Heading east: Implications of Tehran's accession to Shanghai Cooperation Organization
Tehran's accession to the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization (SCO) came after the unanimous approval of its members
to reinforce the eastward policy adopted by Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
to support his country's relations with China and Russia.
The organization was established in
2001 as an intergovernmental organization dedicated to addressing political,
economic and security issues and promoting cooperation among its members, which
include China, Russia, India, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan.
The SCO comprises about 44 percent
of the world's population, four nuclear powers (or half of the world's nuclear
powers), and about a quarter of the world's gross domestic product,
demonstrating its strategic importance.
Iranian media exaggerated the
accession by portraying it as an historic victory for new President Ebrahim
Raisi, who accomplished what former presidents Mohammad Khatami, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad and Hassan Rouhani had failed to do, while this decision came from
Moscow, which for 16 years had objected to Tehran’s annexation of the
organization and finally agreed at the summit hosted by the Tajik capital,
Dushanbe, which may take more than five years to fully activate.
The Iranian press also exaggerated
the celebration of the Russians’ pledges to cooperate to help Iran solve its
banking crisis without providing a clear example of how Moscow could contribute
to easing the impact of international sanctions on Iran, knowing that the
Volga-Caspian trade route, which is supposed to help Tehran circumvent US
sanctions, has not been activated on the ground.
Earlier this year, Iran and China
signed a 25-year strategic partnership that includes billions of dollars in
Chinese investments in Iranian energy and infrastructure projects.
Iran is working to improve its
relationship with the other major powers in the SCO, especially Russia, and the
two sides agreed to hold joint military exercises with Beijing late this year
or early next year in a repetition of the trilateral naval maneuvers in the
Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Oman in late 2019.
It may only be a matter of time
until Iran builds or acquires, with Russian and Chinese help, advanced weapons.
That partnership could provide the Iranians with more powerful air defense
capabilities, missile systems, and electronic warfare capabilities.
The SOC countries’ approval
indicates that there is a belief that the nuclear agreement will be revived and
the US sanctions will be lifted, as the SOC countries will not be able to
conduct economic transactions with countries subject to international
restrictions, and Moscow and Beijing have agreed to accept Tehran's membership
in the framework of the Cold War with Washington, especially the AUKUS security
pact between the United States, Britain and Australia for cooperation in the
Indo-Pacific region.