[R-G] Iran Pours Cash Into Afghanistan, Seeking Leverage Against U.S.
Anthony Fenton
fentona at shaw.ca
Wed Jul 16 22:51:12 MDT 2008
Iran Pours Cash Into Afghanistan, Seeking Leverage Against U.S.
By Bill Varner
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aNaIqaODpvrU&refer=home
July 17 (Bloomberg) -- The flags of Iran, Afghanistan and Tehran-based
Abad Rahan Pars Road & Construction Co. fly above a railroad work camp
west of the Afghan city of Herat, signaling another commercial
incursion from across the border.
Surrounded by a mud-brick wall in the style of an ancient desert
fortress, the site houses 1,000 Afghans and Iranians building tracks
to link Mashhad in northeastern Iran with Herat, about 200 miles away.
The line will run alongside a highway the company completed in 2006
and transmission wires that feed Iranian electricity to Herat's
350,000 residents.
``Every single day Iran is trying to have more influence, and where
there is money, there is political power,'' said Masoud Sana, the
Herat Chamber of Commerce's international relations director. ``The
Iranians are always trying to find out information about what the
Afghan government is going to do next.''
While the world focuses on tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan
800 miles to the east, U.S. officials keep watch on Iran's expanding
presence in Herat and the surrounding province of 2 million people.
The region might play a major role if conflict erupts over Iran's
nuclear program.
Should Iran's nuclear ambitions spark hostilities, it would use its
sway in western Afghanistan as a ``bargaining chip,'' said Afghan-born
Zalmay Khalilzad, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and former
envoy to Kabul. If attacked, Iran ``could make life difficult for us''
in Afghanistan, he said in an interview.
`Operatives Everywhere'
Iran has ``intelligence operatives everywhere, military commanders who
work for them'' in the region who could be deployed to stir up
trouble, including riots, said Barnett Rubin, an Afghanistan
specialist at New York University's Center on International Cooperation.
For now, Tehran's investment of $500 million in the region has helped
the U.S. by minimizing the influence of the Taliban extremists who
once ruled the country and the sort of violence they have inflicted on
southern and eastern Afghanistan. Iran paved half of Herat's streets
and 40 miles of highway leading north, built schools and health
clinics and partnered with Afghan companies in an industrial park.
``It's not just investments, but also trade,'' said Ali Shah Ahmedi,
the 43-year-old manager of Herat's Tejarat Hotel. ``I have Iranian
businessmen staying here all the time, coming to buy or sell goods''
such as packaged foods and motorcycles.
Afghanistan's `Dubai'
Sana, 42, holds forth from his office in the Herat Trade Center, a
modern nine-story building of gleaming blue glass that helped inspire
residents' nickname for their city: ``the Dubai of Afghanistan.'' A
hotel, law offices and a finance company that supports farmers are
connected by an Afghanistan rarity: an elevator.
Traffic lights in Herat work, in contrast to the capital, Kabul, so
vehicles flow smoothly around the Blue Mosque, an 800- year-old, blue-
tiled landmark. Herat is cleaner than Kabul, with more trees and
parks, and less dangerous, with fewer visible police and troops.
Ties between Iran and Herat run deep. The city was the capital of 15th-
century Persia, and Iran held Herat until midway through the 19th
century. Heratis, mostly Sunni Muslims, today speak a dialect closer
to the Farsi spoken in Tehran than the Dari used in Kabul.
Predominantly Shiite Iran opposed the Sunni Taliban -- who refused to
educate girls when they ran Afghanistan, among other strictures -- as
extreme.
Political Transition
After the Taliban were toppled for harboring the terrorists behind the
Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Tehran's government helped the U.S. and the
UN begin the political transition that led to Hamid Karzai's election
as president.
Iran's leaders feel that contribution wasn't properly acknowledged,
said Manouchehr Mottaki, its foreign minister. The slight explains
their refusal to help fight the Taliban's current insurgency, he said.
``We limit our cooperation with Afghanistan to helping reconstruct the
country,'' Mottaki told reporters at the UN on July 2.
William Wood, the U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan, said Iran now helps
arm the Taliban. Tehran's policy is to ``make everyone a loser'' in
Afghanistan, he said in a Kabul interview.
Karzai is ``walking a very fine line'' and doesn't accuse Iran of
actively supporting the insurgents, said Humayun Hamidzada, the
president's chief spokesman.
`Positive Role'
``President Karzai believes Iran has a positive role to play in
Afghanistan,'' Hamidzada said last week in Kabul. ``We are working
with the U.S. and Iran, and don't want to become the battleground for
their conflict.''
Iran's presence in Afghanistan will be an issue for the next U.S.
president. Democratic candidate Barack Obama and Republican rival John
McCain both view Iran's regional influence as a threat, though they
differ on how to contain it. The two said this week that Afghanistan
needs more U.S. military might to battle the Taliban and al-Qaeda
terrorists.
Some Afghans view Iran's involvement in Herat as less than benevolent.
Iran forced 200,000 Afghan refugees back across the border in recent
years, some of whom contributed to crime and poverty in Herat, said
Jamila Naseri, a lawyer with the Legal Aid Organization of Afghanistan.
Sana said Herat's Chamber of Commerce this month rejected a request
from the Iranian Chamber of Commerce for expanded ties. One reason was
Iran's attempt two years ago to undermine a Herat distribution
facility for Super Cola, a soft drink. Iran flooded the region with a
cheaper beverage until Afghanistan taxed the import heavily.
``They'll keep trying, though,'' Sana said. ``Iran is here to stay.''
To contact the reporter on this story: Bill Varner in Herat,
Afghanistan, at wvarner at bloomberg.net
Last Updated: July 16, 2008 16:39 EDT
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