TEHRAN (Basirat)- The defense ministers of Iran and China signed on Monday an agreement to shore up defense cooperation, a show of unity in a war-torn Middle East.

The defense ministers of Iran and China signed on Monday an agreement to shore up defense cooperation, a show of unity in a war-torn Middle East.
"The upgrading of relations and
long-term defense-military cooperation with China is one of the main
priorities of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s defense diplomacy…” Iranian
Defense Minister Hossein Dehqan said at a meeting with visiting Chinese
counterpart General Change Wanquan.
Wenquan arrived in Tehran on Sunday for a three-day visit.
"We assess the visit of the Chinese
defense minister in line with this (Iran’s defense diplomacy,” Brigadier
General Dehqan added.
The agreement envisions, inter alia,
counterterrorism efforts and exchange of experiences in personnel
training between the two militaries.
No more details were available.
Closer military cooperation between
Iran and China is advantageous to regional and international peace, the
Iranian commander stressed.
"Maintaining peace and stability in Asia and Oceania is a collective responsibility of all countries in the region.”
Also, in the meeting, the Chinese
defense minister appeared confident of stronger defense ties with Iran,
citing common regional and international interests.
He also underscored the importance of a
full implementation of defense agreements as the way forward,
expressing hope for a new chapter in defense cooperation.
The visit comes two years after Dehqan
paid an official visit to Beijing, where the two commanders exchanged
ideas on defense ties.
Defense cooperation between the two countries dates back to nearly three decades ago.
Since the 1980’s, Beijing has been a
key partner in supplying Tehran with advanced military hardware,
including tactical ballistic and anti-ship cruise missiles.
There were also rumors last year
regarding the interest shown by Iran in purchasing 150 Chengdu J-10
fighters from China for a contract value of $1 billion, though the deal
was not finalized.
Also, the Iranian Armed Forces Chief
of Staff Major General Mohammad Hossein Baqeri has shown interest in
staging joint military drills with China in a separate meeting with
visiting Wanquan.
"Iran is prepared to expand and deepen
defense and military cooperation between the two countries and stage
joint military war games,” Baqeri was quoted as saying.
Iran’s growing international defense
ties, called "defense diplomacy”, comes after the
country clinched a
historic agreement on its nuclear program with great powers including
China.
China and Iran have shown
determination to strengthen all-encompassing relations particularly
after the nuclear deal reached in July 2015.
During the last year’s January visit to Tehran by Chinese President Xi Jinping, a record number of 17 documents were inked.
As the defense ministers were signing
the deal, the RIA news agency reported that Iran and Russia are in talks
over an arms deal worth around $10 billion under which Moscow delivers
T-90 tanks, artillery systems, planes and helicopters to Tehran.
This is while Russian Ambassador to
Iran Levan Dzhagaryan had seen military deals with Tehran limited by the
UN Resolution 2231.