Russia and Iran are upgrading their transport links
The much-sanctioned pair are jointly seeking ways to avoid isolation
Ever since a French diplomat and developer, Ferdinand de Lesseps, sliced the Suez canal through Egypt in 1869, linking east and west, many Middle Eastern countries have tried to follow suit. Israel has recently broached cutting a canal from the Mediterranean to the Red Sea, or a rail link from its port at Haifa via Jordan and on to the Gulf. A former Iraqi transport minister tirelessly promotes a scheme to carve a canal from Iraq’s southern port of Basra all the way to Turkey. The most serious venture, though, is a Russo-Iranian one to link the Caspian sea to the Indian Ocean.
This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “A rail-and-sea passage to India”
Middle East & Africa May 6th 2023
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