The Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), where heavyweights Russia and China play a major role, was to meet yesterday seeking to lift a moratorium on expansion and open its doors to new members, officials said.
The Kremlin’s top foreign policy aide Sergei Prikhodko said the summit would take place amid “an escalation of a number of problems,” including new tensions on the Korean peninsula and Iran’s defiance in the face of new sanctions.
The six-nation group includes four ex-Soviet Central Asian states — Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan — while Iran, India and Pakistan have observer status and have in the past expressed interest in joining.
A major outcome of the two-day summit in Uzbekistan is expected to be the adoption of a blueprint for expanding membership, Prikhodko said.
He refused to say which country has the best chance of joining the SCO in the near future, simply saying a number of countries have expressed keen interest.
“Iran wants to be in, Pakistan wants to be in, Afghanistan wants to be in,” Prikhodko told reporters ahead of the summit.
However, while Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari are both expected to attend and may have separate meetings with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, whose country is facing the threat of fresh sanctions, will be conspicuously absent.
By contrast, he chose last June’s SCO meeting in Russia for his first foreign trip since his disputed re-election victory last year.
Since then, ties between Russia and Iran have dramatically worsened as Medvedev called Iran’s behavior “irresponsible” and signaled that Russia will support fresh UN sanctions against the Islamic republic.
Ahmadinejad is planning to stay away from the two-day summit, even though he was scheduled to visit neighboring Tajikistan on Wednesday. Yesterday he was to head to China for a visit to the Shanghai Expo, an Iranian diplomat said.
In any case, Iran would not be the first candidate to win membership, analysts say.
“Iran — with its relations with Russia, its relations with America and its nuclear drive — is not the best candidate for the SCO,” said Alexei Malashenko, a Central Asia expert at the Carnegie Moscow Center.
Malashenko said the configuration of the regional grouping is unlikely to change dramatically in the near future even though they may be open to the idea of expansion.
“It would be naive to speak of any expansion without China’s permission,” he said.
“And I have not heard of their readiness” to welcome new countries, he said.
The SCO was set up in 2001 as a security counterweight to NATO that would allow Russia and China to rival US influence in Asia, but is increasingly looking to cooperate on economic brass tacks, analysts say.
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un sent Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) greetings with what appeared to be restrained rhetoric that comes as Pyongyang moves closer to Russia and depends less on its long-time Asian ally. Kim wished “the Chinese people greater success in building a modern socialist country,” in a reply message to Xi for his congratulations on North Korea’s birthday, the state-run Korean Central News Agency reported yesterday. The 190-word dispatch had little of the florid language that had been a staple of their correspondence, which has declined significantly this year, an analysis by Seoul-based specialist service NK Pro showed. It said
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