ΕΛΕΥΘΕΡΟΤΥΠΙΑ - 16/06/2006
Iran, China Forming Major Alliance
Jon E. Dougherty, NewsMax.com
Thursday, Nov. 18, 2004
Just as the foreign policy team of the United States is getting a major overhaul with theresignation of Secretary of State Colin Powell comes new word of a major, growing alliancebetween "axis of evil" member Iran and communist China.The relationship, which has been nurtured by both countries for decades, is growing exponentially now, primarily out of China's insatiable energy needs and Iran's increasing hunger for consumer goods, as the economies of both countries continue to expand.What that means for the United States in the short term is an inability to pressure the Islamic republic into following policies beneficial to Washington. What it could mean for the long haul is a stronger, more menacing Iran and China, each buoyed by needs being met by the other. According to the Washington Post, China's energy needs have climbed nearly 40 percent inthe first months of 2004. Meanwhile, Iran – whose population has doubled since the 1979revolution – is increasing meeting those needs in exchange for access to China's burgeoning low-cost manufacturing industry.
History of Cooperation
For all intents, the match is a natural. But things weren't always rosy between the two powers.Before the revolution, the last Chinese official to meet with the late Shah Mohammed RezaPahlavi was Chinese Communist Party chief Hua Kuo-feng.The meeting "left a very strong negative feeling about China among Iranians," Abbas Maleki,director of the Caspian Institute, a Tehran research organization, told the Post.Ties have improved greatly since then, however. In August 2001, Iranian Ambassador toChina Mohammad Hossein Malaek held a reception in Beijing to mark "the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Iran and China," China's People's Daily reported."In terms of economic relations, China has become one of the most important trade partnersof Iran," said the paper. "At present, the Sino-Iranian political relations remain steady, and trade and economic ties are also developing fast…" In March 2002, Wu Yi, a member of China's State Council, made a visit to Iran to meet withPresident Mohammad Khatami. Again, the focus of the visit was to improve trade and economic ties."The bilateral trade between China and Iran has increased fast in recent years, with tradevolume reaching some 3.3 billion U.S. dollars last year, several times higher than that some10 years ago," People's Daily reported.
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