by Pepe Escobar
July 11, 2020
from
TheSaker Website
Italian version
A 2016 agreement is said to be coming to fruition - but what's in
it?
On January 23, 2016, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani (R)
and
Chinese President Xi Jinping (L) attend a press conference
following
their meeting in Tehran.
Photo: AFP / HO / Iranian Presidency
China will invest $400 billion
in Iran energy and infrastructure
but
nothing in strategic pact
allows for a Chinese troop presence
or
island handover...
Two of the US's top "strategic threats" are getting closer and
closer within the scope of the
New Silk Roads - the leading 21st
century project of economic integration across Eurasia.
The Deep
State will not be amused...
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman
Abbas Mousavi
blasted as "lies"
a series of rumors about the "transparent roadmap" inbuilt in the
evolving Iran-China strategic partnership.
That was
complemented by President Rouhani's chief of staff, Mahmoud Vezi,
who
said that,
"a destructive line of propaganda has been initiated
and directed from outside Iran against the expansion of Iran's
relations with neighbors and especially (with) China and Russia."
Vezi added,
"this
roadmap in which a path is defined for expansion of relations
between governments and the private sectors is signed and will
continue to be signed between many countries."
To a great extent,
both Mousavi and Vezi were referring to a sensationalist
report which did not add anything that was not already known
about the strategic partnership, but predictably dog-whistled a
major red alert about the military alliance.
The Iran-China
strategic partnership was officially established in 2016, when
President Xi visited Tehran.
These are the
guidelines.
Two articles among
the 20 listed in the agreement are particularly relevant:
Item 7 defines the
scope of the partnership within the New Silk Roads vision of Eurasia
integration:
"The Iranian side welcomes 'the Silk Road Economic Belt
and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road' initiative introduced by
China.
Relying on their respective strengths and advantages as well
as the opportunities provided through the signing of documents such
as the,
-
'MOU on Jointly Promoting the Silk Road Economic Belt and the
21st Century Maritime Silk Road'
-
'MOU on Reinforcement of
Industrial and Mineral Capacities and Investment',
...both sides shall
expand cooperation and mutual investments in various areas including
transportation, railway, ports, energy, industry, commerce and
services."
And item 10 praises
Iran's membership of
the AIIB:
"The Chinese
side appreciates Iran's participation as a 'Founding Member' of
the Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank.
Both sides are willing
to strengthen their cooperation in the relevant areas and join
their efforts towards the progress and prosperity of Asia."
So what's the
deal?
The core of the
Iran-China strategic partnership - no secret whatsoever since at
least last year - revolves around a $400 billion Chinese investment
in Iran's energy and infrastructure for the next 25 years.
It's all
about securing a matter of supreme Chinese national interest:
a
steady supply of oil and gas, bypassing the dangerous bottleneck of
the Strait of Malacca, secured with a median 18% discount, and paid
in yuan or in a basket of currencies bypassing the U.S. dollar.
Beijing will also
invest roughly $228 billion in Iranian infrastructure - that's where
the AIIB comes in - over 25 years, but especially up to 2025.
That
ranges from building factories to badly needed energy industry
renovation, all the way to the already in progress construction of
the 900 km-long electric rail from Tehran to Mashhad.
Tehran, Qom and
Isfahan will also be linked by high-speed rail - and there will be
an extension to Tabriz, an important oil, gas and petrochemical node
and the starting point of the Tabriz-Ankara gas pipeline.
All of the above
makes total sense in New Silk Road terms, as
Iran is a key Eurasian
crossroads.
High-speed rail traversing Iran will connect Urumqi in
Xinjiang to Tehran, via four of the Central Asian "stans"
(Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan) all the way to
West Asia, across Iraq and Turkey, and further on to Europe:
a
techno revival of the Ancient Silk Roads, where the main language of
trade between East and West across the heartland was Persian.
The terms of aerial
and naval military cooperation between Iran and China and also
Russia are still not finalized - as Iranian sources told me.
And no
one has had access to the details.
What Mousavi said,
in a tweet, was that,
"there is
nothing [in the agreement] about delivering Iranian islands to
China, nothing about the presence of military forces, and other
falsehoods."
The same applies to
- totally unsubstantiated - speculation that the
PLA would be
granted bases in Iran and be allowed to station troops in Iranian
territory.
Last Sunday,
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif stressed Iran and China had
been negotiating "with confidence and conviction" and there was
"nothing secret" about the agreement.
Iranian, Chinese
and Russian negotiators will meet next month to discuss terms of the
military cooperation among the top three nodes of Eurasia
integration.
Closer collaboration is scheduled to start by November...
Geopolitically and
geo-economically, the key take away is that
the U.S. relentless
blockade of the Iranian economy, featuring hardcore weaponized
sanctions, is impotent to do anything about the wide-ranging
Iran-China deal.
Here is a decent expose of some of the factors in play.
The Iran-China
strategic partnership is yet another graphic demonstration of what
could be deconstructed as the Chinese brand of exceptionalism:
a
collective mentality and enough organized planning capable of
establishing a wide-ranging, win-win, economic, political and
military partnership.
It's quite
instructive to place the whole process within the
context
of what State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi stressed
at a recent 'China-U.S. Think Tanks meeting,' attended, among others, by
Henry Kissinger:
"One particular
view has been floating around in recent years, alleging that the
success of China's path will be a blow and threat to the Western
system and path.
This claim is
inconsistent with facts, and we do not agree with it.
Aggression and
expansion are never in the genes of the Chinese nation
throughout its 5,000 years of history. China does not replicate
any model of other countries, nor does it export its own to
others.
We never ask
other countries to copy what we do.
More than 2,500
years ago, our forefathers advocated that,
'All living
things can grow in harmony without hurting one another, and
different ways can run in parallel without interfering with
one another'."
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