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ABDULLAH-PUTIN SUMMIT (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   087380


Iran's nuclear program and the Future of U.S.-Iranian relations / Özcan, Nihat Ali; Özdamar,Özgür   Journal Article
Özcan, Nihat Ali Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Due to its geopolitical prominence, Iran has been the focus of great-power policies during the entire course of modern history. The Russian-British rivalry over Iran that began in the mid-1800's lasted a century. With the end of World War II, Britain's role in the region diminished, and the vacuum was fi lled by the United States.
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2
ID:   087379


Saudi-Russian relations since the Abdullah-Putin summit / Katz, Mark N   Journal Article
Katz, Mark N Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract In February 2007, then Russian President Vladimir Putin visited Saudi Arabia, the very fi rst visit by a top Russian leader to the kingdom. The Russian press expressed confi dence that Saudi-Russian cooperation was about to increase dramatically. However, similar Russian hopes for Putin's visits to other countries in the Middle East and elsewhere in the developing world have remained largely unfulfi lled. Saudi-Russian cooperation, though, actually did increase after Putin's 2007 trip to Riyadh. With Riyadh signaling strong support for Russian policy in Chechnya, giving its assent to Russian accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO) and signing a military-technical cooperation agreement with Moscow in July 2008, the Kremlin has reason to be pleased. Moscow is disappointed, however, that there have not been more Saudi contracts with Russian businesses. Tension between Moscow and Riyadh over Russia's relations with Iran is also apparent, in part due to the dramatic fall in the price of oil since mid-2008. More fundamentally, Saudi and Russian leaders appear to have different expectations of improved Moscow-Riyadh ties. This could well serve to limit their willingness to cooperate.
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