Iran’s Power Politics: A Warning To Moscow
Posted by Scott Lucas in Europe & Russia, Middle East & IranThe Latest from Iran (10 October): Karroubi is Back
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In the aftermath of the Geneva talks on Iran’s nuclear programme, there are clear signals that Tehran wants some re-assurance of Russia’s support. Moscow may have backed away from its initial signal, after the revelation of the second enrichment plant, that it might accept tougher sanctions, but there is far more in play, as Iran tipped off in its high-profile references at Geneva to “regional issues”. Beyond the headlines on “missile defense”, positions from the Middle East to the Persian Gulf to the Caspian Basin are being contested.
These two articles from Iran Review— the first by Dr Hassan Behestipour on the Iran-Russia-US triangle and the second by Behzad Ahmadi Lafuraki on the threat of Russia’s accommodation with NATO — are far more than academic exercises in making the point:
Iran and Washington’s Game with Moscow
Dr. Hassan Beheshtipour
After Obama was elected president in February 2009, relations between Russia and the United States somehow changed after two years that had passed since the Munich meeting. The new administration had given up past conservative policies and Obama paid a visit to Moscow in July 2009. In the new era, Washington ignores repression of Chechens by Russia, which in turn, helps the United States in Afghanistan.
Tags: Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Andrei Terekhov, Behzad Ahmadi Lafuraki, Dmitri Medvedev, Hassan Behestipour, Iran, Iran Review, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, missile defense, NATO, Nezavisimaia Gazeta, Russia, Sergei Lavrov, Vladimir Eskusirov
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