Document Type : Original Article

Authors

1 عضو هیات علمی

2 Department of International Relations,, Faculty of Law, theology and Political science. Islamic Azad University. Science and Research Branch, Tehran. Iran.

Abstract

This article aims to re-think the main arguments on Russian Middle East policy. According to the mainstream views, the West plays a pivotal role in shaping Russia's Middle East policy, and Moscow's presence in the Middle East has largely been interlinked to Russia’s changing relations with the United States. Not having considering the international dynamics and complexities of the changing Middle East geopolitics, these contributions continue to argue that Russian Middle East presence is highly intended to challenge the United States and revive the Soviet’s sphere of influence throughout the region. In contrast, this paper offers a multidimensional and multivariable contribution, emphasizes on the regionalization of politics and security in the Middle East and the growing role of regional actors and emerging dynamics that inevitably lead to different options, interests and concerns which necessitates the engagement of great powers, especially Russia. According to regionalization of great powers engagement, Russia's Middle East policy and its increasing intervention in regional developments are influenced by political, security and economic dynamics within the Middle East that has increasingly become the driving force behind a variety of opportunities and threats such as terrorism, energy, arms sales, and foreign relations with the regional states. For Russia, this strong presence in the Middle East does not necessarily mean a return to the revisionist and hegemonic policy of Soviet engagement in the cold war era.

Keywords

Al-Makahleh, S. (2017). The Arab View of Russia’s Role in the MENA: Changing
Arab Perceptions of Russia, and the Implications For US Policy. The Jamestown
Foundation, October 5.
Aras, Bulent & Richard Falk (2015). Authoritarian ‘Geopolitics’ of Survival in the
Arab Spring. Third World Quarterly, 36:2, 322-336.
Buzan. B and Waever. O. (2003). Regions and Powers: The Structure of
International Security. Cambridge University Press.
Blank, S. (2017). The Foundations of Russia’s Policy in the Middle East. The
Jamestown Foundation, online, 5 October.
Borshchevskaya, A. (2018). The Tactical Side of Russia’s Arms Sales to the
Middle East. The Jamestown Foundation, December 7.
Brzezinski, Z. (2016), Toward a Global Realignment. The American Interest, Vol.
1, No. 6 (July/ August 2016).
Cook, S. (2018). Russia is the Middle East to Stay. Foreign Policy, 16 March.
Fawcett, L. (2019). International Relations of the Middle East, Oxford University
Press.
Hinnebusch, R. (2015). Structure over Agency: The Arab Uprising and the Regional
Struggle for Power, The Eastern Mediterranean In Transition: Multipolarity,
Politics And Power, ed. Spyridon N.Litsas, Ashgate.
Ibrahim, A. (2016). After Imposing his will on Syria, Putin is Moving onto Libya.
Al-Arabiya, 4 June.
Ikenberry, G. J. (2018). The End of Liberal International Order? International
Affairs, Vol. 94, Issue 1: 7–23..
Karasik, T. & Blank, S. (2018). Russia in the Middle East. The Jamestown
Foundation, Washington, DC.
Kofman, M., & Rojansky, M. (2018), What Kind of Victory for Russia in Syria?.
Military Review Online, March-April 2018: 6–23.
Kolobov, Oleg & Kornilov, A. (2011). Middle East Policy of Russia under
President Medvedev: Strategies, Institutes, Faces. Bilge Strateji, Issue 2, No. 4,
Available at: http://www.academia.edu/, (Accessed on: 25/7/2012).
Kozhanov, N. (2018). Russian Policy across the Middle East. Chatham House
report. London: Royal
Kuznetsov V., V. Naumkin & Zvyagelskaya I. (2018). Russia in the Middle East:
The Harmony of Polyphony. Valdai Discussion Club Report, Moscow, May 2018:
24–7.
Kuznetsov, V. (2017). Search for Stability in Libya. Presentation at Conference on “Russia and the EU in the Wider Middle East”. IFRI, Paris, 7 July.
Lavrov, S. (2017). Remarks at Ministerial Session of the Russian-Arab Cooperation
Forum. Abu Dhabi, 1 February. Available at: http://www.mid.ru/en/foreign_
policy/news/-/asset_publisher/cKNonkJE02Bw/content/id/2621092
Lukyanov, F. (2019). Russia and the Middle East: Viewpoints, Policies, Strategies.
First edition. Minneapolis. MN : East View Press.
Mammadov, R. (2018). Russia in the Middle East: Energy Forever?. The
Jamestown Foundation. December 7.
Megerisi, T., & M. Toaldo (2016). Russia in Libya, A Driver for Escalation?. Sada,
8 December.
Meyer, H., C. Alexander and G. Shennib (2018). Putin Promotes Libyan Strongman
as New Ally After Syria Victory. Bloomberg, 21 December.
Pompeo, M. (2018). Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s Answers to Questions. Full
Committee Hearing ‘An Update on American Diplomacy to Advance our National
Security Strategy’. US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. Washington DC.
25 July 2018. Available at: https://www.foreign.senate.gov/hearings/anupdate-
on-american-diplomacy-to-advance-our-national-security-strategy-072518.
Sarie’olghalam, M. (2017). International System and Modern Geo-Politics in
Middle East. Research Letter of Political Science, 12(1), 101-140. (in Persian).
Shumilin, A. (2016). Russia's Diplomacy in the Middle East: Back to Geopolitics.
Russie.Nei.Visions, No. 93, May 2016
Stent, A. (2016), Putin’s Power Play in Syria: How to Respond to Russia’s
Intervention. Foreign Affairs, January/February 2016, pp. 106-113 (8 pages).
Stepanova, E. (2018). Russia and Conflicts in the Middle East: Regionalisation
and Implications for the West. The International Spectator, 53:4, 1-23, DOI:
10.1080/03932729.2018.1507135.
Trenin, D. (2018). What is Russia up to in the Middle East?. Cambridge UK:
Polity.
Trenin, D. (2009). Russia’s Spheres of Interest, not Influence. The Washington
Quarterly, Vol. 16, No. 4, pp. 3-22.
Tsygankov, A. P. (2012). Russia and the West from Alexander to Putin. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Tsygankov, Andrei P. (2008). Russia’s International Assertiveness: What Does it
Mean fo the West?. Problems of Post-Communism. 55 (2), March-April: 38-55.
Valbjørn, Morten (2019). Global/Regional IR and Changes in Global/Regional
Structures of Middle East International Relations. The Project on Middle East
Political Science (POMEPS), No.34 March, 2019.
CAPTCHA Image