viernes, 11 de mayo de 2018


Friday, May 11, 2018
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Best Of: Russia & Iran’s Temporary Marriage



Photo: Getty Images

As the United States prepares to exit the Iran nuclear deal, or JCPOA, and restore sanctions on the nation, The Cipher Brief revisits the relationship between Iran and Russia, which continue to develop deep ties that run counter to U.S. interests. How will Washington’s actions impact how Tehran and Moscow view their overlapping interests?

Russia and Iran have forged a strategic symbiotic relationship anchored in economic, defense and energy cooperation. And as the Trump administration ramps up both rhetoric and sanctions on key figures and entities linked to the Iranian regime, and threatens to impose more – Washington could end up pushing Moscow and Tehran even closer together.
  • A common mission unites Moscow and Tehran, whose worldviews are shaped by the same lens. Both countries aim to thwart the expansion of western democratic systems and raise their levels of influence at the regional and global levels at the expense of the U.S.
     
  • The U.S. could aim to drive a wedge between the two nations, thereby limiting their joint adventurism in the Middle East. However, such tactics would require Washington to engage directly with Tehran, while excluding Moscow, something the current administration has not demonstrated a willingness to do.



South Korea Has Reassessed the Value of its American Alliance


Tim Willasey-Wilsey, a former senior British diplomat, says South Korea's aggressive diplomacy with North Korea is indicative of a strategic shift in the country's foreign policy - and its relationship with the United States.
  • "Earlier in the present crisis, before the Winter Olympics, it seemed likely to South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s government that the United States was on the brink of launching a pre-emptive military strike against the North. It was Seoul’s conviction that this would be disastrous, combined with a sense of powerlessness at their evident lack of a veto against US action, which led Moon to reactivate the dormant back-channel with Pyongyang."
     
  • "The world has fundamentally changed since the days of the Sunshine Policy. China is now a superpower and is the primary power in North East Asia. Whatever solution to the Korean imbroglio is found it must be, in Seoul’s calculation, acceptable to Beijing. Good relations with China are now seen as an essential plank of South Korean foreign policy.
     
  • "Whilst South Korea would prefer for the North to denuclearize, it can nonetheless live with a nuclear North Korea. It has already done so for 12 years and has no serious concern that Pyongyang would use a nuclear weapon against fellow Koreans in the South. For Seoul, the much bigger fear is of an American strike against North Korea which ends up with Seoul being targeted by North Korean artillery and covert attacks mounted against southern infrastructure."



Your Weekly Intelligence Gossip


It's Friday...and time for your weekly intel gossip! We've put together the best bits from Haspel's hearing and other bizarre news stories, for your reading pleasure.

Here's a snippet:
  • GENERAL STEVE? BuzzFeed has a story that looks like it is something out of the satirical website “The Onion” – but apparently not.  The site says Stephen Toumajan  was in the U.S. Army and rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel but he has since taken his act on the road, and now functions as a major general in the United Arab Emirates military. A UAE government website refers to him as “H.E, Major General Staff Pilot Stephen A. Toumajan.”  Yet according to BuzzFeed, “His Excellency” has said in court filings that he IS a major general in the UAE – but confusingly is “not currently in their armed forces.”
Get the rest of this week's Dead Drop.

Newsletter by Cipher Brief Content Manager Brian Garrett-Glaser. Please send comments to POV@thecipherbrief.com, and questions to info@thecipherbrief.com.


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