Israel
May Send Arms to Ukraine if Russia Delivers S-300 to Iran – Reports
14
April, 2015
Israel
reportedly may start sending arms to Ukraine in response to Russia’s
decision to lift its embargo on the delivery of the S-300 missile
system to Iran.
MOSCOW
(Sputnik) — Israel may start sending arms to Ukraine in response to
Russia’s decision to lift its five-year embargo on the delivery of
the S-300 missile system to Iran, NRG reports Tuesday, citing unnamed
Israeli military source.
According
to NRG, Israeli government has not made any decisions yet on sending
weapons to Ukraine.
Earlier
on Tuesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Russian
president in a phone conversation that the planned delivery of the
S-300 missile systems to Iran will undermine stability in the Middle
East and increase Tehran's belligerence.
On
Monday, Russian President Vladimir Putin lifted the embargo on
delivery of the S-300 systems to Tehran.
The
deal between Russia and Iran on the delivery of five S-300 PMU-1
systems worth $800 million was agreed on eight years ago, but was
suspended by then President Dmitry Medvedev after the UN Security
Council slapped Iran with an arms embargo over concerns that Tehran
was making weapon-grade uranium to use it in warheads.
Russian
top diplomat Sergei Lavrov said earlier that the ban had become
obsolete, citing progress in the nuclear talks between Iran and the
six world powers that will eventually see UN sanctions phased out.
'Solved!':
Iran Eager to Implement S-300 Contract With Russia
Iranian
Defense Minister Hossein Dehghan hopes the Russia-Iran contract will
take on an operational aspect.
16
April, 2015
MOSCOW
(Sputnik) – The issue of delivering Russian S-300 missile defense
systems to Tehran has been solved, Iranian Defense Minister Hossein
Dehghan said Thursday.
“The
issue is solved,” Dehghan said in response to the possible delivery
of the missile defense systems.
“Six
years ago we signed a contract with Russia and some of the points of
the contract will comply with these conditions. We hope that this
contract will take on an operational aspect,” he said.
On
Monday, Russian President Vladimir Putin revived the deal on the
delivery of S-300 missile systems to Tehran, suspended in 2010 after
the UN Security Council introduced sanctions against Iran over
concerns it was developing nuclear weapons.
The
following day, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Putin
in a phone conversation that the delivery of the S-300s would
undermine stability in the Middle East and increase Tehran's
"belligerence."
On
April 2, Iran and six world powers, including Russia, China and the
United States, agreed on a framework for a deal to ensure the
peaceful nature of Iran's nuclear program, which involves a gradual
phasing out of sanctions against Tehran.
The
final agreement between Iran and the international mediators is set
to be achieved by June 30, 2015.
Who’s
Afraid of the Big Bad S-300s?
Eric
Draitser
16 April, 2015
The executive
order issued
by Russian President Vladimir Putin, which lifts the ban on the
export of weapons systems to Iran, has been met with sharp
condemnation by Israel, and admonishment from the United States.
While Moscow has yet to make a final decision on if/when it will
begin supplying the S-300 air defense missiles to Iran – Tehran
purchased the system under a 2007 contract left unfulfilled by Russia
as a result of the UN-imposed arms embargo – it is clear that the opssibility alone signals a significant shift in the geopolitics of
the region.
On
the one hand, Iranian air defenses would be significantly upgraded
with an advanced weapons system such as S-300 which, though not
exactly new, is still very much capable of defending the country’s
airspace from any potential attack, be it Israeli or US. On the other
hand, the possible delivery of the S-300s is a symbolic step towards
integrating Iran into a broader non-NATO security architecture taking
shape under the leadership of Russia and China.
While
BRICS has come to be the watchword of multi-polarity, the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization (SCO) has emerged as a
military-security-intelligence alliance, on top of being an economic
and political forum for Sino-Russian relations. The possibility of
Iran joining this alliance both through participation in SCO summits,
and in practice through military and non-military contracts as well
as other forms of cooperation, signals a watershed both for Iran, and
the non-western world. Where, just a few years ago, the US and its
allies could dictate the terms of relations between Iran and other
states, today it simply cannot, nuclear deal or no nuclear deal. The
S-300s are only the tip of the iceberg.
What
This Means for Iran and the Region
First
and foremost, Iran is going to have the opportunity to exist, at
least to some extent, on an equal footing on the international stage.
Though it is still unclear the specifics of the finalized agreement,
including the odious sanctions regime and the extent to which it will
actually be lifted, what is certain is that Iran will have much more
leeway to pursue economic cooperation with potential partners
internationally.
Naturally,
various propagandists from Washington to Tel Aviv have taken the
opportunity to use Russia’s move to lift the ban as a signal of the
“disastrous” policy of “appeasement” by the Obama
administration. Commenting on
Russia’s decision, Israeli intelligence and international relations
minister Yuval Steinitz said that it was:
A direct result of the legitimacy that Iran is receiving from the nuclear deal that is being prepared, and proof that the Iranian economic growth which follows the lifting of sanctions will be exploited for arming itself and not for the welfare of the Iranian people… Instead of demanding that Iran desist from the terrorist activity that it is carrying out in the Middle East and throughout the world, it is being allowed to arm itself with advanced weapons that will only increase its aggression.
Such
comments are perhaps far more revealing than Mr. Steinitz might
realize. The overt admission in his statement is that Israel sees
Iranian economic growth as the true threat to Israel
(read Israeli hegemony). In direct contradiction to the droning
propaganda about Iran wanting to “wipe Israel from the map,”
Steinitz here quite correctly, though perhaps inadvertently, admits
that Iran’s economic potential is what makes it a regional threat.
While he includes the obligatory references to Iranian “terrorist
activity” and “aggression,” Steinitz provides a window into the
thinking of Israeli strategic planners who see in Iran a potential
economic powerhouse that would lure western and non-western
investment alike, not the least of which coming from western energy
companies.
As Bloomberg noted in late March on the eve of the framework agreement, “[Iran] is emerging again as a potential prize for Western oil companies such as BP, Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Eni SpA and Total SA. The Chinese can also be expected to enter the race, while U.S. companies, more burdened by sanctions and legacy, will be further down the pack...‘Iran is the big prize…The resource size is very attractive.’” Seen from this perspective, both the US and Israel stand to be major losers from the nuclear deal as Iran is allowed to pursue critical investment from international partners.
But
the issue is not merely about investment, for if it were, Israel and
the US would likely be able to control the debate. Instead, Russia’s
potential delivery of the S-300s changes the strategic calculus for
Washington and Tel Aviv, as their principal leverage – the threat
of the use of force ranging from limited air strikes to all out war –
will be considerably weakened, if not totally nullified. For, while
Steinitz and others may talk of “advanced weapons that will only
increase [Iran’s] aggression,” they know perfectly well that
S-300s are defensive weapons whose function is to protect the
integrity of a given country’s airspace from either missiles or
aircraft. In this way, Israel and the US are far more concerned about
losing their strategic advantage than they are of any aggressive
posture from Iran.
There
is still more for the US and Israel to be concerned about, namely
what Iran might be able to do with increased military and
technological cooperation with Russia. It could provide Iran the
opportunity to up their material and technical support for Syria and
Hezbollah in the continued fight against ISIS and Al Qaeda throughout
the region. This of course would be disastrous to the regime change
agenda of the US-NATO-GCC-Israel in Syria which, despite more than
four years of an internationally orchestrated and supported terrorist
war, shows no signs of capitulating. Taken in total, the S-300s would
both symbolically and concretely alter the balance of power in the
region.
The
Geopolitical Significance
One
should be careful not to understate the importance of this move by
Russia. Aside from the obvious strategic importance such a defensive
weapons system holds for a besieged country like Iran, there is the
symbolic importance internationally. From all indications Russia and
Iran are moving considerably closer, as evidenced by the
recent military
cooperation agreement signed
by the defense ministers of the two countries.
Russia
and Iran have a number of issues of mutual interest, from questions
regarding the conflict in Syria, to Caspian region resources and
security, to energy exports and world markets. Such complex
international issues require not only close cooperation, but a
mutually beneficial understanding in a variety of spheres; that is
precisely what worries the US and Israel above all. But,
unfortunately for Washington and Tel Aviv, the integration of Iran
into a non-western, multi-polar order goes far deeper.
The
emerging potential for Iran’s
entry to
the Russia-China led SCO would fundamentally alter the balance of
power in Asia, especially in light of the growing consensus that both
Pakistan and India will also join
the SCO.
Such a development would see a new power bloc in Asia, one that
includes the economic and military power of China and Russia, with
the emerging economy of India and, to a lesser degree, Pakistan: both
military powers in their own right.
It
is self-evident the degree to which such an alliance represents a
threat, let alone a counterweight, to the decades-long hegemony of
NATO and its proxies. Coupled with the emergence of the economic
institutions associated with the BRICS – the BRICS Development
Bank, and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) – which
could provide a much needed alternative to the US-EU dominated IMF
and World Bank, the contours of a new economic and military order
become more apparent.
While
of course all of these important developments are far beyond the
simple lifting of the ban on S-300s to Iran, they are connected. For,
as Iran becomes a viable military and trading partner for Russia, it
becomes more integrated into the global political and economic
system. Today, it may simply be a defensive missile system, but the
potential tomorrow is boundless. Planners in Moscow and Tehran
understand this, as do those in Tel Aviv and Washington. For this
reason, S-300s are far more than missiles: they are the symbol of a
multi-polar future.
Eric
Draitser is an independent geopolitical analyst based in New York
City, he is the founder of StopImperialism.org and OP-ed columnist
for RT, exclusively for the online magazine “New
Eastern Outlook”.
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