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ANKARA: Iran To Lead Central Asia

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  • ANKARA: Iran To Lead Central Asia

    IRAN TO LEAD CENTRAL ASIA

    Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
    Aug 15 2007

    This week, Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad kicks off a tour of
    neighboring states in South and Central Asia with a trip that begins
    in Kabul and ends in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, in time to attend the next
    summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), Asia Times
    Online reported.

    With the security deterioration in Afghanistan, openly admitted to by
    that country's President Hamid Karzai on his recent trip to Washington,
    and rising Islamic militancy in the region and in China's western
    autonomous region of Xinjiang, the Islamic Republic of Iran is a
    key regional player that can be counted on by the SCO member states,
    irrespective of China's recent misgivings about Iran's inclusion as
    a full member.

    In Afghanistan, Ahmadinejad will reiterate Iran's good-neighborly
    policy, perhaps much to the chagrin of US President George W Bush,
    who openly disagreed with Karzai's pro-Iran comments at their recent
    joint press conference. With their porous 936-kilometer border, Iran
    and Afghanistan are grappling with a growing menace of drug traffic
    that exacts the lives of hundreds of Iranian law-enforcement agents
    annually, in addition to the deadly resurgence of the Taliban who,
    having regrouped in Pakistan, have stepped up their attacks on the
    Afghan government and US and North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces
    stationed in the war-ravaged country.

    In Turkmenistan, the country's new leader, Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov,
    is playing a balancing act between Iran and Russia, in contrast to his
    predecessor, Sapamurat Niyazov, who was closely aligned with Iran and
    signed a (hitherto undisclosed) military pact. Considered a welcome
    departure from Niyazov's cultic brand of politics, Berdimuhamedov
    is keen on not antagonizing Moscow, tantalizing it with offers of
    marketing his country's abundant gas resources through a pipeline to
    Russia. Already, Turkmenistan has entered an agreement with Iran for
    the transit of its gas to Turkey and Europe.

    Iran and Turkmenistan have similar perspectives on the hitherto
    inconclusive marathon discussions on the division of the Caspian Sea.

    Iran is weary of any undue shift in Turkmenistan's foreign policy in
    Russia's favor at a delicate time when Iran-Russia relations have hit
    a new low as a result of the nuclear row and Russia's appeasement
    of Washington's demand to link the fate of the Russian-made power
    plant in Bushehr to the nuclear crisis. With President Vladimir Putin
    beginning to flex Russian military muscle on Georgia, and through
    a joint military exercise with China, Iran's concerns about a new
    Russian militarism are unmistakable.

    In Uzbekistan, home to a US military base, Iran seeks to enhance
    economic cooperation in part by improving the transportation
    corridor between the two countries. According to Iran's ambassador
    to Uzbekistan, trade between Iran and Uzbekistan in the first nine
    months of 2006 reached US$450 million. About 70 joint ventures and
    representative offices of big Iranian companies are operating in the
    various sectors of the Uzbek economy. Iran is soliciting Tashkent's
    support on Iran's nuclear program, and that is only one of several
    reasons Tehran, always considering Uzbekistan a regional middleweight,
    is keen on cultivating relations.

    In the "near neighbor" Tajikistan, considered close to Iran's heart
    because of various cultural and historical connections, Tehran's aim is
    to build on the progress made as a result of the January visit by the
    Tajik President Imomali Rahmonov, which paved the way for an expansion
    of bilateral ties, eg agreements providing for Iranian assistance for
    several Tajik infrastructure projects, including construction of the
    Sangtuda-2 hydroelectric power station and the Shahristan Tunnel.

    In light of the continuing tensions between and among the Central
    Asian states of Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan over scarce
    water and arable land, Iran is a suitable mediator with a rather
    shining record, seeing how it successfully brokered peace among the
    Tajik warring factions during the mid-1990s. Unfortunately, to this
    date, Iran's conflict-management role, both in Tajikistan and in the
    Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, have remained
    largely unnoticed in the Western media's coverage of Iran.

    In Kazakhstan, Iran seeks to boost its oil and trade relations and to
    do so partly by arranging sub-national, ie, region-to-region relations
    through its Caspian provinces. Kazakhstan has an oil-swap agreement
    with Iran, whereby every year some 1.2 million barrels of oil are
    exported from Aktau, Kazakhstan, to Iran, which then transports this
    oil to the Arab states of the Persian Gulf region.

    Iran's oil companies are active in Kazakh oil activities in the
    Caspian Sea and, barring unforeseen developments, the two countries
    can expand their trade even beyond the US$2 billion reported for 2006.

    Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev has expressed support for Iran's
    peaceful nuclear program and may even push aggressively for Iran's
    inclusion in the SCO, given Kazakhstan's close yet not too close
    relations with both China and Russia. Kazakhstan is averse toward
    SCO's evolution as a Warsaw Treaty-like organization, which is why
    it has "sent a signal to Washington" by not allowing the Chinese
    soldiers participating in the joint exercise to travel to Russia
    through its territory.

    In Kyrgyzstan, after a recent trip by Iran's finance minister promising
    the allocation of Iran's 50 million euros ($66.67 million) credit for
    joint development and industrial projects in Bishkek, Iran is looking
    to expand ties in all domains, as part and parcel of it broader Central
    Asian policy that includes the ambitious plans for a "new Silk Road"
    connecting Iran and China through the region.

    All five Central Asian states and Afghanistan are members of the
    regional Economic Cooperation Organization (ECO), which has been a
    forum for discussion among these states for trade and transportation
    linkages among them. By more organically connecting Afghanistan to
    Central Asia within the scope of its regionalist approach, Iran hopes
    to see a certain geopolitical dividend emerge that may, in fact,
    influence the SCO's approach toward it.

    A timely boost to the hitherto neglected aspect of Ahmadinejad's
    foreign policy, which has been understandably more preoccupied with
    the volatile Persian Gulf and Iraq, his tour of the region will not
    only reinforce Iran's image as a pillar of cooperation and stability,
    it will also indirectly help Iran's Persian Gulf strategy, which has
    met the resistance of Saudi Arabia (boycotting last week's security
    meeting on Iraq held in Damascus).

    After all, Iran can also play transit route for the Arab states of
    Persian Gulf seeking trade and investment in the landlocked Central
    Asian states. That aside, geostrategically speaking, Iran eases
    pressure on itself by getting more breathing space in this newly
    independent region still grappling with the problems of state-making.
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