Russia's GRU site has a cool pic featurette featuring babettes learning and prepping for careers in Strategic Missile Forces.
"The academy offers career training in over 29 fields for the Strategic Missile
Forces, Space Forces, Army, Navy and Air Force, as well as the Russian Defense
Ministry’s main and central directorates."
With missiles, missile defenses and sheilding sprouting up all over Eurasia recent talk of buddying up with Tehran is a concern. The mullah's handpicked little rocketeer
"Iran and Russia are two major powerful countries, and cooperation between our states in settling various problems will serve the interests of Russian and Iranian
nations as well as regional and international security. We each serve an
efficient role in establishing a new model of international relations."
This is significant. Amer Taheri shares some history and gossip about a 'new model' hook up with Iran and Russia that may be more old school than anyone would reckon.
Why is the leadership in Tehran anxious to give Russia the right to land troops
in Iran?
"The question is not fanciful. The Islamic Republic is conducting a devious campaign to prepare public opinion for that eventuality.
The message is relayed through deliberately vague terms that diplomats understand immediately while the general public does not.
The device is to revive two treaties that most students of Iranian history thought were dead and buried long ago.
The first is the 1921 Treaty that the government of Sayyed Ziauddin Tabatabai, soon after coming to power in a putsch, signed with Vladimir Lenin’s Bolshevik regime.
Under the treaty, Lenin agreed to cancel the debts Iran had accumulated towards the Tsarist Empire. He also undertook to withdraw his troops from Gilan. The treaty revised relations in the Caspian Sea, granting Iran greater rights of fishing and navigation. That amounted to a generous gesture towards Tabatabai’s new government that, still fragile, needed all the good news it could get in relations with the major powers.
Nevertheless, as always when a weak nation makes a pact with a much larger neighbour, the treaty had a sting in its tail. It gave the Russians the right to land troops in Iran when and if troops of any other foreign power arrived in Iran. At the time it was Britain that Lenin had in mind. For his part, Tabatabai wanted to use the threat of Russian military intervention as a means of forcing the British to end their military presence in Iran.
However, in one of those twists of history, the treaty was never used for its original purpose. The British soon abandoned their anti-Bolshevik allies whom they found too weak to defeat Lenin’s new empire. Lenin, for his part, believing he could add Iran to his empire through ideological agitation rather than conquest, abandoned the Mullah of the Jungle and withdrew the Soviet troops.
So, one can imagine the surprise caused by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s decision to suddenly start speaking of the two treaties as if they were still valid.
He and his aides, including Foreign Minister Manuchehr Motakki, have mentioned the treaties with regard to the status of the Caspian Sea and the application by the Islamic Republic to join Russia and China in the Shanghai Group, an informal framework for security cooperation.
Motakki has gone further by suggesting that Iran abandon the Persian name for the Caspian Sea, that is to say the Sea of Mazandaran, and adopt the Russian name mentioned in the treaties. To sweeten Russia further, Motakki has also hinted at abandoning Iran’s demand for a 20 per cent share in the Caspian’s resources, settling, instead, for just over 11 per cent.
Why is an administration that pretends it has a mission from the “Hidden Imam” to liberate the whole world keen to give Russia a licence to land troops in Iran?
Has the Khomeinist president has decided that a war with the United States is inevitable?
In such a war, the Americans may well seize Iran’s oilfields, an easy target for
a surprise attack and a difficult asset for defenders to protect.
Once that happens Russia could land troops in northern Iran and then go to
the United Nations to ask for a generalised ceasefire and the fixing of a
timetable for the withdrawal of “all foreign troops from all Iranian territory.”
The US would come under global pressure to cooperate with Russia in ending
the conflict and paving the way for the departure of foreign troops and the
restoration of Iranian sovereignty.
If that is how Ahmadinejad thinks, he has just returned to 1921 and Sayyed Ziauddin Tabatabai in an Iran as weak and as vulnerable. And that, for a man whose ambition is to lead mankind on a new path away from that fixed by “American Arrogance,” is not something to be proud of. "
Russia has ICBM's, Iran doesn't. Russian President Putin thinks that the Cold War is still going on and he's the President of a Superpower. They aren't. The Russian military is demoralized, outdated and in need of a good overhaul. Russian MiG's cannot fly circles around US planes.
ReplyDeleteWhat Iran is hoping is if the US invaded Iran, the Russian would come to their rescue. The reality is that Russia, for all its blustering, is but a paper tiger. And Russia will not risk WW3 for Iran. Russia would be destroyed in the ensuing nuclear war. But then so would the rest of the world.
He needs backing from someone for his empty, tough talk ;)
ReplyDeleteInteresting post, Courtney. When I heard Sec. Gates announce the second carrier being put into place, to 'remind' the Iranians we are on watch, it all began to come together. Plus the reports that Iran is helping stir the pot prior to our Nov. elections with terrorist attacks in Iraq, well, it all starts to make sense.
ReplyDeleteGreat, fascinating article GSG. As usual, your research benefits us all.
ReplyDeleteThe machinations of nations. As you point out so succintly, one could almost get a little cynical about the genuine religiousity of Iran's sneaky mullahs. Sounds more like Realpolitik than revelation to me. lol
Type of girl in the pic I'm having to deal with each day.
ReplyDeleteHi Findalis, Russia may well want to act out in a regional game of Great Powers by 'intervening' in Iran in case of a cleric crushing coalition that killed the regime.
ReplyDeleteRussia got burned really bad bling wise sucking up to Saddam. Debts were laughed off by newly liberated ppl who were not particular concerned about stuff negotiated by their recently deposed tormentors.
To prevent a Persian redux, Vlad may act out to prevent it - or at least have a say in the aftermath - lest he get burned again.
Hi Skunk! True that!
ReplyDeleteHi Karen, the 2nd carrier is interesting - til you find out at diff times Great Satan has had like 4 in the hood at the same time.
ReplyDeleteIrran may have an urge to surge with an October surprise in Iraq. Recent combat in IRaq and deployments of Great Satan's seabourne regime changers may be a warning - or a set up.
Hi Roger. That is so. The mullahs seem to care about one thing and one thing only - their survival and their control.
ReplyDeleteHigh time to make both concerns past tense.
Hi Semaj - Oh, bless your heart! Having to deal with a wickibit hottie fully crunk with intell, looks and an affinity for high tech?
ReplyDeleteAdmit it - you are lucky - and you know it!