Lagniappe
Galina
Ivanova:
Warnings
from the Caspian Summit
On October 16, 2007, Russian president Vladimir Putin met with Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and implicitly warned the U.S. not to use a former Soviet
republic to stage an attack on Iran.
At a summit of the five nations that border the inland Caspian
Sea (Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Turkmenistan),
Putin said none of the nations' territory should be used by any
outside countries for use of military force against any nation
in the region. It was am obvious reference to long-standing rumors
that the U.S. has planned to use Azerbaijan, a former Soviet
republic, as a staging ground for any possible military action
against Iran.
Putin,
whose trip to Tehran is the first by a Kremlin leader since
World War II, also warned that energy
pipeline projects
crossing the Caspian could only be implemented if all five nations
that border the Caspian support them. The legal status of the
Caspian — believed to contain the world's third-largest
energy reserves — has been uncertain since the 1991 Soviet
collapse, leading to tension and conflicting claims to seabed
oil deposits. Iran, which shared the Caspian's resources with
the Soviet Union, insists that each coastal nation receive an
equal portion of the seabed. Russia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan
want the division based on the length of each nation's shoreline,
giving Iran a smaller share.
Putin's visit took place despite warnings of a possible assassination
plot and amid hopes that personal diplomacy could help offer
a solution to an international standoff on Iran's nuclear program.
Putin's trip was thrown into doubt when the Kremlin said Sunday
that he had been informed by Russian intelligence services that
suicide attackers might try to kill him in Tehran, but he ignored
the warning.
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini dismissed
reports about the purported assassination plot as disinformation
spread by adversaries hoping to damage the good relations between
Russia and Iran.
Putin has warned the U.S. and other nations against trying to
coerce Iran into reining in its nuclear program and insists peaceful
dialogue is the only way to deal with Iranian defiance of a U.N.
Security Council demand that it suspend uranium enrichment.
Iran's rejection of the council's demand and its previous clandestine
atomic work has fed suspicions in the U.S. and other countries
that Tehran is working to enrich uranium to a purity usable in
nuclear weapons. Iran insists it is only wants less enriched
uranium to fuel nuclear reactors that would generate electricity.
Putin's visit to Tehran is being closely watched for any possible
shifts in Russia's carefully hedged stance in the nuclear standoff.
Even though Russia has shielded Tehran from a U.S. push for
a third round of U.N. sanctions, Iran has voiced annoyance about
Moscow's delays in building a nuclear power plant in the southern
port of Bushehr under a $1 billion contract.
Moscow also has ignored Iranian demands to ship fuel for the
plant, saying it would be delivered only six months before the
Bushehr plant goes on line. The launch date has been delayed
indefinitely amid the payment dispute. Any sign by Putin that
Russia could quickly complete the power plant would embolden
Iran and further cloud Russia's relations with the West.
Galina
Ivanova of Russian Election 2008 blog. Petroleumworld does
not necessarily share these views.
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Petroleumworld
News 10/17/07
Copyright© 2007
Galina Ivanova. All rights reserved.
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