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Home Latest News

Tehran, Moscow agree on increasing bilateral trade

byCustoms Today Report
21/07/2015
in Latest News
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TEHRAN: After decades as an isolated rogue state, Iran appears to be finally coming in from the cold. And after decades of pretending to be a partner to the West, Russia has gone rogue.

Tehran and Moscow are essentially swapping places.

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The symmetry is hard to miss. And so are the geopolitical implications of the agreement reached in Vienna to curb Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of crippling international sanctions.

Vladimir Putin said Moscow “welcomes” the agreement, adding that “the world can breathe a sigh of relief.”

The Kremlin, however, may soon be heaving a sigh of despair. Despite being a party to the marathon talks that produced the deal, Moscow has a lot to lose from it.

The first casualty will be Russia’s special relationship with Iran.Moscow has maintained close ties with Tehran, playing up their mutual resentment of the Western-dominated world order. But this will be much harder to do with an Iran that is eager to re-engage with the West.

In a recent commentary for Reuters, Agnia Grigas, author of Beyond Crimea: The New Russian Empire, and Amir Handjani, a Middle East expert, argued that the West now has an opportunity to “decouple the unnatural Iranian-Russian alliance to reign in Moscow’s hegemonic ambitions, as well as bring Iran back into the global economic fold.”

It was indeed Iran’s isolation from the West that drove Tehran into Moscow’s arms. When Russia was in good standing as a member of the G8 group of industrialized nations and had constructive relations with the West, it was able to act as Iran’s principal interlocutor and defender in the international community.

But with Iran about to emerge from its isolation, and Russia quickly becoming an international pariah due to its intervention in Ukraine, the foundation of their relationship looks increasingly shaky.

“The recent Russo-Iranian alliance has been more a marriage of convenience than a genuine partnership,” Grigas and Handjani wrote, noting that Moscow and Tehran have historically had complicated and contentious relations.

“An Iran that is engaged with the West in areas such as energy, trade, and peaceful nuclear power generation would no longer see Russia as protector of its interests.”

And then, of course, there’s the oil and gas. If Iran and Russia’s changing roles in the international community removes the basis for their partnership, the energy markets will provide plenty of room for rivalry.

“Iran is going to be competing in Europe head-on with Russia,” said Ed Morse, head of commodities research at Citigroup told Bloomberg News.

Russia has benefited mightily from Iran’s exclusion from the world energy market.

Iran is the world’s third leading natural gas producer, but — largely due to sanctions — only the 25th leading exporter. And once sanctions are lifted and all that Iranian gas comes online, it will cut dramatically into Russia’s dominance of the European market.

European energy companies are reportedly chomping at the bit to sign deals with Iran. Soon they will get their chance.

And the Brussels’ new get-tough policy with Gazprom, which has long flouted the EU’s antitrust legislation, will get a boost with the alternative of Iranian gas on the market.

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