By Pepe Escobar
June 17, 2019
Russian President Vladimir
Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping and Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani walk as
they attend a meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Council of
Heads of State in Bishkek on June 14, 2019. Photo: AFP / Vyacheslav Oseledko
With the dogs of war on full
alert, something extraordinary happened at the 19th summit of the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization (SCO) late last week in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
Virtually unknown across the
West, the SCO is the foremost Eurasian political, economic and security
alliance. It’s not a Eurasian NATO. It’s not planning any humanitarian
imperialist adventures. A single picture in Bishkek tells a quite significant
story, as we see China’s Xi, Russia’s Putin, India’s Modi and Pakistan’s Imran
Khan aligned with the leaders of four Central Asian “stans”.
These leaders represent the
current eight members of the SCO. Then there are four observer states –
Afghanistan, Belarus, Mongolia and, crucially, Iran – plus six dialogue
partners: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Cambodia, Nepal, Sri Lanka and, crucially, Turkey.
The SCO is bound to
significantly expand by 2020, with possible full membership for both Turkey and
Iran. It will then feature all major players of Eurasia integration.
Considering the current incandescence in the geopolitical chessboard, it’s
hardly an accident a crucial protagonist in Bishkek was the ‘observer’ state
Iran.
Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani played his cards masterfully. Rouhani speaking directly to Putin,
Xi, Modi and Imran, at the same table, is something to be taken very seriously.
He blasted the US under Trump as “a serious risk to stability in the region and
the world”. Then he diplomatically offered preferential treatment for
all companies and entrepreneurs from SCO member nations committed to investing
in the Iranian market.
The Trump administration has
claimed – without any hard evidence – that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps (IRGC), which Washington brands as a “terrorist organization” – was
behind the attacks on two tankers in the Gulf of Oman last week. As the SCO summit
developed, the narrative had already collapsed, as Yutaka Katada, president of
Japanese cargo company Kokuka Sangyo, owner of one of the tankers, said: “The
crew is saying that it was hit by a flying object.”
Iranian Foreign Minister Javad
Zarif had accused the White House of “sabotage diplomacy” but that did not
derail Rouhani’s actual diplomacy in Bishkek.
Xi was adamant; Beijing will
keep developing ties with Tehran “no matter how the situation changes”. Iran is
a key node of the New Silk Roads, or Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). It’s clear
for the leadership in Tehran that the way forward is full integration into the
vast, Eurasia-wide economic ecosystem. European nations that signed the nuclear
deal with Tehran – France, Britain and Germany – can’t save Iran economically.
The Indian hedge
But then Modi canceled a
bilateral with Rouhani at the last minute, with the lame excuse of “scheduling
issues”.
That’s not exactly a clever
diplomatic gambit. India was Iran’s second largest oil customer before the
Trump administration dumped the nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive
Plan of Action, over a year ago. Modi and Rouhani have discussed the
possibility of India paying for Iranian oil in rupees, bypassing the US dollar
and US sanctions.
Yet unlike Beijing and Moscow,
New Delhi refuses to unconditionally support Tehran in its do-or-die fight
against the Trump administration’s economic war and de facto blockade.
Modi faces a stark existential
choice. He’s tempted to channel his visceral anti-Belt-and-Road stance into the
siren call of a fuzzy, US-concocted Indo-Pacific
alliance – a de facto containment mechanism against “China,
China, China” as the Pentagon leadership openly admits it.
Or he could dig deeper into a
SCO/RIC (Russia-India-China) alliance focused on Eurasia integration and
multipolarity.
Aware of the high stakes, a
concerted charm offensive by the leading BRICS and SCO duo is in effect. Putin
invited Modi to be the main guest of the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok
in early September. And Xi Jinping told Modi in their bilateral get together
he’s aiming at a “closer partnership”, from investment and industrial capacity
to pick up speed on the stalled Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar (BCIM) Economic
Corridor, another BRI stalwart.
Imran Khan, for his part,
seems to be very much aware how Pakistan may profit from becoming the ultimate
Eurasia pivot – as Islamabad offers a privileged gateway to the Arabian Sea,
side by side with SCO observer Iran. Gwadar port in the Arabian Sea is the key
hub of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), much better positioned than
Chabahar in Iran, which is being developed as the key hub of India’s mini-New
Silk Road version to Afghanistan and Central Asia.
On the Russian front, a charm
offensive on Pakistan is paying dividends, with Imran openly acknowledging Pakistan
is moving “closer” to Russia in a “changing” world, and has expressed keen
interest in buying Sukhoi Su-35 fighter jets and Mi-35M attack helicopters.
Iran is at the heart of the
BRI-SCO-EAEU integration road map – the nuts and bolts of Eurasian integration.
Russia and China cannot allow Iran to be strangled. Iran boasts fabulous energy
reserves, a huge internal market, and is a frontline state fighting complex
networks of opium, weapons and jihadi smuggling – all key concerns for SCO
member states.
There’s no question that in
southwest Asia, Russia and Iran have interests that clash. What matters most
for Moscow is to prevent jihadis from migrating to the Caucasus and Central
Asia to plot attacks against the Russian Federation; to keep their navy and air
force bases in Syria; and to keep oil and gas trading in full flow.
Tehran, for its part, cannot
possibly support the sort of informal agreement Moscow established with Tel
Aviv in Syria – where alleged Hezbollah and IRGC targets are bombed by Israel,
but never Russian assets.
But still, there are margins
of maneuver for bilateral diplomacy, even if they now seem not that wide.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei has issued the new rules
of the game; reduce imports to a minimum; aim for less reliance on oil and
gas exports; ease domestic political pressure (after all everyone agrees
Iranians must unite to face a mortal threat); and stick to the notion that Iran
has no established all-weather friends, even Russia and China.
St Petersburg, Bishkek,
Dushanbe
Iran is under a state of
siege. Internal regimentation must be the priority. But that does not preclude
abandoning the drive towards Eurasian integration.
The pan-Eurasian
interconnection became even more glaring at what immediately happened after
Bishkek; the summit of the Conference
on Interaction and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia (CICA) in
Dushanbe, Tajikistan.
Bishkek and Dushanbe expanded
what had already been extensively discussed at the St Petersburg forum, as I
previously reported. Putin himself stressed that all vectors should be
integrated: BRI, EAEU, SCO, CICA and ASEAN.
The Bishkek Declaration,
adopted by SCO members, may not have been a headline-grabbing document, but it
emphasized the security guarantees of the Central Asian Nuclear-Weapons-Free
Zone Treaty, the “unacceptability of attempts to ensure one country’s security
at the expense of other countries’ security, and condemning “the unilateral and
unlimited buildup of missile defense systems by certain countries or groups of
states”.
Yet the document is a faithful
product of the drive towards a multilateral, multipolar world.
Among 21 signed agreements,
the SCO also advanced a road map for the crucial SCO-Afghanistan Contact Group,
driving deeper the Russia-China strategic partnership’s imperative that the
Afghan drama must be decided by Eurasian powers.
And what Putin, Xi and Modi
discussed in detail, in private in Bishkek will be developed by their
mini-BRICS gathering, the RIC (Russia-India-China) in the upcoming G20 summit
in Osaka in late June.
Meanwhile, the US
industrial-military-security complex will continue to be obsessed with Russia
as a “revitalized malign actor” (in Pentagonese) alongside the all-encompassing
China “threat”.
The US Navy is obsessed with
the asymmetrical know-how of “our Russian, Chinese and Iranian rivals” in
“contested waterways” from the South China Sea to the Persian Gulf.
With US conservatives ratcheting
up “maximum pressure” trying to frame the alleged weak node of Eurasia
integration, which is already under total economic war because, among other
issues, is bypassing the US dollar, no one can predict how the chessboard will
look like when the 2020 SCO and BRICS summits take place in Russia.
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