http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-russiran4may04,1,413\
4896.story?track=crosspromo&coll=la-headlines-world&ctrack=1&cset=true
<http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-russiran4may04,1,41\
34896.story?track=crosspromo&coll=la-headlines-world&ctrack=1&cset=true>


Russian Bridge to Iran Has Twists
By Alissa J. Rubin and Kim Murphy, Times Staff Writers
May  4, 2006



VIENNA — As the U.N. Security Council meets this week to discuss how
best to stop Iran's march toward nuclear weapons capability, Russia has
the potential to serve as a bridge between the West and the Islamic
Republic. But Moscow's complex motives may make it a difficult partner.

Russia, a permanent member of the council and one that has had close
ties to Middle Eastern countries since the Soviet era, now views the
volatile, oil-rich region as the key to regaining its position as a
world leader, diplomats and analysts say. Moscow also has strong
economic ties to Tehran: Two-way trade topped $2 billion in 2004, and
Iranian officials predicted recently that it would double in coming
years.

This is "a moment of truth for Russia," when the nation will choose
whether to throw its lot with the West or keep the U.S. and its allies
at arm's length, said Radzhab Safarov, director of the Iranian  Studies 
Center in Moscow.

The two Western European permanent members of the council, Britain and
France, share the United States' goal of persuading Iran to halt uranium
enrichment, and they are willing to back sanctions, and perhaps
ultimately military action, to obtain that goal. On Wednesday, the
United   States, Britain and France introduced a draft Security Council
resolution ordering Iran to halt its nuclear enrichment activities.

Although Moscow shares the West's desire to prevent Iran from becoming a
nuclear state, it has other interests as well, chief among them
enhancing its own status as an alternative power to the United   States,
diplomats and experts say.

"Russia has a bunch of motives…. Coming back as one of the world's
superpowers is definitely one — counterbalancing the U.S., but also
counterbalancing China and India," said a senior European diplomat with
experience in the former Soviet  Union who declined to be identified
because he was not authorized to speak on the Iran debate.

"Even with 25 nuclear warheads, Iran would never be a threat to Russia,
which could readily retaliate. So accepting that Iran might have a small
nuclear capability and combining that with potential Russian economic
successes in Iran and the Russian capability to influence or even to
lead Iran — that is really something" for Moscow, the diplomat said.

Russia is particularly worried that the U.S. experience in Iraq will be
repeated — a concern shared by much of the world.

"Of course the Russians don't want the Iranians to develop nukes, but
they are much more concerned about confrontation leading to sanctions
and war, and that's much more of a threat to their interests," said Gary
Samore, a nonproliferation official in the Clinton administration who
now serves as head of global security for the John D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation. He recently visited Moscow to discuss diplomacy on
nuclear issues.

Sanctions could limit Russian exports to Iran and war would almost
certainly destabilize the region, disrupting Russian business not only
with Iran but also throughout the Middle East.

Safarov, the Russia analyst, said that beyond economic concerns,
regaining ascendancy on the world stage was paramount for Russia. If
Moscow can define itself as the world's broker on Iran, he said, it will
be the "go to" country for the West in dealing with the Islamic
Republic.

"Russia has a unique and historic chance to return to the world arena
once again as a key player and as a reborn superpower," Safarov said.
"If Russia firmly stands by Iran's interests in this conflict …
Russia will immediately regain its quite lost prestige in the Muslim
world and on the global arena at large.

"Of course, that will result in a serious cooling of relations between
Russia and the United   States. But Russia and the United   States are
destined to be competitors," he said, "and no lucrative proposals from
the United   States can change this situation strategically."

On Wednesday, the Security Council began to discuss a legally binding
resolution to require Iran to stop its enrichment activities. But the
resolution will avoid any mention of sanctions, which Russia and another
permanent member, China, oppose. U.S. and European officials expect
Russia to sign on to it after some bluster — or at least abstain and
allow it to pass because it merely formalizes a previous council
statement, backed by Russia, which demanded that Iran suspend its
uranium enrichment activities. All five permanent members of the United
Nations council have veto power.

"I'm sure we can find the right language that will assure everyone that
this resolution is not about sanctions," U.S. Ambassador John R. Bolton
said.

Even as Russian officials repeat Iran's mantra that it has a right to
peaceful nuclear power, Moscow is adamant that Iran should not produce a
bomb or, as Russian diplomats frequently put it, "violate the
nonproliferation regime."

"Our position is always [the same], and it's conditioned by two basic
principles, which are the integrity and inviolability of the
nonproliferation regime — this is absolutely fundamental, absolutely
essential," said Nikolai Spassky, deputy secretary of the Russian
Security Council, speaking to reporters recently in Moscow.

"On the other hand, we've got to recognize and to acknowledge the
undeniable right of Iran, like any other country in the world, to
peacefully pursue its peaceful nuclear program, peaceful nuclear energy.

"Of course, it's not an easy thing to reconcile these two basic
positions, but we do think that it's still possible," Spassky said.

Russia has laid the groundwork for its ascendancy with ever-increasing
economic ties. Besides the oil products that it has to import, Iran also
buys conventional arms and missile defense systems from Russia.





Russia sold Iran at least $4 billion of military and dual-use equipment
in the 1990s, and just this year Tehran concluded a nearly $1-billion
deal to buy 30 missile defense systems, intelligence sources say. Those
systems could make it harder for the United   States and its allies to
bomb Iran's nuclear installations.

Russia has expressed interest in expanding its involvement in helping
Iran build up its civilian nuclear power industry. It helped Iran build
its sole nuclear power plant at Bushehr, a $1-billion project that is
almost complete, and is well-positioned to assist if the Islamic
Republic proceeds with its stated goal of building more nuclear plants.
Russia is one of just a handful of countries that have the technological
know-how to build such facilities, and is the one with the best
relations with Iran.



U.S. officials have pressed Russia to halt its assistance with the
Bushehr plant and hold back on sending the Iranians the nuclear fuel
rods it has agreed to provide to operate the reactor. Russia has not
formally responded, but it has yet to send the fuel rods, which are
necessary to run the plant.

Russia also has a political interest in Iran, which has helpfully
remained silent in the face of Moscow's efforts to suppress Muslim
separatists in the republic of Chechnya. Iran has also refrained from
encouraging Islamic fundamentalists to stir up Russia's Muslims, who
make up about 15% of its population.

The country's focus on the Middle East as a way to regain its global
stature began not long after the former Soviet Union broke up.

First, Russia joined the Conference of Islamic States as an observer,
reaching out again to the Islamic world. Then, in 1992, Russia and Iran
set up a joint economic committee to encourage business ventures between
the two countries.

The cozy relationship between the two states means that there is
probably regular consultation between Moscow and Tehran, and Russia's
decisions are carefully calibrated to avoid alienating either the
Iranians or the West.

"Knowing the Russians and knowing their relationship, I think they are
telling Iran how far they are prepared to go," said a senior diplomat in
Europe for a Middle Eastern country who declined to be identified
because questions surrounding Iran are so sensitive.

As negotiations over the Security Council's next steps proceed, the
Russians probably will review their moves before making them with all
players, the European diplomat said.

"Every step they discuss with the five [permanent Security Council
members] is balanced with steps they discuss with Iran," the diplomat
said. "They get a kind of silent agreement with Iran that they might go
along … because of their political interests. But they have to talk
with Iran — it's in their backyard, and no matter what happens, they
have to live with it."

*

Rubin reported from Vienna and Murphy from Moscow. Times staff writer
Maggie Farley at the United Nations contributed to this report.





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