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Eritrean President Isayas Afwerki and Iranian President Mahmud
Ahmadinejad |
Iranian
ships and submarines have deployed an undisclosed number of Iranian
troops and weapons at the Eritrean port town of Assab, according to
opposition groups, foreign diplomats, and NGOs in the area.
The city
of Assab sits at the Horn of Africa in the Arabian Sea. As such, Assab
offers a strategic position as the world nervously eyes the precarious
routes through which a seaborne oil traverses daily.
Local
sources have reported that Iran recently sent soldiers and a large
number of long-range and ballistic missiles. The military basing came
after Iran signed an accord with Eritrea to revamp the Russian-built
refinery used by the Eritrean Oil Company, also known as Assab Oil
Company. As the world’s second largest import of gasoline, Iran is
sensitive to a Western plan to obstruct its access to refined product as
a part of broad sanctions provoked by Teheran’s nuclear activities. Iran
needs nearby oil refining ability. Using protection of the Eritrean
refinery as a pretext, Iran has set up its military operation there, and
has been patrolling with unmanned surveillance drones.
In the
meantime, the Iranian navy has test-fired a sea-to-sea missile during a
six-day naval maneuver in the Sea of Oman. Teheran radio announced, "The
surface-to-surface Nasr-2 missile was tested in the (Sea of) Oman
operational region,” adding that its new, medium-range missile “was
fired from a warship and hit its target at a distance of 30 km (19
miles) and destroyed it."
The
latest large-scale naval maneuver covered 50,000 square miles (129,500
sq. kilometers) of Iranian territorial waters and involved about 60
warships. Iran regularly holds war games in the Persian Gulf and the Sea
of Oman. With the addition of a new naval base at Jask at the mouth of
the Strait of Hormuz, and new basing at Assab in Eritrea, Iran can
exercise a decisive military presence on multiple shores astride the
pivotal oil sea lanes.
Iran’s
new basing rights trace to last May when Eritrean President Isayas
Afwerki visited Iran for a meeting with President Mahmud Ahmadinejad. At
a press conference after the meeting, Ahmadinejad declared that the two
countries share common views on regional issues and on ways to resist
hegemony. "We've held fruitful talks on different subjects relevant to
bilateral ties, mutual investment in the agriculture, industry and
energy sectors, and regional and international cooperation," he said.
Ahmadinejad stated that Iran saw “no limits to the expansion of
cooperation and relations with Eritrea,” while Isayas hailed Iranian
support for Eritrean people. Isayas also commented that both countries
will defend rights of each other and of other independent nations. “I
believe regional and international cooperation would guarantee regional
peace and stability.”
President
Isayas has granted Iran complete and exclusive control over the Eritrean
Oil Refinary with the mandate to revamp, manage, and exercise complete
authority over production and maintenance of the facility. Iran will
refine its crude oil in Assab to cover shortages it faces at home, which
will benefit Eritrea by not having to import expensive refined products.
The
Eritrean Democratic Party, an opposition party, pointed to trepidation
within the Eritrean regime, indicating that some high-ranking members
are saying that the president is playing with fire with Iran and that
the consequences for Eritrea could be grave.
In
September, Iran and Eritrea signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU)
supporting and encouraging foreign investment. The agreement was inked
by Iranian Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs Shamseddin Hosseini
and his Eritrean counterpart Berhane Abrehe.
Opposition groups in Eritrea are reporting that President Isayas, with
the cooperation of some Somali Islamist groups, is going beyond mere
bilateral oil supplies, and colluding to control the Bab El Mandeb
Straights in case of escalation of conflict with the United States and
Israel. Eritrea and the United States backed opposite sides in the war
in Somalia, which erupted at the end of 2006.
The
ominous expansion of the Iranian military comes at a time when the
United States has moved additional naval forces off the coast of Somalia
in response to piracy and what appears to be the looming defeat of its
U.S.-backed Transitional Federal Government.
Cutting Edge Foreign Editor Joseph Grieboski is President of the
Institute on Religion and Public Policy and Secretary General,
Interparliamentary |