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  • NATO Cancellation Spurs Debate In Azerbaijan

    NATO CANCELLATION SPURS DEBATE IN AZERBAIJAN
    Mammad Baghirov and Shahin Abbasov

    Eurasianet
    9/15/04

    The protests that led to the cancellation of the North Atlantic
    Treaty Organizationâ^À^Ùs exercises in Azerbaijan this week are being
    interpreted in Baku as the first public expression of popular will
    since President Ilham Aliyevâ^À^Ùs accession to power in 2003. Yet
    while some believe this show of force indicates that Azerbaijan still
    possesses a robust opposition, others are more worried about what
    NATOâ^À^Ùs decision will mean in the long term for the country.

    Protests at Armeniaâ^À^Ùs participation in the "Cooperative Best
    Effort-2004" exercises, an annual training session for Partnership
    for Peace participants, gained steam in late August, when members
    of the Karabakh Liberation Organization were sentenced to prison
    for forcing their way into a NATO planning conference in Baku that
    included Armenian military officers. Anger at the arrests quickly
    took on momentum, with pickets held outside the British, German and
    French embassies and both pro-government MPs and the opposition media
    calling on the Aliyev government to deny Armenia entry into Azerbaijan
    for the September 14-26 games.

    Though Bakuâ^À^Ùs support for Armeniaâ^À^Ùs participation in the games
    began to cool even before the protests, the resulting political tension
    appears to have forced Aliyev to clearly define the governmentâ^À^Ùs
    position and abandon earlier assurances this April that Armenian
    representatives would be allowed into Azerbaijan for the exercises. On
    September 10, the Foreign Ministry refused to issue visas to all
    Armenian military officers. The same day, parliament pushed for NATO
    Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer to rescind the invitation to
    Armenia to take part in the exercises, saying that the officersâ^À^Ù
    presence does not "correspond with the interests of the nation."

    One day later, Aliyevâ^À^Ùs position was made clear: "Everybody was
    invited by NATO. But if you ask the Azerbaijani people, do they want
    the Armenian military to come to Baku, they would say no," Aliyev
    said during a visit to the Barda region. "I do not want their visit
    as well."

    A tersely worded statement in response from NATOâ^À^Ùs Supreme
    Command on Monday said that the decision to cancel the games took
    place after the allianceâ^À^Ùs "principle of inclusiveness was
    violated." Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar is expected to attend
    meetings at NATO headquarters in Brussels this week to discuss the
    countryâ^À^Ùs participation in the Partnership for Peace program,
    the Baku newspaper Ekspress quoted the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry as
    saying on September 14. "The minister is paying a working visit and,
    therefore, no precise topic or principal issue is on the agenda,"
    Foreign Ministry spokesman Matin Mirza said.

    Throughout the past weeks of protest, however, the government has
    struggled to hold on to some degree of neutrality. Permission was
    not given for street rallies, and pro-government media refrained
    from endorsing independent and opposition journalistsâ^À^Ù calls
    for Armenia to be denied entry for the NATO games. The ruling "Yeni
    Azerbaijan Party" (YAP) abstained from participation in activities
    organized by various public and political organizations, yet was quick
    to express its support for the public mood. In a recent interview
    with the Baku-based Echo daily newspaper, Bahar Muradova, a member
    of parliament and the deputy executive secretary of YAP, said that
    her party was instead "negotiating with international organizations
    and informing them about the opinion of the Azerbaijani people."

    But in a country where outrage with Armenia over the 1988-1994
    Nagorno-Karabakh war still runs deep, appearing out of sync with
    such an "opinion" could carry heavy political risks. The Karabakh
    Liberation Organizationâ^À^Ùs role in sparking the protests was duly
    noted by Aliyev, who commented on an earlier trip to Nahichevan that
    the court sentence passed down on the organizationâ^À^Ùs activists was
    "too severe."

    With municipal elections scheduled for this December, Aliyevâ^À^Ùs
    belief that the activistsâ^À^Ù sentences should be softened appears
    well-calculated. The elections will be the first contested vote since
    the bloody demonstrations that marked Aliyevâ^À^Ùs election in October
    2003. Though Azerbaijanâ^À^Ùs opposition has been badly handicapped
    by the brutal crackdown that followed, any government rebuff of the
    NATO protests, in which Aliyevâ^À^Ùs critics played a large role,
    could conceivably strengthen the oppositionâ^À^Ùs standing with voters.

    Some observers see the governmentâ^À^Ùs about-face as a sign of
    weak political leadership. "The incident shows that the Azerbaijani
    leadership is feeble-minded," independent political analyst Zardust
    Alizada told Azad Azarbaycan TV on September 13. "Armenians could
    choose to come or not to come. This would have had no impact on the
    Karabakh settlement."

    One interpretation of events states that the participation of certain
    pro-government organizations in the protests could indicate a division
    within the ruling elite. Aside from pro-government parliamentarians,
    the participation in the protests of the newly-created Party of
    Unified Popular Front of Azerbaijan, led by Gudrat Gasanguliyev, a
    former opposition member, and the National Forum of Non-Governmental
    Organizations, led by Azay Guliyev, a member of the State Pardoning
    Commission, has prompted this analysis. Under this interpretation,
    anti-Aliyev groups within existing power structures worked to use
    the protests to muddy Aliyevâ^À^Ùs international image.

    Others place the government fully in control of events, and
    maintain that NATO â^À^Ùs cancellation decision will merely
    serve Azerbaijanâ^À^Ùs aims at talks between Aliyev and Armenian
    President Robert Kocharian on Nagorno-Karabakh at a September
    15 meeting of the Commonwealth of Independent States in Astana,
    Kazakhstan. According to this version, Azerbaijanâ^À^Ùs refusal to
    grant Armenian representatives entry into the country can be used to
    secure additional concessions from Armenia, which, like Azerbaijan,
    is eager to tighten its ties to NATO.

    Meanwhile, what the move will mean for Azerbaijanâ^À^Ùs relations with
    NATO and the US has stirred an equally vociferous debate. Particular
    attention is expected to focus on Aliyevâ^À^Ùs September 22 visit to
    New York when he will address the United Nations and, according to an
    Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry statement to the Olaylar news agency,
    meet with President George W. Bush. Recently, speculation has run
    rife that a planned redeployment of 70,000 American troops from Europe
    and East Asia could result in the opening of a US base in Azerbaijan.

    Uzeyir Cafarov, an independent military expert, told Azad Azarbaycan
    TV on September 13 that the Azerbaijani governmentâ^À^Ùs response to
    the protests will inevitably hamper efforts to integrate the country
    within NATO. "The attitude towards us will alter. Just imagine that
    up to 1,000 servicemen from about 20 countries have come to Baku. Now
    they are returning home frustrated," Cafarov said.

    For its part, the US has attempted to counter that belief. An
    unidentified representative of the US embassy in Baku told the news
    agency Turan, that while Washington supports NATOâ^À^Ùs decision, "
    [w]e do not think that this decision has anything to do with Bakuâ^À^Ùs
    desire to cooperate with NATO and become closer to the alliance."

    One former foreign minister blames NATO itself for the failed war
    games, arguing that the decision to cancel the exercises suggests that
    the organization does not understand the nature of Azerbaijanâ^À^Ùs
    grievances against Armenia. "Azerbaijan is a victim of aggression,
    our lands are under occupation and we have hundreds of thousands
    of refugees. It is wrong not to take heed of this," former Foreign
    Minister Tofiq Zulfuqarov told Azad Azerbaycan TV. "This position
    should be taken into consideration in the future by NATO and other
    international structures."

    A leading academician takes that argument even further, insisting
    that, regardless of the countryâ^À^Ùs participation in the Partnership
    for Peace, Azerbaijan has no obligation to NATO to invite Armenian
    military personnel into the country.

    "Itâ^À^Ùs not the Yerevan zoo that is going to come to Azerbaijan,
    but the military of the country, whose commander-in-chief [President
    Robert Kocharian] openly speaks about his participation in the
    occupation of Azerbaijanâ^À^Ùs territory," said Rovshan Mustafayev,
    director of the Institute on Human Rights of the National Academy
    of Sciences. "[I]f for some reason there will be associates of
    [ex-Yugoslav President Slobodan] Milosevic, Kocharian or [ex-Iraqi
    President] Saddam Hussein in the lists of participants, the host
    country has the right to deny them."

    Editorâ^À^Ùs Note: Shahin Abbasov and Mammad Baghirov are deputy
    editors-in-chief of the Baku-based daily newspaper Echo.

    Posted September 15, 2004 © Eurasianet http://www.eurasianet.org
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