‘Falling into Iran’s orbit’
“Russia has been closely cooperating with Iran for the past two-and-a-half years, but exclusively in the military sphere,” said Ruslan Suleymanov, an independent Russian specialist on the Middle East based in Baku, Azerbaijan.
“Iranian weapons are in great demand. They have never been in such demand, and Russia has become dependent on Iranian weapons.”
Iranian military instructors, Suleymanov said, now visit Russia and are helping to build a factory for the production of Shahid drones inside Russia.
“As a result, Russia is forced to support Iran’s allies in the Middle East such as the Hezbollah movement,” Suleymanov said.
Welcomes chaos, but doesn’t want war
“Moscow is not interested in a huge firestorm,” said Suleymanov.
“We saw this in April. When it seemed that Iran and Israel were already entering a big war, Russia did not unequivocally take Iran’s side. Russia urged both Iran and Israel to show restraint,” he said, referring to tensions that exploded after Israel struck an Iranian consulate in Damascus in April, killing senior Iranian military commanders, and Iran responded by firing missiles into Israel for the first time ever.
At the same time, Suleymanov added, “Russia benefits from the chaos in the Middle East”.
“The Americans are now distracted from the war in Ukraine: They need to spend a lot of time resolving the situation in the Middle East.”
“But at the same time, the Kremlin would not like to see [another] major war,” he emphasized.
Russia and Iran share a mutual antagonism with the United States. They also share a common ally in Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, intervening during his country’s civil war. Russian warplanes bombed rebel-held cities, while Hezbollah fought furiously on the ground. Russia has strategic interests in Syria, including military bases as well as oil and gas deposits.
To defuse tensions with Israel, Moscow has used its influence with Tehran to persuade Hezbollah to pull back from the Syrian-Israeli border.
Levina, the Beirut-based Russian researcher, said that there was a view among observers that there has existed a tacit understanding between Israel and Russia, over Syria. She cited Israel’s reluctance to supply military hardware to Ukraine in its war against Russia, and said that when Israel strikes Hezbollah positions in southern Syria – where Moscow’s troops are present – “Russia does nothing, just lets them.”
Russia’s complex history with Lebanon and Hezbollah
As for Lebanon, Russia’s interests are rather limited. During Soviet times, Lebanese students, especially members of the Communist Party, were invited to attend the Patrice Lumumba University in Moscow – and some sympathy for modern Russia remains, embodied by the billboards of Putin occasionally displayed in the Shia and Orthodox Christian areas.
“The USSR was very active with the communist parties here and they had interests in common,” said Levina, including over Palestine and Armenians living in Lebanon.
Today, Russia’s relations with Lebanon aren’t as extensive, she said – and when it comes to Hezbollah, have long been complicated.
During the Lebanese Civil War, which lasted between 1975 and 1990, Hezbollah purportedly took three Soviet diplomats hostage as a means of pressuring Moscow to use its influence over Syria to stop shelling positions in Tripoli. After one hostage was executed, the KGB reportedly responded by kidnapping and castrating a Hezbollah leader’s relative and delivering the appendage. The rest of the hostages were swiftly released. This account has not been officially verified by either Hezbollah or the Kremlin.
The de-facto allies are still not particularly close, and there have been reported tensions over Hezbollah’s continued presence in Syria.
On Thursday, a Russian emergency plane evacuated 60 family members of diplomatic staff from Lebanon, but more than 3,000 Russian nationals remain in the country. The same plane delivered 33 tonnes of humanitarian aid, including food, medical supplies, and power generators. Further evacuations could follow.
Levina, meanwhile, hopes Hezbollah will bog down the Israeli advance.
“It was of course very unpleasant, but the ground invasion was, dare I say, good news because this is the third time Israel’s making this mistake,” she said, referring to Israel’s invasion and occupation of Lebanon in 1982, and the war in 2006.
“And they’re not learning at all.”
Source: Global news
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