By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The Real Meaning of Putin’s Middle East
Failure
Just a few years ago,
Russian President Vladimir Putin seemed to have reasserted Moscow’s influence
in the Middle East after decades in which it had waned. As Putin deepened ties
with longstanding Russian allies Iran and Syria while nurturing more cordial
relationships with Israel and the Arab monarchies, his pragmatic realism seemed
to represent a more comfortable alternative to what many countries
in the region perceived as the United States’ naïve and destabilizing
commitment to promoting democracy.
This strategy
allowed Russia to become an important counterweight to the United
States in the region, but it also paid dividends closer to home. Leaders in the
Middle East were notably quiet in response to Russia’s full-scale invasion of
Ukraine in 2022. Not even Israel, a close U.S. ally, criticized Russia, let
alone took part in sanctioning it.
But over the past 20
months, Russia’s standing in the Middle East has cratered. Israel’s response to
Hamas’s October 7 attacks has devastated the so-called axis of resistance, the
Iranian-backed network with which Russia had forged close ties. The Assad regime
in Syria, long a valuable Russian client, collapsed spectacularly. U.S.
and Israeli strikes against Iranian nuclear facilities severely weakened
Russia’s most important regional ally. As a result, Russia’s reputation as a
patron and guarantor of security in the region lies in tatters. In the new
Middle East now taking shape, Moscow is no longer needed.
Moscow’s failures
will resound beyond the Middle East. Whether the result of Putin’s conscious
decision not to intervene or of the Kremlin’s inability to do so, Russia’s
abandonment of partners in the region should be a sobering lesson for Xi Jinping and the Chinese Communist Party: that
in times of crisis, Russia will not be a reliable ally.
For the United
States, Russia’s declining influence in the Middle East should also prompt
further reflection. For years, policymakers and scholars have debated the
strength of the Russian-Chinese bond and whether it made sense to try to drive
a wedge between them or encourage their codependence while raising the costs
and risks it poses to both countries. But Moscow’s recent setbacks in the
Middle East have clarified a basic fact obscured by Chinese and Russian talk of
a special relationship. Russia is a fair-weather friend. In the event of a
U.S.-Chinese conflict—for example, a fight over Taiwan—Washington can expect
Moscow to remain on the sidelines, just as it did with its partners in the
Middle East.
The Road to Damascus
After the Soviet Union collapsed, in 1991, Russia ceased to
be a major international actor, including in the Middle East. Focused instead
on integrating a democratizing Russia into the West, Russian President Boris
Yeltsin aspired to join Western institutions such as the G7, the World Trade
Organization, and NATO, devoting little effort or resources to maintaining
Soviet-era relationships with autocratic adversaries of the United States, such
as Iran and Syria. A decade of economic depression further prevented Russia
from engaging with countries in the region.
Putin, who won the presidency in 2000, gradually ended
Moscow’s neglect of the Middle East. After the 9/11 attacks, he quickly
embraced U.S. President George W. Bush’s “global war on terror.” To assist the
U.S. war effort in Afghanistan, Russia helped the United States open military
bases in what Putin considered his sphere of influence, the former Soviet
republics of Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. Even as Putin broke with Bush over the
invasion of Iraq in 2003 because of Iraqi leader Saddam
Hussein’s close ties with Russia, the Russian president continued to work
with Washington in the Middle East on issues of mutual interest, most important
among them a joint effort to deny Iran a nuclear weapon. In 2010, Russia voted
alongside the United States on UN Security Council Resolution 1929, which
imposed what were at the time the most comprehensive multilateral sanctions
against Tehran. Five years later, Russia joined the United States, along with
China, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the European Union in signing the
Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. Throughout this period, Russia also
cooperated with the United States to fight various terrorist organizations in
the region, some of which had close ties with jihadis inside Russia.
The Arab Spring, in 2011, proved to be a turning
point for Putin’s Middle East policy. As leaders in the United States and
Europe celebrated the fall of dictatorships in the region, Putin, Russia’s
prime minister at the time, took a different view of the protests. In meetings
with Western leaders, including U.S. President Barack Obama, he warned that the
breakdown of autocracy in the Arab world would spark civil wars, empower
extremists, and embolden terrorists. He even publicly criticized his protégé,
President Dmitry Medvedev, for abstaining from a UN Security Council resolution
authorizing the use of force against Libyan strongman Muammar al-Qaddafi’s army, then
threatening to commit mass atrocities in Benghazi, Libya’s
second-largest city. Putin lambasted the resolution as “defective and flawed,”
saying that it “[allowed] everything” and “[resembled] medieval calls for
crusades.”
That year, another
mass movement against autocracy erupted—in Russia. In December 2011, hundreds
of thousands of Russians took to the streets to protest a falsified
parliamentary election. Just as he had accused Washington of fomenting
revolutions against dictatorships in Egypt, Libya, Syria, and Tunisia, Putin
blamed the United States for the demonstrations against his regime. Threats to
his rule at home, which Putin genuinely believed were supported by the Obama
administration, led the Russian leader to turn away from cooperation with the
United States, with significant implications for Russian foreign policy in the
Middle East.
Putin’s worries about
stability resonated with monarchs in the Middle East, who agreed that regime
change in the region would bring to power radical jihadis. Saudi Arabia even
intervened militarily in Bahrain to quell anti-government protests. Putin used
the moment to deepen ties with Israel and the Arab monarchies, at a time when
their relations with the United States were strained because of U.S. support
for political change in the Arab world and perceived rapprochement with Iran.
Putin also cultivated a closer relationship with autocratic Egyptian leader Abdel Fattah el-Sisi after he seized
power through a coup in 2013. In addition, Russia filled the void left by the
American disengagement in Libya, providing rhetorical and financial support for
Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar, the powerful warlord who now controls the eastern
part of the country. And when many Western leaders denounced Saudi Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman after the 2018 assassination of Jamal Khashoggi, a writer
who was critical of the Saudi regime, Putin publicly embraced the Saudi ruler.
During this period,
Putin also nurtured his relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, who also feared state breakdown and the rise of Islamist governments
and movements in the Arab world. So too did many conservative Jews who had emigrated
from the former Soviet Union to Israel, with whom Russian media channels
engaged directly. For them, Putin was a respected, pragmatic leader supporting
stability in their neighborhood.
After he won a third term as president in 2012, Putin’s
heightened hostility toward the United States as the source of regional and
global instability found a particularly sympathetic ear in Iran’s theocratic
dictator, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Since becoming the supreme leader in 1989,
Khamenei had moved methodically the regime’s foreign policy toward Russia and
China. As Iranian proxy Hezbollah fought alongside Russia’s air force to support Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad in a
brutal civil war, Tehran and Moscow grew still closer. Hamas, which initially
took a critical position of the Assad regime, ultimately aligned with Iran and
Russia. For their part, Putin and the Kremlin never labeled Hamas as a
terrorist group, describing it instead as a national liberation movement akin
to groups in Latin America, Southeast Asia, and southern Africa that the Soviet
Union had supported during the Cold War. That Putin could simultaneously pursue
relationships with Israel and Hamas was remarkable, a testament to his
successful diplomacy in the Middle East at the time.

Russian President
Vladimir Putin, Iranian Ambassador to Russia Kazem Jalali, and Iranian Foreign
Minister Abbas Araghchi in Moscow, June 2025
A Friend to All Autocrats
Putin’s push to
expand Russia’s influence in the Middle East initially yielded results. After
Russia launched its full-scale invasion of
Ukraine in 2022, Iran provided thousands of deadly Shahed drones to
support the effort. Arab monarchies have abstained from UN votes criticizing
Russia for the invasion and have not joined the international sanctions
coalition. In October 2022, Putin and MBS signed an agreement to reduce oil
exports, thereby increasing oil prices and funding Russia’s war machine. Even
Israel split with most of the democratic world in refraining from criticizing
the invasion, voting against a United Nations resolution that condemned
Russia’s aggression.
When Assad’s regime
in Syria was faltering in 2015, Putin’s deployment of the Russian air force to
support Syrian, Iranian, and Hezbollah ground forces bought the Syrian dictator
another nine years in power. In exchange for this support, Assad
gave Russia continued access to the Tartus naval base and the Khmeimim Air Base (near Latakia), which enhanced Russia’s
maritime presence in the Mediterranean Sea, and served as a durable symbol of
Russia’s military presence in the Arab Middle East.
Putin’s military
intervention in Syria buoyed Russia’s image as a decisive and reliable partner.
Unlike the United States, Russia never chastised the region’s autocrats with
speeches about democracy and human rights. And Moscow also kept the weapons
flowing. In the years after the Arab Spring, Russian arms exports to the Middle
East increased, including to Sisi’s Egypt, but also to Turkey, a NATO ally that
nonetheless agreed to purchase Russia’s S-400 air defense system.
Everything Everywhere All At Once
After Hamas launched
its attack against Israel on October 7, 2023, however, Putin’s strategy began
to unravel. Israel launched major military operations in response, first
against Hamas in Gaza and then against Hezbollah in Lebanon, devastating both
groups’ leadership and command structures. Putin tried to avoid taking a side
in the conflict, instead offering to mediate between Hamas and Israel, a
gesture that neither Netanyahu nor Israeli society was willing to entertain.
But he also offered no significant assistance to Hamas or Hezbollah.
Then, in December
2024, the Assad regime collapsed. Russia’s decades-long investment in
supporting the dictatorship crumbled in the span of days. Putin gave Assad and
his family asylum in Russia but did nothing to repel rebel forces as they took
Damascus. His failure to intervene reverberated throughout the region.
Hezbollah was further weakened. Media outlets aligned with the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in Iran publicly complained about Russia’s
inability to save their mutual partner.
Russia suffered an
even more serious reputational blow in the Middle East when Israeli
and U.S. armed forces bombed Iran’s nuclear facilities in June. Just days after
the U.S. attack on the Fordow site, Iranian
Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi flew to Moscow seeking support. Putin offered
his trademark rhetorical condemnation of the United States but provided no new
military aid to Russia’s most stalwart ally in the Middle East, despite Iran’s
continued willingness to provide direct military assistance for Russia’s war in
Ukraine. Internally, Khamenei and his regime are today weaker than ever, but
Putin has offered little to bolster the supreme leader’s position.

Fear and Loathing
Leaders and societies
in the Middle East have taken note of Russia’s inaction and indifference in the
region. The reaction inside Iran has been particularly pronounced. Khamenei has
always been loyal to Moscow, but with his position now weakened, criticism of
his embrace of Russia is growing louder. Iranian commentators, once
careful and circumspect about questioning Tehran’s relationship with Moscow,
now openly lambaste Putin for refusing to include a mutual defense clause in
the Russian Treaty on Comprehensive Strategic Partnership signed by Tehran and
Moscow in January (similar Russian agreements with Belarus and North Korea
contain such clauses). Other voices, including former Iranian Parliament Deputy
Speaker Ali Motahari, have criticized Russian delays in providing Iran the
S-400 missile defense system that could have helped defend against the Israeli
strikes. After the Israeli and U.S. strikes, a lead editorial in an influential
newspaper founded by three clerics (including Khamenei) decades ago chastised
leaders who steered Iran toward closer ties to Moscow—an unmistakable reference
to Khamenei.
So dismayed were some
even within the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, often assumed to be a
bastion of pro-Russian sympathies, that when Putin offered to mediate between
Iran and the United States, a newspaper aligned with the IRGC
suggested that the Russian president was really attempting to use Iran to get a
better deal with the United States, supporting constraints on Iran’s nuclear
program in exchange for U.S. concessions on Ukraine. Commentators on Iranian
social media sites now openly discuss the history of Russia’s colonial
ambitions in Iran in the tsarist and Soviet eras. The voices of pro-democratic
opposition memberslong critical of deepening ties
with autocratic Russia have now gained new resonance, both inside Iran and in
the diaspora.
Israeli attitudes
toward Russia have changed, as well. Neither Netanyahu nor Israeli society
appears interested in Putin’s mediating services with Iran. When ties between
the United States and Israel have been strained, Netanyahu has leaned toward
Moscow. But with Trump back in the White House, Netanyahu’s imperative to
remain close to Putin and a weakened Russia has waned.
The official Saudi
reaction to Russia’s inaction has been muted. Behind closed doors, MBS is
pleased that Iran’s nuclear program has been set back, and that Tehran’s
military—especially its missile arsenal—has proved so incapable of inflicting
severe damage on Israel or the U.S. military base in Qatar. Putin’s inability
or indifference to influence events through either diplomacy or military
assistance in the region should compel MBS to rethink his carefully calibrated
courtship of the United States, China, and Russia. Before the Israeli strikes,
Saudi Arabia and Russia had already clashed over increasing oil output. Riyadh
triumphed, and OPEC+ is set to up production in August, to the delight of
Washington and the frustration of Moscow.
You Can’t Count On Me
Putin’s decisions not
to help Russia’s partners in the Middle East should also send a message to
leaders in Beijing about Russia’s value as an ally in the event of war between
China and the United States over Taiwan.
If its refusal to
support the Iranian regime in its time of greatest vulnerability is any
indication, Russia will offer little help to Beijing should it face its own
moment of need. Likewise, Moscow’s abandonment of the Assad regime suggests
that the Russian armed forces would not join a war against the United States.
If a conflict in Asia were to occur, Putin’s support would be limited to
continuing to supply China with oil and gas. As Chinese Foreign
Minister Wang Yi bluntly stated during a meeting with European leaders, Russia
will remain valuable to China so long as it continues to fight in Ukraine,
thereby diverting U.S. resources and attention away from Asia. But it cannot be
counted on for anything more.
The Trump
administration should draw the same conclusion. In the administration’s first
months, some analysts argued that the United States needed to peel Russia away
from China to help contain Beijing —a “reverse
Kissinger” policy. Such a move would have been a bad mistake
then, and would be even worse today. Putin has shown Russia to be unreliable
even to dictatorships with long-standing relations with Moscow. It would be an
even less effective partner for Washington against China. Putin would provide
the United States and the democratic world the same resources that he provided
the theocrats in Tehran: nothing. So whatever approach Trump ultimately decides
to take with Putin, he should set aside the goal of trying to peel Moscow away
from Beijing.
The initial success
of Moscow’s Middle East strategy once suggested that Russia could be a valuable
geopolitical partner. That it eventually failed so completely should dissuade
Trump and others from courting its architect.
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