July 07, 2025Clash Report
In a candid assessment, former Iranian nuclear negotiator and ambassador Seyed Hossein Mousavian says Russia’s reluctance to arm Iran with high-end military systems—while offering them to U.S. allies—should serve as a lesson for Tehran about the primacy of national interest in global diplomacy.
Mousavian noted that despite Iran facing decades of threats from nuclear-armed states like the United States and Israel—and ultimately being attacked—Moscow never supplied Tehran with Su-35 fighter jets or the S-400 air defense system.
By contrast, Russia offered:
“This is not a criticism of Russia,” Mousavian wrote. “Moscow is simply acting according to its national interests.”
Mousavian suggested that Russia would likely sell the same advanced platforms to other U.S. allies like Türkiye or Saudi Arabia if asked. The takeaway for Iran, he argues, is that strategic calculations override ideological alliances.
The statement reflects growing frustration in some Iranian political circles about Russia’s selective cooperation, even as Tehran and Moscow have grown closer over military coordination in Syria and defense cooperation under Western sanctions.
Mousavian’s remarks come as Iran continues to navigate its place between rising eastern powers and ongoing isolation from the West. His tone signals a push for greater realism in Iranian foreign policy—accepting that even close partners prioritize pragmatism over loyalty in arms sales and security guarantees.
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