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Attention Focuses On Iran In Bush-Aliyev Talks

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  • Attention Focuses On Iran In Bush-Aliyev Talks

    ATTENTION FOCUSES ON IRAN IN BUSH-ALIYEV TALKS
    Rovshan Ismayilov

    EurasiaNet, NY
    April 11 2006

    An upcoming meeting between Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and
    US President George W. Bush is fuelling speculation about what role
    Azerbaijan may play in the conflict between Iran, its neighbour to
    the south, and the US over Iran's nuclear research program.

    The White House announced on April 10 that President Bush will meet
    with President Aliyev in the White House on April 28. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Information about the White House's invitation was first reported
    by Radio Liberty on April 6 and confirmed by Azerbaijani Foreign
    Minister Elmar Mammadyarov on April 7. Novruz Mammadov, the head of
    the presidential administration's international relations department,
    said that Ilham Aliyev will meet with US President George W. Bush
    and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

    The largely unexpected invitation has sparked frustration among
    Azerbaijan's opposition and celebrations among the country's ruling
    elite. During last year's parliamentary election campaign, the
    opposition had targeted the lack of a White House invitation for
    President Aliyev as proof of Azerbaijan's poor record on democratic
    reform.

    Coming just one month after a US State Department report that
    strongly criticized human rights conditions in Azerbaijan, the sudden
    invitation has surprised many local observers. News of the trip
    has encouraged speculations over what role Azerbaijan might play in
    the conflict between the US and Iran over Tehran's nuclear research
    program. Attention is also being given to the ongoing Nagorno Karabakh
    talks, Caspian surveillance system negotiations and other security
    and energy issues.

    Iran, which borders Azerbaijan and has a large ethnic Azeri
    minority, is expected to feature prominently in the White House's
    discussions with President Aliyev. Recent articles in The New Yorker
    and The Washington Post have indicated that the US administration is
    considering launching a military attack against Iran. The April 10 New
    Yorker article by investigative journalist Seymour M. Hersh claims
    that "US Air Force planning groups are drawing up lists of targets,
    and teams of American combat troops have been ordered into Iran,
    under cover, to collect targeting data and to establish contact with
    anti-government ethnic-minority groups," including ethnic Azeris.

    Azerbaijani officials have been careful in discussing what the US
    conflict with Iran means for Baku's relations with Washington. In a
    visit to the Azerbaijani capital in late March, however, Assistant
    US Secretary of State Daniel Fried stated that the US is keeping
    the Azerbaijani government informed about its plans concerning Iran
    "because Azerbaijan has the right to be aware about it," local media
    reported. Fried also said that the US looks forward to reaching
    consensus with Azerbaijan on this issue. The US official did not
    dismiss the possibility of US troops being deployed in Azerbaijan some
    day, although said that a large military base should not be expected
    any time soon.

    Turan news agency chief political analyst Zafar Guliyev believes that
    Iran is the main reason for Ilham Aliyev's invitation to the US. "I
    think they [the US] will try to involve Azerbaijan in the anti-Iranian
    coalition. The White House wants to get Azerbaijan's approval for
    using its territory against Iran. To get Azerbaijan's participation
    in the coalition is as important as it was during the Iraq campaign,"
    Guliyev told Day.az on April 10.

    While acknowledging that Iran has featured in a topic of discussion
    with Washington, government officials, however, maintain that
    Azerbaijan does not intend to join any alliance against the Persian
    Gulf state. At an April 6 press conference, Deputy Foreign Minister
    Araz Azimov rejected reports that the US is attempting to include
    Azerbaijan in an anti-Iranian coalition. "Azerbaijan has no intention
    to become part of a coalition against someone else and wants to
    build friendly relations with all the region's countries," Azimov
    said. The official noted only that "Azerbaijan is concerned about
    some activities of Iran in the disputed sector of the Caspian Sea."

    Azimov stressed that "the US wants nothing from Azerbaijan."

    Washington's interest in Azerbaijan, the official continued, is
    "to see Azerbaijan developing as a normal stable state. That is why
    possible threats to Azerbaijan's national security were discussed."

    Guliyev argues that sooner or later Azerbaijan will have to choose
    between Washington and Tehran. "For the time being, the Azerbaijani
    government did well balancing in its foreign policy, but there are
    moments when choice is inevitable."

    Independent political analyst Rasim Musabekov agrees that concerns
    over Iran form the primary reason for the White House's invitation
    to President Aliyev, but sees little chance that Azerbaijan would
    stand with the US against Iran. "Given the geographical neighborhood,
    and the historical, cultural and human links, it is impossible for
    Azerbaijan to become a member of such a coalition. But regardless
    of whether Azerbaijan supports US plans or not, their realization -
    whether as economic sanctions or military actions -- will have a huge
    impact on our country."

    Analysts project that the two sides will discuss many issues about
    Iran that are unrelated to the country's nuclear ambitions, among
    them border security, prevention of Iranian threats against US and
    Western-owned property in Azerbaijan, and security for Azerbaijan's
    oil and gas fields in the Caspian Sea. Azerbaijani officials have
    noted that they are also interested in discussion of Iran's treatment
    of ethnic minority Azerbaijanis.

    Many observers assume that securing Azerbaijan's support for the
    US position on Iran will be linked to progress on resolution of the
    18-year conflict with Armenia over the disputed exclave of Nagorno
    Karabakh. Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov has announced that he
    received an "interesting proposal" for resolution of the Karabakh
    dispute during his April 7-8 trip to Washington. Before meeting with
    Mammadyarov on April 7, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice spoke on
    the phone with both President Aliyev and Armenian President Robert
    Kocharian, according to the US State Department press office.

    Baku, according to Mamadyarov, will announce its response to the
    proposal when Steven Mann, US co-chair of the Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe's Minsk Group, which supervises the Karabakh
    talks, visits the Azerbaijani capital on April 18.

    Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov, who visited Washington in late
    March, has also told reporters that a130-kilometer-long section of
    the Azerbaijani-Iranian border, currently under Armenian occupation,
    made up part of his discussions with US officials.

    A series of recent visits paid to the US by Azerbaijani officials
    and to Baku by senior US diplomats indicate further likely topics
    for discussion during President Aliyev's visit.

    Security, energy and reforms issues were also discussed during an
    April 8 meeting between Condoleezza Rice and Elmar Mammadyarov,
    US Ambassador to Azerbaijan Reno Harnish told Turan on April 10.

    For its part, the delegation led by Deputy Foreign Minister Azimov
    reviewed joint anti-terror efforts, non-proliferation of weapons of
    mass destruction (WMD), border security and the general military
    and political situation in the Caspian Sea basin. The delegation
    included Azerbaijani Naval Forces Commander-in-Chief Shahin Sultanov,
    and high level representatives from the Ministry of National Security
    and State Border Service.

    Of particular note are the two Caspian Sea basin surveillance systems
    proposed by the US (Caspian Guard) and Russia (CasFor). Russia
    maintains that the two systems cannot exist in the same area,
    and favors establishment of a common system, according to Gennady
    Yevsyukov, spokesperson for the Russian embassy in Baku. Foreign
    Minister Elmar Mammadyarov, however, has stated that Azerbaijan will
    have to make the ultimate decision about whether the two systems
    can co-exist.

    According to Azimov, a number of agreements were reached during
    the visit. "The . . . risks and threats in the Caspian region [are]
    very complicated. There are elements of war, terrorism, environmental
    threats," Azimov told the state-run Azertag news agency on April 1.

    "In this regard, the US will cooperate with Azerbaijan very closely.

    We have reached a number of agreements." The official stated that
    "several groups of the US experts" will visit Baku to consider the
    possibility of Azerbaijan joining the G-8 club of industrialized
    countries' WMD non-proliferation initiative.

    Editor's Note: Rovshan Ismayilov is a freelance journalist based
    in Baku.
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