By Henry Srebrnik, [Summerside, PEI] Journal Pioneer
The relationship between Moscow and Tehran
has been converted into a growing strategic partnership.
Since President Donald Trump took office, in
2017, Moscow and Tehran have shared increasingly common bonds:
growing tensions with Washington and a quest to expand spheres
of influence in the Middle East.
The deepening ties were reflected when Putin
flew to Tehran, last November, for talks with Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei and President Hassan Rouhani. “Our co-operation can
isolate America,” Khamenei told Putin, who in turn called the
growing Russian-Iran co-operation “very productive.”
The chief of staff of Russia’s armed forces,
General Valery Gerasimov, also visited Iran for talks with Major
General Mohammad Bagheri, who oversees the Revolutionary Guards
and the regular Iranian Army, Navy, and Air Force.
In April Iranian Rouhani hailed the “very
close” relationship his government has formed with Russia and
touted the alliance. “I’m glad that our relations are developing
every year,” Rouhani said.
“Close relations and cooperation between Iran
and Russia on Syria and peace and security in the region has
been very effective,” he added.
And now that President Donald Trump has
announced that the U.S. is pulling out of the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action, the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran,
they have become even closer. Russia is one of the six
signatories to the agreement. Russian President Vladimir Putin
has expressed his “deep concern” over Washington’s withdrawal.
The Iranian and Russian foreign ministers met
in Moscow not long afterwards. “Unfortunately once again we see
that Washington is trying to revise key international
agreements, this time to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action,
the Jerusalem issue and a number of other agreements,” Russia’s
Sergei Lavrov said. Javad Zarif agreed, of course.
However, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister
Sergei Ryabkov did state that the nuclear deal with Iran could
not be preserved without some concessions from Tehran.
Despite all this, the long-term
sustainability of the Moscow-Tehran alignment remains unclear.
For example, Iran’s use of Syrian territory to create a
permanent transit point for weaponry to Hezbollah has alarmed
Russian policymakers who seek to preserve strong relations with
Israel.
In any case,
Russian-Iranian relations have never run smooth for
long. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Iran was divided
into British and Russian zones of political and economic
influence.
In 1941, during the Second World War, the
Soviet Union and Great Britain invaded Iran. They feared Iran
would join the war on the side of the Axis powers and were
protecting their interests.
These included the oil deposits belonging to
the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and the corridor which allowed the
United States to supply the Soviet Union with military equipment
and materials during the war.
After
the war, Iran saw the Soviet Union as a greater threat than the
western powerst. The Red Army maintained a presence in northern
Iran even after the end of the conflict, and supported the
establishment of two short-lived separatist states.
In late 1945, the so-called Republic of
Mahabad in northwest Iran came into existence, fueled by Kurdish
nationalists. In early 1946, pro-Soviet Iranians proclaimed a
separatist Peoples’ Republic of Azerbaijan.
Soon, an alliance of these two forces,
supported in arms and training by the Soviet Union, engaged in
fighting with Iranian forces, resulting in a total of 2,000
casualties.
Diplomatic pressure on the Soviets by the
United States eventually led to Soviet withdrawal and
dissolution of the separatist Azeri and Kurdish states. The
crisis is seen as one of the early conflicts in the growing cold
war at the time.
To this day, Iranians speak resentfully of
the Soviet occupation. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who became
the supreme leader in 1979, disdained both the U.S. and the
Soviet Union. His defining slogan was “Neither East nor West but
Islamic Republic.”
However, with the end of the Iran-Iraq War in
1988, some Iranian officials sought to improve ties with Moscow
on pragmatic grounds. By the end of the 1990s, Russia had
emerged as Iran’s main conventional arms supplier. In addition,
the two countries shared a strong opposition to Sunni Islamism.
The majority of Russia’s Muslims are Sunni
and countering extremism has been among Putin’s official
policies. Shia Iran shares this concern. So Tehran sided with
Moscow during Chechnya’s separatist struggles in the 1990s.
Still, historically there has been little
love lost between these two countries, and therefore an alliance
can only go so far. This is really a marriage of convenience.
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