Iran-russia Relations

  • Uploaded by: mohd samsuddin bin harun
  • 0
  • 0
  • June 2020
  • PDF

This document was uploaded by user and they confirmed that they have the permission to share it. If you are author or own the copyright of this book, please report to us by using this DMCA report form. Report DMCA


Overview

Download & View Iran-russia Relations as PDF for free.

More details

  • Words: 2,293
  • Pages: 5
Try Beta article

discussion

edit this page

Log in / create account

history

Iran–Russia relations From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (Redirected from Iran-Russia relations)

navigation Main page Contents Featured content Current events Random article search

Go

Search

Relations between Russia and Persia (pre-1935 Iran), officially commenced in 1592, with the Safavids in power. Past and present contact between Russia and Iran has long been complicatedly multi-faceted; often wavering between collaboration and rivalry. The two nations have a long history of geographic, economic, and socio-political interaction. Since then, mutual relations have been turbulent often, and dormant at others. Contents

interaction About Wikipedia Community portal Recent changes Contact Wikipedia Donate to Wikipedia Help toolbox What links here Related changes Upload file Special pages Printable version Permanent link Cite this page

Iran–Russia relations

Iran

Russia

1 History of Iran-Russia relations 1.1 Pre-Pahlavi era 1.2 Pahlavi era 1.3 Post 1979 2 Current relations 3 References 4 Further reading 5 See also 6 External links

History of Iran-Russia relations

[edit]

Pre-Pahlavi era

[edit]

Contacts between Russians and Persians have a long history. As early as in the 1660s the famous Russian Cossack ataman Stenka Razin raided, and occasionally wintered at, Persia's north coast, creating diplomatic problems for the Russian Czar in his

languages Français

日本語 Русский

Shah Suleiman I and his courtiers, Isfahan, 1670. Painter is Ali Qoli Jabbador, and is kept at The Saint Petersburg Institute of Oriental Studies in Russia, ever since it was acquired by Tsar Nicholas II. Note the two Georgian figures with their names at the top left.

dealings with the Persian Shah.[1] The Russian song telling the tragic semi-legendary story of Razin's relationship with a Persian princess remains popular to this day.

Irano-Russian relations particularly picked up as a weakened Safavid empire gave way to the Qajarid dynasty in the mid-18th century. The first Persian Ambassador to Russia was Mirza Abolhassan Khan Ilchi Kabir. The Qajarid government was quickly absorbed with managing domestic turmoil, while rival colonial powers rapidly sought a stable foothold in the region. While the Portuguese, British, and Dutch competed for the south and southeast of Persia in the Persian Gulf, the Russian Empire largely was left unchallenged in the north as it plunged southward to establish dominance in Persia's northern territories. Plagued with internal politics, the Qajarid government found itself incapable of rising to the challenge of facing, or even recognizing, its northern threat from Russia. A weakened and bankrupted royal court, under Fath Ali Shah, was forced to sign the notorious Treaty of Gulistan in 1813, followed by the Treaty of Turkmenchay after efforts by Abbas Mirza failed to secure Persia's northern front. With the Russian Empire continuously advancing south in the course of two wars against Persia, and the treaties of Turkmanchai and Golestan in the western frontiers, plus the unexpected death of Abbas Mirza in 1823, and the murder of Persia's Grand Vizier (Mirza AbolQasem Qa'im Maqām), Persia lost its Generated by www.PDFonFly.com at 11/14/2009 9:07:32 AM URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran-Russia_relations

traditional foothold in Central Asia to the Russian Tsarist armies. [2] The Russian armies occupied the Aral coast in 1849, Tashkent in 1864, Bukhara in 1867, Samarkand in 1868, and Khiva and Amudarya in 1873. The Treaty of Akhal, in which the Qajarid's were forced to cede Khwarazm, topped off Persian losses to the global emerging power of Imperial Russia. By the end of the 19th century, the Russian Empire's dominance became so pronounced that Tabriz, Qazvin, and a host of other cities were occupied by Russia, and the central government in Tehran was left with no power to even select its own ministers without the approval of the Anglo-Russian consulates. Morgan Shuster, for example, had to resign under tremendous British and Russian pressure on the royal court. Shuster's book "The Strangling of Persia"[3] is a recount of the details of these events, a harsh criticism of Britain and Imperial Russia. These, and a series of climaxing events such as the Russian shelling of Mashad's Goharshad Mosque in 1911, and the shelling of the Persian National Assembly by the Russian Colonel V. Liakhov, led to a surge in widespread anti-Russian sentiments across the nation. See a photo of a burial of a Russian road engineer in Qazvin here: [1]

Pahlavi era

[edit]

One result of the public outcry against the ubiquitous presence of Imperial Russia in Persia was the Constitutionalist movement of Gilan. The rebellion, headed by Mirza Kuchak Khan led to an eventual confrontation between the Iranian rebels and the Russian army, but was disrupted with the October Revolution in 1917.

Colonel V. Liakhov was notorious for shelling the National Iranian Assembly in 1911.

Russian involvement however continued on with the establishment of the short-lived Persian Socialist Soviet Republic in 1920, followed by the Republic of Mahabad, the last effort by Soviet Russia to establish a communist republic in Iran.

Image from 1916 French magazine showing the "Russians at Ispahan".

In 1941, as the Second World War raged, Soviet Russia and Great Britain launched the Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran, ignoring Iran's plea of neutrality. In a revealing cable sent on July 6th 1945 by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, the local Soviet commander in northern Azerbaijan was instructed as such: "Begin preparatory work to form a national autonomous Azerbaijan district with broad powers within the Iranian state and simultaneously develop separatist movements in the provinces of Gilan, Mazandaran, Gorgan, and Khorasan".[4] The end of World War Two brought the start of American dominance in Iran's political arena, and with an anti-Soviet Cold War brewing, the United States quickly moved to convert Iran into an anti-communist block, thus ending Russia's influence on Iran for years to come.

Post 1979

[edit]

During the Iran–Iraq War, the USSR supplied Saddam Hussein with large amounts of conventional arms. Ayatollah Khomeini deemed Islam principally incompatible with the communist ideals of the Soviet Union, leaving the secular Saddam as an ally of Moscow. After the war, especially with the fall of the USSR, Tehran-Moscow relations witnessed a sudden increase in diplomatic and commercial relations, and Iran soon even began purchasing weapons from Russia. By the mid 1990s, Russia had already agreed to continue workby onwww.PDFonFly.com developing Iran'satNuclear Program, Generated 11/14/2009 9:07:32 AM URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran-Russia_relations

with plans to finish constructing the nearly 20 year delayed Nuclear Reactor plant of Bushehr.

Current relations

[edit]

In 2005, Russia was the seventh largest trading partner of Iran, with 5.33% of all exports to Iran originating from Russia.[5] Trade relations between the two exceed USD$1 billion.[6] Motor vehicles, fruits, vegetables, glass, textiles, plastics, chemicals, hand-woven carpet, stone and plaster products were among the main Iranian non-oil goods exported to Russia.[7] As confrontation between the United States and the European Union on one side and Iran on the other escalates, Tehran is finding itself further pushed into an alliance with Beijing and Moscow. And Iran, like Russia, "views Turkey's regional ambitions and the possible spread of some form of pan-Turkic ideology with suspicion".[8]

Iran is a CSTO candidate

Russia and Iran also share a common interest in limiting the political influence of the United States in Central Asia. This common interest has led the Shanghai Cooperation Organization to extend to Iran observer status in 2005, and offer full membership in 2006. Iran's relations with the organization, which is dominated by Russia and China, represents the most extensive diplomatic ties Iran has shared since the 1979 revolution. The solidity of Tehran-Moscow ties remains to be seen and tested however. Russia is increasingly becoming dependent on its economic relations with the West, and is thus gradually becoming vulnerable to western pressures in trying to curb its ties with Tehran. Iran has also expressed its unhappiness with the repeated delays by Russia in finishing the Bushehr Reactor project, as well as Russia's stance in the Caspian Sea dispute. Russia's growing ties with Israel and it's increasing role in the Arab Israeli peace process have also been points of tension between the two countries. Unlike previous years in which Iran's air fleet were entirely western made, Iran's Air Force and civilian air fleet are increasingly becoming Russian built as the US and Europe continues to maintain sanctions on Iran.[9]

References 1.

2. 3. 4.

[edit]

^ O'Rourke, Shane (2000). [http://books.google.com.au/books?id=L0Zk3tUQ1M4C Warriors and peasants: the Don Cossacks in late Imperial Russia Edition: illustrated]. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0312227744. ^ Nasser Takmil Homayoun. Kharazm: What do I know about Iran?. 2004. ISBN 964-379-023-1 p.78 ^ Morgan Shuster, The Strangling of Persia: Story of the European Diplomacy and Oriental Intrigue That Resulted in the Denationalization of Twelve Million Mohammedans. ISBN 0-934211-06-X

5.

^ Decree of the CC CPSU Politburo to Mir Bagirov, CC Secretary of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan, on "measures to Organize a Separatist Movement in Southern Azerbaijan and Other Provinces of Northern Iran". Translation provided by The Cold War International History Project at The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. ^ The Cost of Economic Sanctions on Major Exporters to Iran by Nader Habibi

6. 7.

^ Trade with Russia up , IranMania.com, 2003-12-25 ^ http://www.iran-daily.com/1388/3414/html/economy.htm#s383292

8.

^ Herzig Edmund, Iran and the former Soviet South, Royal Institute for International Affairs, 1995, ISBN 1-899658-04-1, p.9 ^ See:

9.

BBC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4504434.stm http://www.payvand.com/news/04/mar/1195.html http://www.ainonline.com/Publications/dubai/2005/d1iranp41.htm

Further reading

[edit]

Kazemzadeh, Firuz, Russia and Britain in Persia, A study in Imperialism, 1968, Yale University Press.

See also Foreign relations of Iran

[edit] Generated by www.PDFonFly.com at 11/14/2009 9:07:32 AM URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran-Russia_relations

Iran-China relations Russo-Persian War, 1826-1828 Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907 in which Persia was proposed to be partitioned

External links

[edit]

REALITE-EU: Russian-Iranian Relations World Press Review: Bear Hugs, Iran-Russian relations

v



Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Iran–Russia relations

Foreign relations of Russia

d•e

Africa Algeria • Angola • Benin • Botswana • Burkina Faso • Burundi • Cameroon • Cape Verde • Central African Republic • Chad • Comoros • Congo, Democratic Republic of the • Congo, Republic of the • Côte d'Ivoire • Djibouti • Egypt • Equatorial Guinea • Eritrea • Ethiopia • Gabon • Gambia • Ghana • Guinea • Guinea-Bissau • Kenya • Lesotho • Liberia • Libya • Madagascar • Malawi • Mali • Mauritania • Mauritius • Morocco • Mozambique • Namibia • Niger • Nigeria • Rwanda • São Tomé and Príncipe • Senegal • Seychelles • Sierra Leone • Somalia • South Africa • Sudan • Swaziland • Tanzania • Togo • Tunisia • Uganda • Zambia • Zimbabwe Asia Abkhazia • Afghanistan • Armenia • Azerbaijan • Bahrain • Bangladesh • Bhutan • Brunei • Cambodia • China, People's Republic of • China, Republic of • East Timor • Georgia • India • Indonesia • Iran • Iraq • Israel • Japan • Jordan • Kazakhstan • Korea, North • Korea, South • Kuwait • Kyrgyzstan • Laos • Lebanon • Malaysia • Maldives • Mongolia • Myanmar • Nepal • Oman • Pakistan • Palestine • Philippines • Qatar • Saudi Arabia • Singapore • South Ossetia • Sri Lanka • Syria • Tajikistan • Thailand • Turkey • Turkmenistan • United Arab Emirates • Uzbekistan • Vietnam • Yemen Europe Albania • Andorra • Austria • Belarus • Belgium • Bosnia and Herzegovina • Bulgaria • Croatia • Cyprus • Czech Republic • Denmark • Estonia • Finland • France • Germany • Greece • Hungary • Iceland • Ireland • Italy • Latvia • Lithuania • Luxembourg • Macedonia • Malta • Moldova • Monaco • Montenegro • Netherlands • Norway • Poland • Portugal • Romania • San Marino • Serbia • Slovakia • Slovenia • Spain • Sweden • Switzerland • Turkey • Ukraine • United Kingdom • Vatican City North America Antigua and Barbuda • Bahamas • Barbados • Belize • Canada • Costa Rica • Cuba • Dominica • Dominican Republic • El Salvador • Grenada • Guatemala • Haiti • Honduras • Jamaica • Mexico • Nicaragua • Panama • Saint Kitts and Nevis • Saint Lucia • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines • Trinidad and Tobago • United States Oceania Australia • Fiji • Kiribati • Marshall Islands • Micronesia • Nauru • New Zealand • Palau • Papua New Guinea • Samoa • Solomon Islands • Tonga • Tuvalu • Vanuatu South America Argentina • Bolivia • Brazil • Chile • Colombia • Ecuador • Guyana • Paraguay • Peru • Suriname • Uruguay • Venezuela Diplomacy Ministry of Foreign Affairs • Minister of Foreign Affairs • Diplomatic missions of Russia • Diplomatic missions in Russia • Russia and the European Union • Russia and the United Nations • NATO–Russia relations v



Foreign relations of Iran

d•e

Africa Americas

Asia

Europe

Morocco · Senegal · South Africa Canada · Cuba · United States · Venezuela Afghanistan · Arab world · Bangladesh · China (PRC) · Kazakhstan · Kyrgyzstan · India · Iraq · Israel · Japan · North Korea · Pakistan · Palestine · Saudi Arabia · Tajikistan · Turkmenistan · Uzbekistan Armenia · Azerbaijan · Belarus · Bulgaria · Croatia · Denmark · France · Georgia · Germany · Greece · Holy See · Hungary · Italy · Russia · Serbia · Switzerland · Turkey · Generated by www.PDFonFly.com at 11/14/2009 9:07:32 AM United Kingdom URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran-Russia_relations

Related topics

Ministry of Foreign Affairs · Diplomatic missions of / in Iran Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Categories: Iran–Russia relations

This page was last modified on 20 August 2009 at 06:17. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. See Terms of Use for details. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization. Contact us Privacy policy Wikipedia Disclaimers

About

Generated by www.PDFonFly.com at 11/14/2009 9:07:32 AM URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran-Russia_relations

Related Documents


More Documents from ""