Ridding lonely to my freedom, In my saddle-bag only hope. I Do not go where the path may lead, I go instead where there is no path and I will leave a trail.
By all appearances, the Donald Trump administration is preparing to attempt a historic reconciliation with Russia. In part, the strategy is aimed
at driving a wedge into the long-running strategic partnership between
Moscow and Tehran. With the proper incentives, the thinking goes, it
might be possible to “flip” Russia. “There’s daylight between Russia and Iran,
for sure,” one foreign official familiar with the White House’s
deliberations explained. “What’s unclear is what [Russian President
Vladimir] Putin would demand in return for weakening the alliance.”
The
new president and his advisers may soon find, however, that
precipitating a Russian-Iranian split is an exceedingly tall order. The
past decade has provided ample proof that the military, political, and
economic bonds that Russia and the Islamic Republic have built over the
past quarter-century are remarkably resilient. And today, there is
reason to believe that the strategic partnership between the two
countries is stronger than ever.
RUSSIA’S AMBITIONS
In 2005, speaking before the prestigious Munich Security Conference, Putin famously remarked that
the collapse of the Soviet Union marked the “greatest geopolitical
catastrophe of the twentieth century.” The years since have seen Putin
pursue a foreign policy centered in large part on recreating a modified
version of the old Soviet sphere of influence.
In military terms,
this has meant creating or supporting security blocs, such as the
Collective Security Treaty Organization and the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization, that are tethered to the Kremlin and are designed to
further Russian strategic priorities in the Eurasian theater. On the
economic front, Putin has put forth an alternative to the EU, known
broadly as the Eurasian Economic Union. Although it can hardly be called a resounding success, the union is nonetheless a viable construct. It boasts four members in addition to Russia
(Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan) and is currently
contemplating the addition of two more (Mongolia and Tajikistan).
Vadim Savitsky / Russian Defense Ministry / REUTERS
Russian military jets at Khmeimim Air Base, Syria, June 2016.
Politically, meanwhile, Moscow has invested enormous
capital in building closer ties with countries such as Belarus, and to
assorted Central Asian regimes and eastern European governments, in an
effort to increase its political freedom of action along its periphery.
The result is what can best be described as a postmodern Russian
empire—one not of actual military control but of political and economic
dependency.
Iran plays a large part in these plans. The country is
an ally of choice for Russia’s Eurasianists—ideological proponents of a
distinct Russian civilizational identity whose thinking has gained
currency in recent years in the corridors of the Kremlin. (The most
famous contemporary example is Alexander Dugin,
who explicitly called for an alliance with Iran in his sprawling 1997
opus, The Foundations of Geopolitics.) In the minds of Dugin and his
compatriots, Iran’s strategic position in the Middle East, along with
Iran’s distinct strategic culture and history, make it an
attractive—albeit temporary—partner for Russia as it gathers strength to
reclaim a global role. Moscow will need to remain in Iran’s good graces to preserve its strategic foothold in Syria.
Tehran’s strategic value to Moscow is reflected in the Kremlin’s persistent efforts (blocked by China, at least so far)
to elevate Iran from a mere observer nation to a full-fledged member of
the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and in the quiet encouragement of
Iran’s expansion of contacts with the Central Asian republics. The
result, Russia’s foreign policy ideologues hope, is the creation of a
dependable proxy in the Middle East—one that can help augment Russian
power and objectives there.
THE SALES THAT BIND
Iran is
also increasingly vital to Russia’s economy. Over the past few years,
Russian fiscal health has been ravaged by low world oil prices and
successive rounds of Western sanctions aimed at penalizing it for its
aggressive policy toward Ukraine. The International Monetary Fund estimates
that Russia’s economy, which constricted by as much as 3.5 percent in
2015, shrank by nearly another one percent last year, continuing a
protracted process of national decline. And although there are now some
signs that Russia might see a slight recovery in 2017, economists have been quick to point out
that a real turnaround isn’t in the cards for the foreseeable future
due to the country’s endemic corruption and systemic weaknesses.
Meanwhile, a number of self-inflicted wounds have compounded the external financial pressures. To wit, the annexation of Crimea has added as much as $7.5 billion
in annual expenditures to the country’s already stretched federal
budget. Russia’s expensive military adventurism in Ukraine and Syria,
meanwhile, has depleted its coffers further still. (A telling study
issued in August by the financial news agency RosBusinessConsulting estimated
that, every month, Moscow has been spending up to $150 million just on
military contractors to support its operations in Syria.)
Jonathan Ernst / REUTERS
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks by phone with Russian President Vladimir Putin in the Oval Office, January 2017.
Against this backdrop, Iran—once an international
pariah deeply dependent on Russia's good graces—has taken on growing
importance for the Kremlin. As a result of last summer’s nuclear deal
(formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA),
Iran has enjoyed an economic windfall of unprecedented magnitude. This
has taken the form of more than $100 billion in direct sanctions relief and a surge in post-sanctions trade with an array of international partners, including China and India.
For its part, over the past several months, the Kremlin has concluded at least $10 billion in new arms deals with the Iranian regime. Nuclear commerce between the two countries has seen a similar surge.
These are arrangements that the Russian government, increasingly
struggling to make ends meet, can ill afford to give up, whatever the
promise of a new, more cordial relationship with Washington.
A SPONSOR IN SYRIA
Russia
likewise needs Iran to preserve its presence in the Middle East. Like
the Islamic Republic, Russia has become a crucial player in the ongoing
Syrian civil war. But unlike that of Tehran, Moscow’s endgame in Syria
is not entirely clear. To date, the Kremlin’s strategy is focused on expanding and strengthening
its military presence in Syria’s east (where Moscow has been ensconced
since the early 1970s) and on combating assorted Islamist radicals
arrayed against the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, a great many of whose members hail from Russia and other parts of the former Soviet Union.
By contrast, Iran’s ayatollahs have made it clear that preserving the stability of the Assad regime is a cardinal priority
and have invested massive sums of money and military materiel in
ensuring this outcome. These investments, coupled with parallel Western
operations against the Islamic State (ISIS), have succeeded in turning the tide of the conflict in favor of Syria’s embattled dictator.
As
such, it is reasonable to conclude that, whatever settlement ultimately
emerges in Syria, it will be one deeply influenced by, and beneficial
to, Iran. Under these circumstances, Moscow will need to remain in
Iran’s good graces to preserve its strategic foothold in Syria over the
long term.
CLINTON REDUX?
All this suggests that, despite the White
House’s fervent wishes, the Russian-Iranian alliance is both durable and
resilient. Indeed, the Trump administration’s focus looks more than a
little like the Clinton administration’s repeated efforts
throughout the 1990s to pull Syria away from Iran and into the Western
orbit. Those attempts failed miserably, not least because Washington
greatly underestimated the strategic value Syria attached to its ongoing
partnership with Tehran.
Today, Washington runs the danger of
making the same mistake with Moscow. While the new president has made it
abundantly clear that he wants a more cordial
relationship with the Kremlin, he must proceed knowing that those ties
will inevitably be circumscribed by the importance that Russian
officials attach to their allies in Tehran.
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