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United States says Iran risks dependency on Russia

United States

United States says Iran risks dependency on Russia

  • Vladimir Putin met with his Turkish and Iranian counterparts in Tehran.
  • Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called for “long-term cooperation” with Russia.
  • The United States warned Iran that it risked becoming dependent on an isolated Russia after the visit.

The United States on Wednesday warned Iran that it risked becoming dependent on an isolated Russia after it welcomed President Vladimir Putin, even though the CIA director acknowledged the two countries have tense relations.

Putin travelled to Tehran on Tuesday for a three-way summit with his Turkish and Iranian counterparts that was ostensibly about the conflict-ridden Syrian situation.

On the sidelines of the summit, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called for “long-term cooperation” with Russia, even though Tehran earlier tried to show its neutrality by abstaining from a key UN vote on condemning Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

“Iran has now cast its lot with a small number of countries who wore that veil of neutrality only to end up supporting President Putin in his war against Ukraine and the Ukrainian people,” State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters.

The United States recently released intelligence purporting to show Russian delegations visiting Iran to assess combat drones as it looks to bolster its arsenal against Western arms in Ukraine.

But Price signaled that Iran’s return to compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal — backed by President Joe Biden after his predecessor Donald Trump trashed it — would start a new “economic relationship with other countries around the world.”

Negotiations have been deadlocked in part over Iranian demands that Biden lift Trump’s designation of the powerful Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist group.

Despite the US criticism of Iran’s summit, CIA chief Bill Burns — who as a diplomat helped broker the Iran deal and served as ambassador to Moscow — said Iran and Russia were reaching out to each other primarily because they are both “looking to break out of political isolation” and are under sanctions.

“But if they need each other, they don’t really trust each other in the sense that they are energy rivals and historical competitors,” Burns said at the Aspen Security Forum.

Moscow has a long history of interfering in Iranian affairs; it occupied the important northern city of Tabriz in the early 20th century and collaborated with the British to invade Iran in 1941.

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