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  • US troop redeployment sparks rumors on Azeri base

    ISN, Switzerland
    Aug 24 2004

    US troop redeployment sparks rumors on Azeri base 24.08.2004

    News that the US is planning a massive redeployment of its armed
    forces has Azeris wondering whether their country will soon host US
    troops.


    By Fariz Ismailzade for EurasiaNet

    News that the US is planning a massive redeployment of its armed
    forces has Azeris wondering whether their country will soon host US
    troops. Azeri officials are coy on the base question, prompting some
    local political analysts to say Baku is trying to leverage the issue
    to achieve a breakthrough on the stalled talks on a Nagorno-Karabakh
    peace settlement. Speculation over whether the US would establish a
    military base in Azerbaijan began almost immediately after US leaders
    announced 16 August that up 70'000 US troops in Europe and East Asia
    would be redeployed. Most US soldiers appear headed back to the US,
    but some will staff new facilities, in keeping with the Pentagon's
    desire to create a more mobile armed forces. A few days before the
    announcement, US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld visited Baku
    for hastily arranged talks. The Azeri government provided only a
    vague description about the discussions. However, Zerkalo, an
    independent daily newspaper, claimed that a tentative base deal had
    been reached. "Moreover, the USA is interested in modernizing ...
    military airfields in Azerbaijan," Zerkalo reported on 17 August,
    without citing a source. Azeri media have also seized on recent
    comments attributed to General Charles Wald, the deputy commander for
    US forces in Europe, who reportedly indicated that US defense
    officials were considering Azerbaijan, Uganda, and the island state
    of Sao Tome as potential host sites for US rapid deployment forces.
    According to the Azeri reports, the US is seeking a base in
    Azerbaijan to ensure the security of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline
    and to monitor developments in Iran, which Washington believes is
    working hard to develop nuclear weapons.

    Fait accompli
    While some Azerbaijani media outlets are treating a US base as a fait
    accompli, the only public statements on the issue by Azeri officials
    have been non-committal. Foreign Minister Eldar Mammadyarov has
    acknowledged that talks are on-going, but he stressed on 19 August
    that "it is naive to think that military bases can be set up
    overnight". Some analysts say it wasn't coincidental that Mammadyarov
    made the statement in Moscow. Russia is on record as opposing any US
    redeployment that would place US troops in the formerly Communist
    sphere, and a few observers believe the potential US base is at the
    center of a geopolitical game being played by Baku. The objective,
    from Baku's viewpoint, is to secure increased political support for a
    Karabakh peace settlement that is to Azerbaijan's liking. Azerbaijan
    has insisted that any settlement leave the region under Baku's
    jurisdiction. Azeri officials have grown restless in recent months
    over the lack of progress in the peace talks. Mammadyarov said in a
    19 August television interview that the Karabakh question topped his
    agenda during talks with Russian leaders in Moscow. Some in Baku
    believe Russia, given Moscow's close strategic relationship with
    Armenia, is the key to achieving the desired breakthrough on
    Karabakh. A trade-off involving Azerbaijan's rejection of a US base,
    effectively in return for greater Russian support for Baku in the
    Karabakh peace process, could possibly pressure Armenia into
    softening its Karabakh negotiating position.

    A diplomatic bargaining chip
    Some pundits say Mammadyarov's attempt to use the base issue as a
    diplomatic bargaining chip has so far failed. They note that both
    Russia and the US have given no public indication of shifting their
    existing positions on the Karabakh peace process. Given the apparent
    failure of what some in Baku describe as Azerbaijan's base "bluff",
    officials are now left to weigh the potential merits and liabilities
    of playing host to US troops. Political analyst Rauf Mirqadirov,
    writing in an analysis published 19 August analysis by Zerkalo,
    examined the pros and cons of the base issue. On the plus side,
    Mirqadirov said the presence of US forces would facilitate rapid
    economic development in the region. He also downplayed the
    possibility of Russian retaliation, arguing that Moscow "is not ready
    for global confrontation with the United States". Mirqadirov,
    however, envisioned several potential negatives arising out of a
    possible basing arrangement. A US presence, for example, could make
    Azerbaijan a target of Islamic militant action. It could also
    potentially limit Azerbaijan's options in striving to achieve its
    Karabakh settlement objectives. In addition, Mirqadirov voiced
    concern about the possibility of Azerbaijan becoming embroiled in the
    long-running feud between the US and Iran. "The Americans do not rule
    out that Iran is their future target," Mirqadirov said. "If all these
    statements are made in order to frighten Tehran - then that's one
    thing. But if the Americans start another mess - moreover, one along
    our border - then Azerbaijan, irrespective of its wishes, will be
    dragged into this conflict." Azeris interviewed at random on the
    streets of Baku offered a mixed view on the base issue. "We need to
    see, first, what is our benefit from these bases. Will they help us
    in the war with Armenia?" said Nargiz, a university student. Niyazi,
    an employee at a trading house, suggested an American troop presence
    would "only bring us trouble with Iran." Others, however, said US
    troops would help defend against potential encroachment by Iran or
    Russia against Azerbaijan's sovereignty.


    Fariz Ismailzade is a freelance writer on Caucasus politics and
    economics. He has obtained his masters degree from the Washington
    University in St. Louis and is currently based in Baku.
    EurasiaNet (www.eurasianet.org)provides information and analysis
    about political, economic, environmental, and social developments in
    the countries of Central Asia and the Caucasus, as well as in Russia,
    the Middle East, and Southwest Asia. The website presents a variety
    of perspectives on contemporary developments, utilizing a network of
    correspondents based both in the West and in the region. The aim of
    EurasiaNet is to promote informed decision making among policy
    makers, as well as broadening interest in the region among the
    general public. EurasiaNet is operated by the Central Eurasia Project
    of the Open Society Institute.
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