Rewiring Eurasia: Mr. Patrushev Goes to Tehran
PEPE ESCOBAR • NOVEMBER
10, 2022
https://www.unz.com/pescobar/rewiring-eurasia-mr-patrushev-goes-to-tehran/
Two guys are hanging out in a cozy room in Tehran with
a tantalizing new map of the world in the background.
Nothing to see here? On the contrary. These two
Eurasian security giants are no less than the – unusually relaxed – Russian
Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev and Ali Shamkhani, the Secretary
of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council.
And why are they so relaxed? Because the future
prospects revolving around the main theme of their conversation – the
Russia-Iran strategic partnership – could not be more exciting.
This was a very serious business affair: an official
visit, at the invitation of Shamkhani.
Patrushev was in Tehran on the exact same day that
Russian Minister of Defense Sergey Shoigu – following a recommendation from
General Sergey Surovikin, the overall commander of the Special Military
Operation – ordered a Russian retreat from Kherson.
Patrushev knew it for days – so he had no problem stepping on a plane to take care of business in Tehran. After all, the Kherson
drama is part of the Patrushev negotiations with US National Security Advisor
Jake Sullivan on Ukraine, which has been going on for weeks, with Saudi Arabia
as an eventual go-between.
Besides Ukraine, the two discussed “information
security, as well as measures to counter interference in the internal affairs
of both countries by western special services,” according to a report by
Russia’s TASS news agency.
Both countries, as we know, are particular targets of
western information warfare and sabotage, with Iran currently the focus of one
of these no-holds-barred, foreign-backed, destabilization campaigns.
Patrushev was officially received by Iranian President
Ebrahim Raisi, who went straight to the point: “The cooperation of independent
countries is the strongest response to the sanctions and destabilization
policies of the US and its allies.”
Patrushev, for his part, assured Raisi that for the
Russian Federation, strategic relations with Iran are essential for Russian
national security.
So that goes way beyond Geranium-2 kamikaze drones –
the Russian cousins of the Shahed-136 – wreaking havoc on the Ukrainian
battlefield. This, by the way, elicited a direct mention later on by
Shamkhani: “Iran welcomes a peaceful settlement in Ukraine and is in favor of
peace based on dialogue between Moscow and Kiev.”
Patrushev and Shamkhani of course discussed security
issues and the proverbial “cooperation in the international arena.” But what
may be more significant is that the Russian delegation included officials from
several key economic agencies.
There were no leaks – but that suggests serious
economic connectivity remains at the heart of the strategic partnership between
the two top-sanctioned nations in Eurasia.
Key in the discussions was the Iranian focus on the fast
expansion of bilateral trade in national currencies – ruble and rial. That
happens to be at the center of the drive by both the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO) and BRICS towards multipolarity. Iran is now a full SCO
member – the only West Asian nation to be part of the Asian strategic behemoth
– and will apply to become part of BRICS+.
Have swap, will travel
The Patrushev-Shamkhani get-together happened ahead of
the signing, next month, of a whopping $40 billion energy deal with Gazprom, as
previously announced by Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Mahdi Safari.
The National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) has already
clinched an initial $6.5 billion deal. All that revolves around developing two gas deposits and six oilfields; swaps in natural gas and oil products;
LNG projects; and building more gas pipelines.
Last month, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Aleksandr
Novak announced a swap of 5 million tons of oil and 10 billion cubic meters of
gas, to be finished by the end of 2022. And he confirmed that “the amount of
Russian investment in Iran’s oil fields will increase.”
Barter of course is ideal for Moscow and Tehran to
jointly bypass interminably problematic sanctions and payment settlement issues
– linked to the western financial system. On top of it, Russia and Iran are
able to invest in direct trade links via the Caspian Sea.
At the recent Conference on Interaction and Confidence
Building Measures in Asia (CICA) summit in Astana, Kazakhstan, Raisi forcefully
proposed that a successful “new Asia” must necessarily develop an endogenous
model for independent states.
As an SCO member, and playing a very important role,
alongside Russia and India, in the International North-South Transportation
Corridor (INSTC), Raisi is positioning Iran in a key vector of multilateralism.
Since Tehran entered the SCO, cooperation with both
Russia and China, predictably, is on overdrive. Patrushev’s visit is part of
that process. Tehran is leaving behind decades of Iranophobia and every
possible declination of American “maximum pressure” – from sanctions to
attempts at color revolution – to dynamically connect across Eurasia.
BRI, SCO, INSTC
Iran is a key Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) partner
for China’s grand infrastructure project to connect Eurasia via road, sea, and
train. In parallel, the multimodal Russian-led INSTC is essential to promote
trade between the Indian subcontinent and Central Asia – at the same time
solidifying Russia’s presence in the South Caucasus and the Caspian Sea region.
Iran and India have committed to offering part of Chabahar port in Iran to Central Asian nations, with access to
exclusive economic zones.
At the recent SCO summit in Samarkand, both Russia and
China made it quite clear – especially for the collective west – that Iran
is no longer going
to be treated as a pariah state.
So it is no wonder Iran is entering a new
business era with all members of the SCO under the sign of an emerging
financial order being designed mostly by Russia, China, and India. As far as
strategic partnerships go, the ties between Russia and India (President
Narendra Modi called it an unbreakable friendship) are as strong as those
between Russia and China. And when it comes to Russia, that’s what Iran is
aiming at.
The Patrushev-Shamkhani strategic meeting will hurl
western hysteria to unseen levels – as it completely smashes Iranophobia and
Russophobia in one fell swoop. Iran as a close ally is an unparalleled
strategic asset for Russia in the drive towards multipolarity.
Iran and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) are
already negotiating a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) in parallel to those swaps
involving Russian oil. The west’s reliance on the SWIFT banking messaging
system hardly makes any difference to Russia and Iran. The Global South is
watching it closely, especially in Iran’s neighborhood where oil is commonly
traded in US dollars.
It is starting to become clear to anyone in the west
with an IQ above room temperature that the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action
(JCPOA, or Iran nuclear deal), in the end, does not matter anymore. Iran’s
future is directly connected to the success of three of the BRICS: Russia,
China, and India. Iran itself may soon become a BRICS+ member.
There’s more: Iran is even becoming a role model for
the Persian Gulf: witness the lengthy queue of regional states aspiring toward
gaining SCO membership. The Trumpian “Abraham Accords?” What’s that?
BRICS/SCO/BRI is the only way to go in West Asia today.
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