Iran-China secret agreement raises controversy
The leaked provisions of a comprehensive agreement between
Tehran and Beijing have provoked negative reactions around the world, and even
within Iran itself. Despite both parties trying to hide these provisions, the
leak has put the Iranian regime in a major political predicament, as its
opponents have accused it of selling the country's wealth to foreigners in
exchange for protecting the regime.
Although the agreement has not yet been officially
published, opposition leaders and former senior officials in Iran have
announced their rejection of what they consider to be high treason.
Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi
said on Saturday, July 25 that his country is determined to continue friendly
and balanced relations with all powers in East and South Asia and Eurasia.
Mousavi tweeted that the potential long-term cooperation
agreements with China and Russia and the continuation of cooperation with India
in the Iranian city of Chabahar indicate the continuation of friendly and
balanced relations with these countries. “We are determined to continue this
policy,” he added.
This comes in conjunction with Iranian Foreign Minister
Mohammad Javad Zarif’s announcement of modernizing the Iranian-Russian
cooperation agreement for 20 years within the framework of developing the
growing economic relations between Tehran and the international anti-Washington
axis that seeks to establish an active eastern bloc.
The leaked agreement with China states that Iran's leaders
called on Beijing to invest in all industrial, economic, agricultural,
security, military, commercial and financial sectors in exchange for purchasing
crude oil.
The draft agreement is said to have been deliberately leaked
by the Iranians in order to bargain with Washington and improve their
negotiating position in any future negotiating entitlement.
The agreement between the Chinese and Iranian governments
includes a comprehensive economic and security partnership with investments
worth $400 billion, mostly in Iranian oil infrastructure, as well as military
industries. In return, China will obtain cheap and guaranteed oil without
interruption for a quarter century. This would provide a means for saving the
Iranian oil industry, which has been wracked by US sanctions since 2018, reducing
its oil exports and forcing Iran to smuggle oil across its borders.
China imports 10 million barrels a day, and Tehran will be
able to save most of that amount and gradually raise its production ceiling to
more than 8 million barrels a day.
If this agreement begins to be implemented, it is likely to
upset the geopolitical balances in the region by introducing China as a direct
party in the region’s security accounts and the great challenge this will
represent.



