AHMEDINEJAD'S VISIT: IN PERSPECTIVE
By B. Raman
In response to an invitation
issued by President Mahinda Rajapaksa of Sri Lanka during
his visit to Teheran in November, 2007. President Mahmud
Ahmadinejad of Iran paid a two-day official visit to Sri
Lanka on April 28 and 29, 2008.
2. Since last year, Sri
Lanka has been facing economic difficulties due to the
drying-up of economic assistance from countries of the
European Union (EU) such as Germany because of what they
perceive as the indifferent attitude of the Rajapaksa
Government to complaints regarding the violation of the
human rights of the Tamils and its refusal to seek a
political solution to the problem.
3. Instead of succumbing to
the EU pressure on the subject, the Rajapaksa Government
turned for increased assistance to other countries such as
China and Iran, which did not raise human rights issues as a
condition for such assistance. Assistance from Iran was of
crucial importance to Sri Lanka because of the Government's
inability to pay for its increasingly costly oil imports.The
Goverenment of Ahmadinejad readily agreed to provide oil at
concessional rates to Sri Lanka and to train a small team of
officers of the Sri Lankan Army and intelligence in Iran. It
also agreed to provide a low-interest loan to Sri Lanka to
enable it to purchase defence-related equipment from China
and Pakistan.
4. In addition, it agreed to
invest US $ 1.5 billion in energy-related projects in Sri
Lanka. One of these projects is for the production of hydel
power and the other to double the capacity of an existing
oil refinery in Sri Lanka. Work on the construction of the
hydel project started during Mr. Ahmadinejad's visit. Iranian
engineers have already been preparing the project report for
doubling the capacity of the refinery and for modifying it
to enable it to refine in future Iranian crude to be
supplied at concessional rates. The existing capacity is
50,000 barrels a day.
5. The interest shown by
Iran in Sri Lanka since last year is attributed to its
desire to counter the Israeli influence in Sri Lanka and to
use Sri Lanka as a base for monitoring the movements of US
naval ships between the Pacific and the Gulf. Since
Mr. Rajapaksa came to power, the visit of US naval vessels
and officers to Sri Lanka has increased. Even before he came
to power, Israel had emerged as an important supplier of
military equipment, particularly for the Sri Lankan Air
Force. The fact that even at the risk of misunderstanding
with Israel, Mr. Rajapaksa chose to approach Iran and
accepted its ready offer of assistance underlined the
serious economic situation in which Sri Lanka found itself.
6. In view of the operation
of a NATO Naval task force in the Gulf to provide logistics
support to the NATO's military operations in Afghanistan,
the officers in charge of Ahmadinejad's security were not in
favour of his aircraft flying over the seas on his way to
and back from Colombo. They reportedly decided that his
aircraft should fly to Colombo over Pakistan and India and
use the same route for its return journey.
7. The Iran Air Force has
aircraft which can fly directly from Teheran to Colombo
without the need for any intermediate halt. However, they
are in a poor state of maintenance due to difficulties in
procuring spare parts because of the sanctions imposed by
the UN and the US against Iran. It was, therefore, decided
that his aircraft should stop over briefly in Islamabad on
his way to Colombo and in New Delhi on his way back. It is
learnt that the initiative for stop-over visits came from
Teheran because of considerations relating to the security
of Mr. Ahmadinejad's plane.
8. Pakistan, which has not
been worried about any adverse reaction from the US,
welcomed the proposal and extended to him a high profile
welcome while he was on his way to Colombo on April 28.His
engagements in Islamabad included separate meetings with
President Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Yusuf Raza
Gilani and a lunch hosted by the Prime Minister. While the
local media hype focussed on the reported forward movement
in the negotiations for a gas pipeline to supply Iranian gas
to Pakistan and India----- a proposal, which has been under
periodic discussions since Benazir Bhutto's second term as
the Prime Minister (1993-96) within ups and downs in hype and
euphoria--- the real reason for the satisfaction of the
Pakistani leadership was the Iranian President's positive
response to Pakistan's request for urgent economic
assistance.
9. The Pakistani economy has
been in a bad shape since the beginning of this year due to
shortages of food grains, flour and electricity. The
shortages in foodgrains and flour have caused acute economic
hardship to the people. The erratic electric supply has
affected industrial production, which has also been affected
by frequent disruptions in the supply of gas from
Balochistan due to attacks on the pipelines from Balochistan
to Punjab by the Balochistan Liberation Army(BLA). In
response to reportedly desperate requests from Musharraf and
Gilani, Mr. Ahmadinejad is learnt to have agreed to supply an
unspecified quantity of foodgrains, flour and electricity
to Pakistan.
10. On the question of the
gas pipeline from Iran to Pakistan, there were contradictory
versions of the outcome of the talks despite the
orchestrated atmosphere of optimism which Mr. Ahmadinejad
himself tried to spread in Islamabad and New Delhi. While
the "News" and the "Daily Times" gave an optimistic
assessment as if all issues involving India, Pakistan and
Iran had been sorted out on matters like price, the transit
fee etc during the visit of Mr. Murli Deora, the Indian
Petroleum Minister, to Pakistan before the Iranian
President's visit, the "Dawn" of Karachi, which is better
informed and which has its feet firmly on the ground, gave a
more guarded picture. Quoting what it described as
"diplomatic observers", the "Dawn" (April 29) said: "Several
contentious issues remain to be addressed." It did not
specify what were those contentious issues.
11. The 'Hindu" of Chennai
was even more cautious than the "Dawn". It reported as
follows on April 30,2008: " Foreign Secretary Shivshankar
Menon reaffirmed Mr. Ahmadinejad's optimism, but cautioned
that a long road lay ahead to ensure that the project was
commercially viable, financially acceptable to India and all
security concerns were taken care of."
12. There are various
dimensions to this castle-building in the air over the gas
pipeline from Iran. Among them, the following:
- Financial: Both India
and Pakistan are reported to have made it clear that
Iran has to raise the funds (about US $ 7.5 billion) for
the construction of the pipeline. Where is it going to
get it when it has been facing difficulty for years in
raising in the international market the funds required
by it for the modernisation of its own oil and gas
industries. The Americans are determined to see that
unless and until it winds up its nuclear enrichment
plant at Natanz, it is not able to raise a single cent
in the international market.
- Technical: The proposed
pipeline will pass through earthquake prone areas on
both sides of the Iran-Pakistan border. Iran does not
have the required technology for its construction. Only
Western pipeline construction companies and those in
Russia and China have it. The Western (including
Australian) companies would not help because of the US
pressure and the UN sanctions. Russia might help, but
would want to be paid for it in cash. China would be
prepared to help provided it is paid in kind in the form
of a share of the gas to be transported. If Iran agrees
to it, it would become a four-party project involving
Iran, Pakistan, India and China and the entire proposal
will have to be re-negotiated.
- Security: The pipeline
has to pass through Baloch majority areas on both sides
of the Iran-Pakistan border. The Balochs in Iran, who
are Sunnis, are being assisted by the Americans through
organisations such as the Jundullah to destabilise the
border areas of Iran. The Balochs in Pakistan have also
risen in revolt against the Government in Islamabad and
are fighting for an independent Balochistan. They are
demanding that they should also be a party to the gas
pipeline project, which will pass through their
homeland, and that they should get a share of the
transit fee, which Pakistan hopes to get from India.
13. None of these really major
issues has so far been addressed. The only issues addressed
so far are the price of the gas and the transit fee to be
paid by India to Pakistan. These are the least complex and
the least difficult of the issues. The above-mentioned
issues are much more complex and difficult. Iran, Pakistan
and India have been misleading public opinion by creating an
impression that just because an agreement has been reached
on the pricing and transit fees, the pipeline is for
tomorrow. It is not. There is still a long road ahead.
14. Spins, meant to generate
an unwarranted atmosphere of optimism, are not confined to
the proposed Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline. The spins
also cover the proposed oil/gas pipeline from Turkmenistan
to Pakistan via Afghanistan. Iran is not involved in this
project, which has the total blessing of the US. The idea of
this project was originally initiated by the UNOCAL of the
US in 1994, when Benazir was the Prime Minister. Since then
it has been under discussion. After the Taliban captured
power in Kabul in September,1996, UNOCAL lost interest in
the project. After 9/11, most Western companies lost
interest in the project because of the on-going military
operations against Al Qaeda and the Neo Taliban in the area.
Only the Asian Development Bank (ADB), which is keenly
interested in the project, kept the talks going even though
there were no takers from major Western pipeline
construction companies.
15. In the case of the
Iranian pipeline, there is neither money nor construction
offers. In the case of the Turkmenistan pipeline, money is
available, but concrete construction offers are not
forthcoming due to the security situation. As per the
current proposal, the pipeline will pass through Herat and
Kandahar in Afghanistan to Multan in Pakistan. While the
security situation in Herat is improving, that in Kandahar
is as bad as ever. Till Al Qaeda and the Neo Taliban are
decisively defeated by the NATO forces, this pipeline is
unlikely to take off. In response to an invitation from the
sponsors, India has also joined this project and Mr. Deora
participated in discussions on this project also during his
recent visit to Pakistan. The US was also keen that India
should join this project as it could provide an attractive
alternative to the Iranian pipeline project. When both the
projects are struggling to take off, the question of an
attractive alternative does not arise.
16. The "Dawn" wrote on
April 19, 2008: "Pakistan had planned to start work on the
(Turkmenistan) project in 2007 and complete it by 2011. But
the target was missed. The project is now envisaged to be
completed by 2018."
17. India had no difficulty
in accepting Iran's proposal for a stop-over visit by Mr.
Ahmadinejad to New Delhi. In view of the slowing-down of the
operalionalisation of the India-US nuclear co-operation deal
due to opposition from the Communists, likely US
sensitivities on Iran were not an inhibiting factor in the
way of inviting him. However, caution dictated a
low-profile visit, which would not be too jarring to the US.
While Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh hosted a private
dinner for the Iranian President, he avoided any public
fraternisation with him similar to the fraternisation which
one saw in Islamabad and Colombo. However, the Iranian
Embassy in New Delhi succeeded in giving to the visit a
higher profile than what the Government of India had wanted.
Mr. Ahmadinejad fully utilised his press conference, which
was not attended by the Indian Prime Minister, to taunt and
ridicule the US as a bully and a decaying power.
18. As one saw
Mr. Ahmadinejad doing it, one's mind went back to the period
before 2003 when another West Asian leader was using similar
language against the US. He and his country paid a heavy
price for it. His name was Saddam Hussein.
19. As one witnessed the
demeanour and heard the anti-US rhetoric of Mr. Ahmadinejad
during his diplomatic foray into South Asia, one got the
impression that he feels that he no longer has to fear any
US intervention in Iran over the issue of its uranium
enrichment project. More by coincidence than by design, two
reports, which should be worrisome for the Iranian
leadership, came from Washington DC before the diplomatic
foray of Mr. Ahmadinejad. First, the US decision to send a
second aircraft carrier to the Gulf. Second, a briefing for
a Congressional Committee by the Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) on a mysterious bombing of a construction site in
Syria in September, 2007, by an unidentified aircaft. The
CIA confirmed what was being speculated about since then,
namely, that the construction site was destroyed by an
Israeli aircraft because it was to be a nuclear reactor
being set up by Syria with North Korean assistance.
20. Was it a message to
Mr. Ahmadinejad that what Israel did to Iraq by destroying
the Osirak nuclear construction site in the early 1980s and
to Syria last September, it could do to the uranium
enrichment plant at Natanz in Iran. Of course, it won't be
that easy. In Iraq and Syria, the Israelis bombed a
construction site and not operational nuclear reactors.
Natanz is not a project under construction. It is an already
constructed and operational set-up located underground. The
Iranians feel confident that Israel will not be able to
damage or destroy Natanz. Their confidence also derives from
the fact that Iran is a much stronger military power than
Iraq or Syria and that the US, in their perception, has to
depend on Iran for restoring normalcy in Iraq.
21. But the history of
Israel shows that when it genuinely fears a threat to it and
its people from the potential nuclear capability of an
adversary state, it finds a way of neutralising that threat,
whatever be the difficulties. Mr. Ahmadinejad's
self-confidence may prove to be short-lived.
(The writer is
Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of
India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For
Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)