Russia Prepares For A US-Israeli Military Strike Against Iran
By Clara Weiss
28 April, 2012
WSWS.org
WSWS.org
Russia has undertaken
intensive preparations during the past few months for a possible
military strike by Israel and the United States on Iran. According to
recent reports, the Russian General Staff expects a war against Iran
this summer, with enormous repercussions for not only the Middle East
but also the Caucasus.
Russian troops in the Caucasus have been technically
upgraded, and a missile division situated on the Caspian Sea has been
placed in readiness. The missile cruisers of the Caspian flotilla are
now anchored off the coast of Dagestan. The only Russian military base
in the South Caucasus, located in Armenia, is also on alert for military
intervention. Last autumn, Russia sent its aircraft carrier Kuznetsov
to the Syrian port Tartous following the escalation of the conflict in
Syria. Experts believe that Russia would support Tehran in the event of
war, at least on a military-technical level.
In a commentary in April, General Leonid Ivashov,
president of the Academy of Geopolitical Science, wrote that “a war
against Iran would be a war against Russia” and he called for a
“political-diplomatic alliance” with China and India. Operations were
being undertaken throughout the Middle East in order to destabilise the
region and proceed against China, Russia and Europe. The war against
Iran, Ivashov wrote, would “end up at our borders, destabilise the
situation in the North Caucasus and weaken our position in the Caspian
region.”
Of central concern for Moscow are the consequences
for the South Caucasus in the event of a war against Iran. Armenia is
the only ally of the Kremlin in the region and has close economic links
with Iran, while neighbouring Georgia and Azerbaijan maintain military
and economic ties with the United States and Israel.
The Kremlin fears above all that Azerbaijan could
participate in a military alliance alongside Israel and the United
States against Iran. Azerbaijan borders Iran, Russia, Armenia and the
Caspian Sea, and since the mid-1990s has been an important military and
economic ally of the US in the South Caucasus, housing several American
military bases.
Relations between Iran and Azerbaijan are already
very tense. Tehran has repeatedly accused Baku of participating in
terrorist attacks and acts of sabotage, most probably in collaboration
with the Israeli and American intelligence agencies. In recent years,
Azerbaijan has doubled its military spending and in February completed a
weapons deal with Israel worth US$1.6 billion involving the supply of
drones and missile defence systems.
Citing senior sources in the Obama administration,
Mark Perry told the American journal Foreign Policy in late March that
Baku had allowed Israel access to several air bases on the border to
northern Iran that could be used for an air strike on Tehran. The
magazine quotes a senior government official saying, “The Israelis have
bought an airport and this airport is Azerbaijan.” Perry warned,
“Military strategists must now take into account a war scenario, which
includes not only the Persian Gulf, but also the Caucasus.”
The Baku government immediately denied the report,
but the editor of the Azerbaijani newspaper Neue Zeit, Shakir
Gablikogly, warned that Azerbaijan could be drawn into a war against
Iran.
Even if Azerbaijan should not prove to be the
starting point for an Israeli attack on Iran, there is the danger that
war will lead to a military escalation of other territorial conflicts
such as the dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
Nagorno-Karabakh. The region has been independent since the end of the
civil war in 1994, but the government in Baku, the US and the European
Council insist it be regarded as part of Azerbaijan. There have been
repeated border conflicts between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the past two
years, and commentators have warned that the dispute could escalate
into a war involving Russia, the United States and Iran.
In a recent interview with Russia’s Komsomolskaya
Pravda, military expert Mikhail Barabanov said that conflicts in the
post-Soviet region could lead to military intervention in Russia. Any
intervention in the region by the US or other NATO power would bring
with it “the inevitable risk of the use of nuclear weapons.” Russia has
the second largest nuclear arsenal in the world after the US.
Due to its geostrategic importance, Eurasia has
become the epicentre for economic and political rivalries and military
conflicts between the US and Russia following the collapse of the Soviet
Union. Azerbaijan, Georgia and Armenia form a bridge between
resource-rich Central Asia and the Caspian Sea on one side, and Europe
and the Black Sea on the other.
The US has sought to win influence in the region via
economic alliances since the 1990s. In 1998, the then US vice president
Richard Cheney declared, “I can not remember a time when a region so
suddenly gained such huge strategic importance as the Caspian.”
In his book The Grand Chessboard (1998), Zbigniew
Brzezinski, former national security adviser to US president Jimmy
Carter, wrote: “A power that dominates Eurasia would control two thirds
of the most advanced and economically productive regions of the world.
In Eurasia, there are about three-quarters of the known energy resources
in the world.”
The central importance of the region is its role as a
transit area for energy supplies to Europe from Asia, which bypasses
Russia. By supporting alternative pipeline projects, Washington has
sought to weaken Russian links to Europe, which depends heavily on
Russian oil and gas.
So far, Georgia is the key country for the transit
of gas and oil supplies and has been at the heart of conflicts in the
region. Georgia’s “Rose Revolution” in 2003 was instigated by Washington
to push Mikhail Saakashvili into power as president in order to
safeguard US economic and strategic interests in the region. It led to
an intensification of tensions with Moscow for geostrategic supremacy.
The war between Georgia and Russia in the summer of 2008 represented a
further ratcheting up of the rivalry between the two countries with the
potential to expand into a Russian-American war. Relations between
Russia and Georgia remain very tense.
US influence in the Caucasus and Central Asia has
declined significantly in recent years. In addition to Russia, China has
emerged as a major force in the area, establishing significant economic
and military ties with Central Asian states such as Kazakhstan.
Although Russia and China remain rivals, they have struck a strategic
alliance in their competition with the United States. For the US, war
against Iran represents a further stage in its growing confrontation
with China and Russia for control of the energy resources of Central
Asia and the Middle East.
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