MOSCOW: Russia could be on the verge of clinching an arms deal with Syria or Iran that would send the US and Israel into pop-eyed rage. A few days ago a Russian arms manufacturer let slip at an arms fair in Kuala Lumpur that his state-run weapons design bureau was close to sealing a foreign sale of Iskander-E missiles. The destination of the hardware was secret, he said, but the most obvious market is clear: the Middle East.

Last year, Israel was furious when it emerged that Moscow was planning to sell the Iskander to Damascus. The Iskander is like the Scuds that Iraq used during the Persian Gulf war but many times more accurate and better equipped to avoid defensive weapons such as the Patriot missile. Syria — part of George Bush’s “axis of evil” - would love to be able to trundle some of these short-range ballistic missiles down to its southern border to point at Israel in the event of a conflict.

No doubt the Iranian regime of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is also itching to get its hands on some of these weapons — whose sale is not restricted by any treaty. Earlier this month Iran tested an underwater missile that looked suspiciously like a Russian Shkval.

President Vladimir Putin, under pressure from the Israeli Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon, was forced to step in and reverse the Syrian missile deal. These days, one might surmise, he would not give a fig. Everything about Russia’s stance in the international arena suggests a new confidence that radiates “don’t bully me”. It is still possible the Iskanders will go to a less threatening client than the “Middle Eastern bad boys” — China, say, or India or Algeria. But the point is, they will go to whomever Moscow wants.

Russia has shown in recent months that the Western condemnation will not shake its resolve to play on the world stage as it likes. Welcoming a Hamas delegation to Moscow last month - described by a minister in Jerusalem as “stabbing Israel in the back” — was one example. A second was the decision a few weeks later to give financial aid to the Palestinian Authority, against the wishes of the US and the EU.

In another robust move, the Russians have refused to back down on a recent $700m (£380m) deal to sell 29 Tor M1 mobile surface-to-air missile defence systems to Iran despite pressure from Washington.

“We hope and we trust that that deal will not go forward because this is not the time for business as usual with the Iranian government,” grumbled the US undersecretary of state Nicholas Burns last week. But the complaint fell on deaf ears at the Kremlin.

While Russia’s arms industry is growing fast, its new brassiness relies mostly on the billions of dollars it is raking in from hydrocarbon exports, on the back of high oil prices. As an emerging energy superpower, Moscow is increasingly seeking to play off potential buyers of its oil and gas. Last week Alexei Miller, the head of the Russian state gas monopoly, Gazprom, warned that attempts to limit his company’s expansion in Europe would “not lead to good results”.

The company caused alarm at the British gas supplier Centrica when it emerged that the Russian firm saw it as a potential takeover target - Gazprom had turned off the taps to its neighbour Ukraine in January, in a politically charged dispute. Miller also said: “It should not be forgotten we are actively seeking new markets, such as North America and China.”

President Vladimir Putin weighed in on the theme yesterday. “Despite the great demand for energy resources, any excuses are being used to limit us in the north, in the south, in the West,” he said. “We must look for markets, fit into the processes of global development. I have in mind the countries of the Asia-Pacific region, which are developing at great speed and need to cooperate with us.”

Dmitry Trenin, an analyst at the Moscow Carnegie Centre, says Russia — fed up with pandering to the US and Europe — is undergoing a fundamental shift in foreign relations. Now it will focus on ties with countries, such as Brazil, India and China, that it sees as being on a similar path of development to itself.

“Russia has left the Western orbit,” Mr Trenin said. “It was circling it distantly for about a decade, Pluto-like. But now it’s gone.”—Dawn/The Guardian News Service

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