An Iranian delegation, led by President Hassan Rouhani, arrived in
Moscow on Monday for negotiations with their Russian counterparts. Russia and
Iran are allies in the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, and the ongoing
negotiations between the Russian and Iranian leadership may be characterized as
a peak of their mutual diplomatic activities in the first quarter of 2017.
Earlier this year, the Russian leadership had held consultations and
meetings with almost all external and internal players in the Middle East, clarifying
their positions towards the situation in Syria. March developments have shown
that the many sides have not reached a seamless consensus over the conflict.
Furthermore, some positions and opinions became increasingly divergent.
Turkey and Israel expanded their support to militant groups and
increased their own military involvement in the conflict. This situation forces
Moscow and Tehran to adjust their plans for the spring-summer campaign of 2017.
Besides this, Russia and Iran have a broad polıtıcal agenda to discuss.
The main reason behind the Russian-Iranian alliance in Syria is a joint
concern over security threats from terrorist groups and geopolitical
competitors using terrorist groups and western controlled, surrogate regimes
for exerting pressure on their perceived opponents.
The current Middle Eastern battleground borders Iran, is located
approximately 700 km from the borders of the Russian Federation, and only 450
km from the borders of the former USSR. Syria and Iraq are traditional targets
of manipulation by the more powerful and influential players of the globalist
international establishment.
Some experts believe that these, once well-known external players,
sought to acquire control over the region in several steps, implementing
several “controlled chaos” approaches. New types of quasi-state terrorist
structures, like ISIS, appeared because of these experiments, which had been
enacted in the region, or as a result of a gross dereliction of duty.
Regardless, this growing threat of highly organized and ideologically motivated
Sunni terrorism led to the creation of the Iranian-Russian military alliance.
However, Moscow and Tehran could have different approaches on the
operational level. They have different attitudes towards the retention of power
by President Bashar al-Assad. Iran stands for maintaining the current status
quo while Russia does not rule out a creation of a coalition government
representing the interests of different Syrian ethnic and religious groups.
Moscow and Tehran have different negotiability in the case of working
with other regional players, including Turkey, Israel, Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
This situation is determined by a number of ethnic, religious and historical
factors. There is a notable difference in the level of pressure that Moscow and
Tehran could face from global players.
Russia is more vulnerable to various types of pressure than Iran,
because of its role in world politics, its ample geographic territory,
democratic political system, the multi-ethnic and multi-religious structure of
its population, and its involvement in other key conflicts.
Nonetheless, these differences are negotiable and do not influence the
general nature of the military and political cooperation between the two
powers.
If we want to understand the Iranian and Russian interests in the
region, we should attempt a forecast, characterizing the aims and objectives
that each side has in 2017.
In diplomatic terms, Russia will likely continue to try to align its
policy of solving the Syrian conflict with that of the United States. In
particular, Moscow will use opportunities opened through their strategic
cooperation with the Kurds. Russia will continue to work with Ankara in order
to decrease, if not cease, the flow of arms and munitions from Turkey to the
various militant groups in the Syrian province of Idlib.
An important issue is the need to separate pro-Turkish militant groups
from al-Qaeda-linked organizations. Concerning the Kurdish issue, Russia will
contribute to any efforts that create and strengthen confidence and trust between
the Damascus government and the Kurdish leadership. The goal is to get a joint
vision of the post-war political order in Syria that includes the interests of
the Kurds.
This must lead to setting up a de-facto alliance between pro-government
and Kurdish forces. Russia will also work to expand its role as a mediator in
other Middle Eastern conflicts, such as those in Iraq, Palestine and Yemen.
This will result in increasing influence on Israel, preventing it from
conducting unilateral military actions against Damascus, or at least limiting
them.
In military terms, Russia has the following goals for 2017:
- decisive defeat
of ISIS;
- developing
its own military infrastructure at the facilities in Tartus and the
Khmeimim Air Base;
- strengthening
of the Syrian Armed Forces;
- limiting US
expansion in Syria via the expansion of the zone of Syrian government
forces’ military operations in the provinces of Raqqah and Deir Ezzor;
- limiting
Turkish military expansion and continued development of relations with the
Kurds.
In turn, Tehran will continue its diplomatic efforts aimed at
strengthening of pro-Iranian forces in Syria, including the Assad regime, as a
key component of the Shia Crescent. Iran will also focus its efforts on the he
stabilization of Iraq, led by the Shia government and defended by the
predominantly Shia military forces. Tehran will adopt all possible measures to
counteract the actions of the Gulf monarchies, and as a result, those of the
United States and Israel, in Yemen, by supporting the Houthis.
Within the framework of the Arab-Israeli confrontation, Iran will
further seek to depict itself as the main frontline power working in the
interests of the Palestinians. Tehran will contribute military and diplomatic
efforts to strengthening the influence of Hezbollah in the region and to assist
Hezbollah in gaining international, legal recognition as a legitimate political
and military force in the region.
Economic isolation is a major obstacle for Tehran. The Trump
administration has intensified cooperation with Israel and sees Iran as a key
threat to both the US and Israeli interests in the region. This political
reality does not bode well for the chances that sanctions on Iran will be
wholly lifted in the near future. Meanwhile, Iranian-EU relations pursue
another agenda, and here Tehran could expect an economic breakthrough.
As for Iranian military goals in 2017 in the region, they consist of:
- decisive defeat
of ISIS;
- disintegration
of radical Sunni opposition groups in the regions crucial for the survival
of the Damascus regime, especially in the Damascus countryside, in the
provinces of Homs and Daraa. At the least, Iran will be striving to push
these groups to relocate to the province of Idlib;
- strengthening
of pro-government forces in Syria with special attention to strengthening
of Shia and pro-Iranian military formations in the Syrian Armed Forces;
- development
of Hezbollah’s infrastructure in Syria;
- development
of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps’ facilities in Syria.
Thus, we can see that Russia and Iran have joint military goals, and at
least there are no irreconcilable differences. As to the political and
diplomatic agenda in general, the situation is relatively the same; however,
there could be some variance.
These differences could appear as a result of different levels of vision
of the situation in the region. Iran is a regional player with its own
historical agenda, while Russia is a supra-regional player with some links to
the region. Economic and energy factors could also play a role.
This is why the alliance has to operate in close contact with one
another and to respond swiftly to challenges as they materialize. Both sides
have to clarify their own vital interests in good faith, to exchange views, and
to develop a pragmatic, joint approach in the sphere of regional security.
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