and I think it will be best
for everybody to advise them to stop aggression against
others.”
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