DV RULES
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2010
- Messages
- 4,078
- Reaction score
- -2
- Country
- Location
Unlike many people believe International relations don't go like "i need you more than you need me, so to hell with you". No country want's bad relations with another country. Issue crop up when interest clash. When you refer to alternate route for AF via Iran keep in mind the isolation Iran is facing. India is a strong regional player and Iran would not like to loose support of India especially at this stage. US is tightening the knot on Iran and Russia/China are also not showing the level of support that they used to shover. In short how much Iran will gain by supporting cause of Kashmir and how much it will loose is no brainer. In short a demarche has been issued and India has abstained from Voting. The message has been loud and clear, we did not like what you did, we are refraining from voting against you however we are not voting in favor of you... Think about your priorities and keep in mind there will be repercussions in case you poke your nose in our sensitive issue....
I want to say that your international relations are so conservative.
US will not going to attack on Iran because he understand that to attack on Iranian nuclear spots means attack on Russian nuclear plant and US will avoid any direct conflicts with Russia and more over this is an another mover to set control on region and china never will like this move. India already has lost the favors of Iran to give vote in UNSC against Iran so what you are looking for? Russian help to Iran is going in progress without any measures of sanctions, just read about Iranian made S-300 M and deployment of S-300 abkhazia & Azrbaijan for what all is this? US never can get a hopeful answer from Russia against Iran except ban over the direct sale of S-300 to Iran.
Russia already has converted its natural resources to China from EU and EU will not like to loose his 2nd main oil & gas supplier. Iran is going to construct pipe line to China through Pakistan and where I think this all bullshit is going only to cover and occupy Iranian natural resources and supply it to EU & America without any resistance. Don’t forget the example of Iraq.
Where concerns India than I want to say that India want to wash his hands same from all but it is hard to reality. So tell me why India could not say that they are in side of Iran about Iranian Nuclear program? Unless India is voting against Iran and then he is requiring a full-fledged support from Iran to ‘disputed Jammu & Kashmir’! How cute
Pressuring Iran and threatening further sanctions over its nuclear programme would be counter-productive, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov says.
Speaking after talks in Moscow with US counterpart Hillary Clinton, Mr Lavrov said every effort should be made to continue negotiations.
His comments appeared to fall short of the tougher commitment sought by Washington towards Iran.
But Mrs Clinton praised Russia for its help on the issue.
The US secretary of state, in Moscow at the end of a five-day European tour, told a joint news conference with Mr Lavrov that Russia had "been extremely co-operative in the work that we have done together" on Iran.
Iran says its nuclear programme is for peaceful energy purposes, but the US and other Western nations believe it is seeking nuclear weapons.
Tehran revealed last month that it had a second uranium plant, further raising questions about the nature of its nuclear ambitions.
'No requests'
Ahead of Mrs Clinton's visit, a US official had suggested she would ask Russian leaders about "specific forms of pressure" that Moscow would be prepared to back if talks failed.
ANALYSIS
The BBC's Rupert Wingfield-Hayes
Rupert Wingfield-Hayes, BBC News, Moscow
Last month President Medvedev told President Obama sanctions against Iran might be "inevitable". But on Tuesday the Russians seemed less enthusiastic.
Iran has agreed to open more of its nuclear enrichment facilities to international inspection. That has taken the pressure off Russia, for now.
Behind the scenes there are powerful factions vying for control of Russia's Iran policy.
Russia's arms makers and their Kremlin allies are pro-Iran. They want to sell weapons to the Islamic Republic. Nor do they fear a nuclear armed Iran. They do not believe Russia will be a target.
But there is also an increasingly powerful pro-Israel faction in the Kremlin. Analysts say a new strategic and military partnership is being built with Jerusalem. Over a million Russian speakers now live in Israel.
At present Moscow is happy to wait and see what happens. But Tehran can no longer take Moscow's support for granted.
But Mrs Clinton said no requests had been made.
"We did not ask for anything today. We reviewed the situation and where it stood, which I think was the appropriate timing for what this process entails," she said.
The US was not seeking further sanctions pending talks between big powers and Iran, she added, but could do so "in the absence of significant progress and assurance that Iran is not pursuing nuclear weapons".
Mr Lavrov, for his part, said "all efforts" should be made to maintain dialogue with Iran.
"We are convinced that threats, sanctions, and threats of pressure in the present situation are counter-productive," he said.
The BBC's Rupert Wingfield-Hayes in Moscow says Mrs Clinton was looking for a solid commitment from Mr Lavrov, but did not get one.
Both Mr Lavrov and Mrs Clinton also said there had been considerable progress in talks on a new treaty to reduce the two countries' nuclear arsenals.
Mrs Clinton later met President Dmitry Medvedev at his Barvikha residence, but she will not meet Russia's powerful Prime Minister, Vladimir Putin.
He is in China for talks focusing on trade, but also expected to raise the nuclear programmes of Iran and North Korea.
No quid pro quo
President Barack Obama, who met Mr Medvedev in July, has pledged to reset relations with Russia.
Dmitry Medvedev and Barack Obama (July 2009)
Iran on defensive over secret site
UN sanctions against Iran
Iran and the nuclear issue
A month ago, following the revelations about Iran's second uranium enrichment facility, the Russian president said his government might ultimately accept further sanctions as inevitable.
Since then, Mr Obama has met a key Russian demand to scrap plans to deploy interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar station in the Czech Republic as part of a US missile defence system in Europe.
The US administration insisted it did not expect concessions in return.
But US officials have called on Russia to support, or at least not oppose, the idea of the UN Security Council imposing tougher sanctions on Iran if it fails to live up to its international obligations.
The council wants Iran to end uranium enrichment and has approved three rounds of sanctions - including bans on Iran's arms exports and all trade in nuclear material.