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Russian President Vladimir Putin is visiting Tehran on Tuesday for talks with Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Kremlin leaderโs first trip outside the former Soviet Union since Moscowโs Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine.
In Tehran, Putin will also hold his first face-to-face meeting since the invasion with a NATO leader, Turkeyโs Tayyip Erdogan, to discuss a deal aimed at allowing the resumption of Ukraineโs Black Sea grain exports as well as peace in Syria.
Putinโs trip, which comes just days after U.S. President Joe Biden visited Israel and Saudi Arabia, sends a strong message to the West about Moscowโs plans to forge closer strategic ties with Iran, China and India in the face of the Western sanctions.
โThe contact with Khamenei is very important,โ Yuri Ushakov, Putinโs foreign policy adviser, told reporters in Moscow. โA trusting dialogue has developed between them on the most important issues on the bilateral and international agenda.โ
โOn most issues, our positions are close or identical.โ
BOTH SANCTIONED
For Iran, also chafing under Western economic sanctions and at loggerheads with the United States over Tehranโs nuclear programme and a range of other issues, Putinโs visit is timely.
Its clerical leaders are keen to strengthen strategic relations with Russia in the face of an emerging U.S.-backed Gulf Arab-Israeli bloc that could tilt the Middle East balance of power further away from Iran.
โConsidering the evolving geopolitical ties after the Ukraine war, Tehran tries to secure Moscowโs support in its confrontation with Washington and its regional allies,โ said a senior Iranian official, who asked not to be named.
Emboldened by high oil prices since the Ukraine war, Iran is betting that with Russiaโs support it could pressure Washington to offer concessions for the revival of a 2015 nuclear deal.
However, Russiaโs increased tilt towards Beijing in recent months has significantly reduced Iranโs crude exports to China โ a key source of income for Tehran since U.S. President Donald Trump reimposed sanctions in 2018.
In May, Reuters reported that Iranโs crude exports to China have fallen sharply as Beijing favoured heavily discounted Russian barrels, leaving almost 40 million barrels of Iranian oil stored on tankers at sea in Asia and seeking buyers.
Ahead of Putinโs arrival, the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) and Russian gas producer Gazprom GAZP.MM signed a memorandum of understanding worth around $40 billion.
SYRIA, UKRAINE
High on the agenda in Tuesdayโs trilateral talks that will also include Turkey will be efforts to reduce violence in Syria, where Erdogan has threatened to launch more military operations to extend 30-km (20-mile) deep โsafe zonesโ along the border. Moscow and Tehran both oppose any such action by Turkey.
โMaintaining the territorial integrity of Syria is very important, and any military attack in northern Syria will definitely harm Turkey, Syria and the entire region, and benefit terrorists,โ Khamenei told Erdogan. Read full story
Any Turkish operation in Syria would attack the Kurdish YPG militia, a key part of the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) that controls large parts of north Syria and is regarded by Washington as an important ally against Islamic State.
A senior Turkish official said Turkeyโs planned operation would be discussed in Tehran, as would reports that Russia and the Kurds were acting together in some areas of Syria.
Russia and Iran are Syrian President Bashar al-Assadโs strongest backers, while Turkey supports anti-Assad insurgents.
Putin, who turns 70 this year, has made few foreign trips in recent years due to the COVID pandemic and then the Ukraine crisis. His last trip beyond the former Soviet Union was to China in February.
His bilateral talks with Erdogan will focus on a plan to get Ukrainian grain exports moving again.
Russia, Ukraine, Turkey and the United Nations are expected to sign a deal later this week aimed at resuming the shipping of grain from Ukraine across the Black Sea.
REUTERS