The Washington
Times
Commentary

www.washingtontimes.com
TIMMERMAN: Global strategy
harbinger?
Friday, August 15, 2008
Russia's new "czar," Vladimir Putin, has much more on his agenda than
just invading Georgia. As former Reagan administration diplomat Robert
Kagan has argued, Mr. Putin is "making his move" to restore Russia's
superpower status.
Russia's support for Iran and its nuclear ambitions is a large part of
Mr. Putin's global strategy. It's time to face facts about Russia's
deep involvement in Iran and recognize that here, too, Russia is no
longer an ally, and hardly a friend.
Just two days before the invasion of Georgia, Russia again came to the
aide of a recalcitrant Iranian regime, even as the United States and
its allies were counting on Russia's support to increase pressure on
Tehran.
At issue was a hard deadline for Iran to suspend its nuclear programs
on Aug. 2, in exchange for a package of U.S.-backed incentives. But
Russia's ambassador to the United Nations, Vitaly I. Churkin, pretended
there was no deadline, and called Iran's
stalling tactics "negotiating opportunities."
Russia's double-talk on Iran is reminiscent of Cold War propaganda,
when Soviet "diplomats" lied egregiously without even a smirk of shame.
A non-answer by Iran was supposed to trigger a new round of sanctions
at the United Nations, but Russia is signaling it won't play ball.
Even before the invasion of Georgia, Russia's behavior should have come
as no surprise. Why? Because Russia is Iran's
foremost ally.
Can this possibly be shocking to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
and her top aides? Not if they know recent history. And yet, the desire
to wish away the truth would appear to be strong in them.
A 1995 Russian national security memo, obtained by Rep. Curt Weldon,
Pennsylvania Republican, who had it translated by the CIA, identifies
the United States as "the main external force potentially capable of
creating a threat to the Russian Federation military security and to
Russia's economic and political interests."
The memo, written by a top adviser to the Russian defense minister and
stamped "approved" by the defense minister's office, sketches out a new
Russian policy to contain the United States in the Persian Gulf. "And
in case Russia is persistently driven into a corner, then it will be
possible to undertake to sell military nuclear and missile technologies
to such countries as Iran and Iraq, and to Algeria after Islamic forces
arrive in power there," the memo states.
"Moreover, Russia's direct military alliance with some of the countries
mentioned also should not be excluded, above all with Iran, within the
framework of which a Russian troop contingent and tactical nuclear
weapons could be stationed on the shores of the Persian Gulf and the
Strait of Hormuz."
Just idle talk? Consider the following facts:
- Just one month after he was briefed on this memo, Defense
Minister Pavel Grachev went to Iran to discuss military cooperation.
His visit paved the way for a sweeping 10-year cooperation agreement
the two countries signed Dec. 28, 1995.
- Two months after the briefing, Russia began shipping to Iraq
gyroscopes scavenged from dismantled SS-18 strategic nuclear missiles.
- Within four months of the briefing, the Russian government
authorized Russian missile experts to travel to Iran, to work on
jointly developing a new generation of nuclear missiles for Iran. Those
missiles became the Shahab-3, which Iran parades about the streets of
Tehran with signs in English that read "Israel will be wiped off the
map."
Also in 1995, the text of a secret military nuclear cooperation
agreement between Russia and Iran was leaked to the Western media that
included the provision of a "nuclear test shaft" and a turnkey
enrichment plant.
Alarmed by the news reports, President Clinton got Mr. Yeltsin to
publicly announce during their May 1995 summit in Moscow that Russia
was renouncing the "military aspects" of the nuclear cooperation
agreement with Iran. Since then, more than 20 Russian companies -
including the Russian Space Agency - have been identified in
congressional testimony for having provided ballistic missile
technology to Iran. And Russia continues to be Iran's top nuclear
facilitator, having provided low-enriched fuel for the Bushehr nuclear
power plant (built by Russia) earlier this year.
No amount of cajoling or play-acting will get the Russians to be
helpful in stopping Iran's methodical quest for nuclear weapons. Russia
may even want Iran to go nuclear, since the increased world tension
will drive up oil prices (Russia's biggest export) and seriously
challenge U.S. predominance in the Persian Gulf, long a strategic
Russian goal.
It's time to stop the charade. Let Russia veto a new sanctions
resolution at the United Nations and explain their vote to the Israeli
Air Force.
Russia's waiting game only plays into the hands of an Iranian regime
determined to run out of the clock of the Bush administration. In the
meantime, with each passing day, Iran enriches more uranium, bringing
it ever closer to the day it will have enough to make a bomb, or that
Israel will feel compelled to act alone.
Kenneth R. Timmerman is a
contributing editor to Newsmax Media and is the author of "Countdown to
Crisis: the Coming Nuclear Showdown with Iran " (Crown Forum).
Original