Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi on Monday began a diplomatic tour of Latin America with a first stop in Caracas, where he said his country and Venezuela are “friends” with “common enemies.”
Raisi’s schedule is also set to include visits to Cuba and Nicaragua, who, like Iran and Venezuela, are all the target of US sanctions.
“We have common interests, common visions and common enemies,” the president said, without specifying, in remarks to the press alongside Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.
Photo: AFP
“The relationship between Iran and Venezuela is not a normal diplomatic relationship, but a strategic relationship,” he said.
Tehran is one of the principal international allies of Maduro’s government, which, like those in Cuba and Nicaragua, are also allies of Russia, an international pariah since its invasion of Ukraine last year.
“Iran is playing a starring role as one of the most important emerging powers in the new world,” Maduro said, adding that “together we will be invincible.”
Part of the reason for Raisi’s trip was to increase trade between the two countries, Raisi said, up from the current US$3 billion a year to eventually US$20 billion.
The two leaders announced that they signed 25 accords, across sectors ranging from education and health to mining.
Also on the agenda is developing technological cooperation between the two countries, part of Raisi’s goal of improving “economic, political and scientific cooperation” between Iran, Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba.
“Over the last two years, our cooperation with these countries has developed,” Raisi told the Islamic Republic News Agency before he set off from Tehran.
Iran and Venezuela are also members of OPEC, which has become central to international discussions on the energy crisis sparked by Russia’s war on Ukraine.
The war has renewed global efforts to solve Venezuela’s ongoing political and economic crisis.
Last year, the US sent delegates to Caracas to meet Maduro.
After talks resumed between his government and the opposition in November last year, Washington granted a six-month license to US energy giant Chevron to operate in Venezuela.
The South American country, facing a deep economic crisis, has the world’s largest known oil reserves.
Raisi’s trip follows a previous diplomatic visit by Maduro, who visited Iran in June last year and signed a 20-year pact to open “major fronts” for cooperation in the oil, petrochemicals and defense sectors.
In February, Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs Hossein Amir-Abdollahian visited Caracas and discussed with Maduro the “defense of their national interests faced with external pressures,” Tehran said.
In 2020, Iran sent 1.5 million barrels of fuel to Venezuela along with supplies to help restart struggling refineries.
Washington has since accused Iran of circumventing sanctions.
The previous Iranian president to visit Cuba and Venezuela was Hassan Rouhani in September 2016.
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad made the last presidential visit to Nicaragua in 2007.
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