Ukraine war: Putin visits Iran in rare
international trip
By Malu
Cursino
BBC News
Published
7 hours ago
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-62218696
Vladimir
Putin met his Iranian and Turkish counterparts in Tehran on Tuesday
Russian
President Vladimir Putin met Turkish and Iranian leaders in Tehran on Tuesday -
only his second foreign trip since he launched the invasion of Ukraine in
February.
Unblocking
Ukrainian grain exports via the Black Sea was high on the agenda - Mr Putin
said progress had been made.
The civil
war in Syria was also discussed, with Turkey and Russia historically backing
opposing sides.
The summit
was a chance for Mr Putin to show he still has international allies.
Speaking
after his meeting with the Russian president, Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei said Tehran and Moscow should strengthen their ties, and suggested
that the West was to blame for the war in Ukraine.
"If
you did not take the initiative, the other side would have caused the war with
its own initiative," Mr Khamenei told Mr Putin.
The US said
the Russian leader's visit to Iran showed how isolated Russia has become in the
wake of its invasion of Ukraine.
Analysis box by Steve Rosenberg, Russia editor
Invading
your neighbour, a sovereign independent country, tends to lose you friends.
And
Russia's lost plenty after invading Ukraine. In the West Moscow has achieved
pariah status.
But the
Kremlin is keen to show that international sanctions have failed to isolate
Russia, the world's largest country, and that some of its friends are sticking
around. Like Turkey and Iran.
Russia will
use the three-way summit on Syria to try to demonstrate it retains powerful
allies and geo-political influence.
But we're not
talking BFF (best friends forever). Turkey and Iran are also Russia's rivals.
Turkey and Russia are on opposing sides in Syria and in Libya; they are
competing for influence in the South Caucasus; Turkish combat drones have been
supporting the Ukrainian military. As for Iran, it's competing with Russia in
global energy markets.
True,
Russia, Turkey and Iran do have some common interests. But that is no guarantee
of long-lasting friendship.
In Tehran,
Mr Putin also held his first face-to-face meeting since the start of the war
with the leader of a Nato country, Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Despite
being a key member of the Western military alliance, Turkey has refused to join
international sanctions against Moscow, with Mr Erdogan's government seeking to
play the role of mediator.
Most
recently, Ankara has been trying to negotiate an end to the grain blockade in
the Black Sea, which is stopping millions of tonnes of desperately needed grain
from leaving Ukraine and being delivered to countries around the world.
Russia's
Black Sea fleet is said to be stopping any shipments getting in or out, and the
BBC has documented mounting evidence that Moscow's forces have stolen and
exported Ukrainian grain. Other routes have been heavily mined.
On Tuesday,
Mr Putin said progress had been made on the issue, and thanked Mr Erdogan for
mediating the talks between Moscow and Kyiv.
Later the
Russian president told journalists that Moscow would facilitate the export of
Ukrainian grain, if "all restrictions related to air deliveries for the
export of Russian grain" were lifted.
Syrian
civil war
The three
countries' leaders also discussed the long-running war in Syria, with Iran and
Russia supporting Syria's President Bashar al-Assad and Turkey backing rebel
forces.
Turkey has
threatened to launch a fresh offensive in northern Syria against US-backed
Kurdish militants, a move which both Iran and Russia oppose. The operation is
part of Mr Erdogan's plans to create a 30km (20 mile) safe zone along Turkey's
border with Syria.
Mr Erdogan
said he expects support from Russia and Iran "in its fight against
terrorism".
Last week,
the UN Security Council agreed to re-authorise cross-border deliveries of aid
to rebel-held Syria for six months after Russia had initially blocked a
proposal for a one-year extension.


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