Russia just made another agreement with Iran that will raise eyebrows in the West

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REUTERS/Alexei Nikolsky/RIA Novosti/Kremlin

Iran's Rouhani and Russia's Putin.

Six Iranian food companies are now allowed to export their goods to Russia.

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"We gave permission for the delivery of food products from six Iranian companies: four dairy producers, and two poultry producers," Federal Veterinary and Phytosanitary Inspection Service press secretary Yulia Melano said on Monday, according to RIA Novosti.

"Deliveries can begin only after the completion of an additional set of requirements, which will guarantee complete safety," she added.

Meanwhile, imports of meat, dairy, fruit, vegetables, and fish from various Western countries are still banned by Russia.

This news is just the latest in the highly publicized, heavily scrutinized Russia-Iran deals and cooperation over the last year.

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Most notably, we saw the massive oil-for-goods deal, and Russia lifting its own ban on the delivery of the S-300 immediately following the interim nuclear deal in April.

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Analysts have interpreted all of this Russo-Iranian collaboration in several different ways.

There's a certain camp, including Tom Nichols, a professor at the Naval War College, who see the Moscow-Tehran relationship as a sign that US policy is having little impact on global affairs - especially on Russia and Iran.

Nichols told Business Insider back in April that the transfer of the S-300s is "yet another moment where Russia and Iran underscore the reality that they can do whatever they like, unconstrained by a disengaged United States."

On the flip side, others see Russia's quick pounce on Iran immediately after the nuclear deal as a sign that the Kremlin is afraid that its already isolated position on the global stage will further weaken if Tehran and Washington's relations improve following the real deal.

As Russian Middle East expert Georgy Mirsky told the Washington Post:

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"A few years back, I heard one of our diplomats say: 'A pro-American Iran is more dangerous for us than a nuclear Iran.' ... If you look at this as a zero-sum game, Iran getting closer to the West is a weakening of the Russian position."

"And for this it is necessary to bring a preventative blow, before the implementation of this nuclear agreement, to show Iran that we are the most reliable partner and the only great power you can rely on."

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In any case, it's unclear what will come out of the flurry of activity.

Despite all the deals and the fact that "Tehran may ... consider ties with Russia to be a plan B in case negotiations over its nuclear program fail or do not lead to the results it desires," Russo-Iranian relations are probably far from the beginnings of a deep poli-economic integration, according to Carnegie Moscow Center's nonresident scholar Nikolay Kozhanov.

Various political and economic hurdles, such as Russia's dialogue with Israel and the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, could prevent Moscow and Tehran from forming any sort of "comprehensive strategic alliance," Kozhanov argues in a report on the revitalization of Russo-Iranian relations.

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Putin arrives with Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to a joint news conference in Moscow's Kremlin November 20, 2013.

"Russia and Iran must determine in which political spheres their collaboration makes sense and can be effective- in other words, where they can go beyond mere consultations," he writes. "On certain issues, the Russian and Iranian positions are close, but it is not certain that the two will agree.

"Without clear answers to these economic and political questions, further progress on the dialogue between Moscow and Tehran is unlikely."

To summarize, Kozhanov writes: "The intensity of Moscow's current contact with Tehran is unprecedented in Russia's post-Soviet history. Yet despite the potential for improvement, there are serious obstacles that may hamper or even halt cooperation."

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