Trump risks creating an alliance between Turkey, Iran, China and Russia.
Western researchers believe in an analysis of the US president's sanctions campaign, and plans more on Russia, Iran and Turkey, and launching a trade war against China.
American experts on Middle Eastern affairs believe that Trump creates Iran as an enemy, while Tehran poses no threat to American interests.
In fact, Russian political literature has been divorced since the breakup of the Soviet Union, the alliances, and the Kremlin in the last two decades; describing Russia's strong relations with some countries as a "partnership" and, at times, a "strategy."
Russia's caution about coalition policies is that the Kremlin, during the post-Soviet era, sought to strengthen relations with the United States and the West in general. Decision-makers have long been in genuine partnership with old Europe and with Washington.
Even after the transformation, which appeared to be sharp; in Vladimir Putin's foreign policy, the Kremlin was keen to describe opponents to partners, and Sergey Lavrov's diplomacy continued to pave the wall of Western reprisal in pursuit of strong Russian security in cooperation. However, the European arrogance, which was characterized by a high view; the anti-Russian propaganda, the opening of human rights files, the annexation of the Crimea, and the military intervention in Syria between Moscow and the capitals of the European decision; which do not dispense with Russian gas, The West After Perestroika Gorbachev and the policies of the Boris Yeltsin team, the Russian industry was transformed into a market for goods from all directions.
The Kremlin has sought to find partners that do not care about human rights files or Russia's relations with its former Soviet neighbors, and are not concerned about Russia's military intervention in Syria.
Commercial and economic partners, have no political conditions in dealing with Russia. Looking to conclude contracts of arms on appropriate terms, and acquisition of modern Russian military techniques, comparable; sometimes, superior to US weapons and Western encroachment requirements.
Even Washington's most hawkish allies have taken the White House out of the White House, waving the banner of multiple arms sources, and making deals with Moscow even from afar.
Indeed, Turkey has signed a deal to buy the S-400 missile system, despite the US warnings that have turned into a holiday, recently manifested in the imposition of sanctions on Ankara under the pretext of US pastor detained by the Turkish authorities.
It is true that the economic power of the United States, which gives it global hegemony, confuses opponents and raises the fears of friends about the consequences of leaving the house of obedience, but the insistence of Turkey and the Iranian rejection and the Russian disregard of the sanctions lead observers to believe that the alliance of necessity can arise between countries that are not in perfect harmony In positions, it is possible that acceding countries will join the White House's black policies in various parts of the world.
Is it not surprising that Qatar, which seeks to win American friendship with its Gulf sister provinces for more than a year, is rushing to find the Turkish lira that Trump is working to collapse?
It is also known that Qatar is considering with the Russians the possibility of buying the S-400 system.
Before that, Doha has taken a different tack from US anti-Iranian policy. It has adopted a policy of openness to Tehran's allies in the region, without Washington's permission.
In the context of anti-American measures, the Caspian Sea, Russia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan have reached a historic agreement on the legal status of the sea, culminating in talks that Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov described as a 20-year arduous process.
And really;
The writer of these lines was prepared to accompany Minister Lavrov more than once with the press team during his visits to Iran to discuss the Caspian Sea file.
On each visit, we would hear from the minister, the words "difficult talks", on the way back from Tehran to Moscow aboard the private plane.
Once, we noticed how Lavrov, every quarter of an hour or so from the closed meeting room with his Iranian counterpart, smoked in the courtyard and narrowed it.
Then he stopped going out a few times. We did not miss the opportunity to ask. What happened?
As usual, Lavrov replied calmly, laughing: I told them either to move the talks into the open air or to smoke in the hall!
It is clear that the Iranian negotiator is difficult to contemplate, preferring to block the smoke of the difficult debate in the closed hall to appear in public.
Iran was demanding the sharing of the sea on the basis of equality, because it was the former Soviet Union only, Caspian coast, according to the old agreements and before the emergence of three new countries, riparian, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan, was among the Soviet empire.
Lavrov, while smoking heavily, consumed hundreds of cigarettes in negotiations with Iranian pistachio merchants, who are known for peeling, knitting, selling and buying. Two decades later, Russia and its former Soviet partners reached an agreement that would establish a division that would meet the interests of those who despised the Caspian without underestimating anyone's right.
Perhaps, the compatibility of Russian-Iranian interests, and seeking to prevent American intervention and influence in the resource-rich closed sea, contributed greatly to the maturity of the agreement.
The fangs of Russian-Iranian understanding have emerged again, once in Syria and later in the Caspian. They may appear with Turkey and China elsewhere.
It is true that Moscow does not rely too much on Beijing, which is known to play well on the ropes, but Chinese pragmatism will meet the common Russian-Turkish-Iranian need to establish a buffer against the raging American bull.
It is partnerships of necessity that may become a permanent alliance, according to the famous Western pragmatism.
There are no permanent enmities, no permanent friendships, but permanent interests.
The economic tigers jump towards the garden
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