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  • BAKU: Iran Azerbaijan talk militaries

    Baku Sun, Azerbaijan
    May 23 2005

    BAKU: Iran Azerbaijan talk militaries


    TEHRAN - Iran's President Mohammad Khatami offered assuring words to
    Azerbaijan's Defense Minister Safar Abiyev during his official visit
    this weekend to Iran, saying Azerbaijan need not fear a powerful
    Iran, according to Iranian news agencies.

    In an apparent reference to mushrooming U.S. military bases in the
    former Soviet republics, Khatami was quoted as describing the
    presence of foreign troops as `a threat to the security and peace of
    regional countries and an affront to them.'

    `Through coexistence and non-interference in each other's affairs and
    maintaining mutual respect, we should complement our defense
    capabilities and protect security and peace in the region,' he added.


    In January, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev paid an official visit
    to Iran at part of the two countries' efforts to warm up diplomatic
    relations.

    Khatami touched on `historical relations' between Iran and
    Azerbaijan, hoping ties would bolster `in line with the principle of
    maintaining security and tranquility in the region.'

    `Tehran-Baku relations can serve as a suitable example for other
    countries given their ideological, political and international
    commonalties,' he said.

    Later in the week, Azeri media reported Abiyev dismissed reports that
    NATO troops might be stationed in Azerbaijan to safeguard the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan main export pipeline. The defense minister was
    quoted as saying Azerbaijan was an independent country pursuing its
    own free policies.

    Last month during a brief stop in Azerbaijan as part of a fast moving
    tour of Iraq and Afghanistan U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
    met with Abiyev and addressed Azeri peacekeepers in Iraq and the
    current pace of settlement talks regarding the Karabakh conflict.

    While brief, the trip generated huge interest among Azerbaijani
    media, with some reports calling the visit `shrouded in secrecy.'
    Local analysts blamed the suspicion on recent international
    speculation that the United States seeks to establish a major
    military presence in Azerbaijan.

    The U.S. Embassy on Azerbaijan has since dismissed the rumors.

    Back in Iran, Abiyev also oversaw the signing of military
    co-operation agreement in Iran, in addition to discussions over
    issues pertaining to the Caspian Sea.
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