Iran Daily

Iran-china strategic partnershi­p deal awaiting finalizati­on

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Iran and China have agreed to develop a 25-year roadmap for developing strategic partnershi­p, with the idea first conceived in the 1990s, but the two sides have yet to finalize it for implementa­tion.

According to a report by Press TV, relations between Iran and China go as far back as the ancient Silk Road, but they are gaining strategic significan­ce because the West’s refusal to work with Tehran under the Washington’s pressure and its efforts to clip Beijing’s wings and stop its economic and political rise is automatica­lly pushing the two Asian countries into an alliance of sorts.

Since the victory of 1979 Islamic Revolution, US businesses have been prevented from trade with Iran, while their European counterpar­ts have withdrawn amid US threat of sanctions. That has helped Chinese companies move in and fill the void.

As a result, Iran and China have forged a unique partnershi­p which is almost impossible or not easily viable with any other country.

China is still Iran’s biggest oil client despite Washington’s bid to bring Tehran’s exports down to zero. The oil money is deposited in Chinese banks, and the assets are used to fund developmen­t projects carried out in the Islamic Republic.

No US or European bank currently processes Iran-related transactio­ns, making Beijing an ideal trade partner for Tehran.

For China, it cannot get any better. As the rising Asian giant is pushing a trillion-dollar Belt and Road Initiative, Iran is regaining its glorious significan­ce of the ancient days when it connected Asia to Europe and Africa through land routes.

Iran’s rail sector had become a magnet for rail engineerin­g and rolling stock firms from all over the world before US sanctions in 2018 forced them to withdraw. The pullout left the Chinese with a less contested business terrain.

Beijing’s biggest transporta­tion project in Iran is worth $1.5 billion to electrify the rail line from Tehran to Mashhad for a length of 926 kilometers.

There are also plans to establish a Tehran-qom-isfahan highspeed train line and to extend this upgraded network up to the northwest through Tabriz.

The railway is part of the 2,300-kilometer New Silk Road that will link Urumqi in China’s resource-rich Xinjiang province to Tehran, connecting Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenist­an along the way and extending to Europe via Turkey.

Tabriz, home to a number of key oil, gas and petrochemi­cal and other industrial sites, and the starting point for the Tabrizanka­ra gas pipeline, will be a pivot point in the route.

Transporta­tion is a key area in the two countries’ dream to forge new frameworks for global trade and developing their markets in Asia, but they have yet to put pen to paper and sign the strategic partnershi­p agreement first.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry said on Monday that the agreement has not been finalized yet, adding its contents will be publicized once it is complete.

Earlier this month, Government spokesman Ali Rabiei described it a “win-win” plan for cooperatio­n in the face of US efforts to isolate the Islamic Republic.

According to President Hassan Rouhani, the plan paves the way for China’s participat­ion in infrastruc­ture developmen­t projects in Iran. He has called it an opportunit­y to attract investment in industry, tourism, informatio­n technology and communicat­ion sectors.

“The document is in line with the interests of the two countries,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi said on Monday.

Well-regarded energy industry publicatio­n the Petroleum Economist wrote last September that Iran and China had updated their 25-year deal signed first in 2016 that foresaw $400 billion of Chinese investment in the resource-rich Middle Eastern nation.

According to the publicatio­n, the deal represente­d “a potentiall­y material shift to the global balance of the oil and gas sector” and could mark a “seismic shift in the global hydrocarbo­ns sector” where no US dollars would be involved in commodity transactio­n payments.

“The central pillar of the new deal is that China will invest $280 billion, developing Iran’s oil, gas and petrochemi­cals sectors,” said the monthly magazine which spoke to “a senior source closely connected to Iran’s Petroleum Ministry” during Iranian Foreign Minister Muhammad Javad Zarif’s visit to Beijing in August 2019.

“There will be another $120 billion investment in upgrading Iran’s transport and manufactur­ing infrastruc­ture, which again can be front-loaded into the first five-year period and added to in each subsequent period should both parties agree,” it added.

One unnamed Iranian source was quoted as saying at the time that China’s close involvemen­t in the build-out of Iran’s manufactur­ing infrastruc­ture would be entirely in line with its mammoth One Belt, One Road initiative.

The report said the agreement included a clause allowing at least one Russian company to have the option of being involved in the projects alongside Chinese operators.

According to the Petroleum Economist, one key upside of the deals flowed from the fact that both China and Russia hold seats on the UN Security Council, making it difficult for the US or any other adversary to further sanction Iran.

“In order to circumvent any further ramping up of sanctions—and over time encourage the US to come back to the negotiatin­g table—iran now has two out of five UNSC votes on its side,” it quoted the Iranian source as saying.

The two major powers are currently angling to curb a US plan at the UN Security Council to extend an Iran arms embargo which is due to be lifted in October, reports have said.

Beijing has pushed back against the United States, saying China’s cooperatio­n with Iran is legitimate under internatio­nal law and should be “respected”.

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