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Aliyev's Invitation To The White House: A Blessing Or A Curse?

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  • Aliyev's Invitation To The White House: A Blessing Or A Curse?

    ALIYEV'S INVITATION TO THE WHITE HOUSE: A BLESSING OR A CURSE?
    By Fariz Ismailzade

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    April 13 2006

    Officials in Baku are rejoicing. Three years after his election,
    Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev has received an official
    invitation to visit the White House and meet with U.S. President George
    W. Bush. In a press release issued by the White House on April 10,
    the invitation was justified by the fact that "Azerbaijan is a key
    ally in a region of great importance and a valued partner, making
    important contributions in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Kosovo." The meeting
    with President Bush, set for April 28, will include discussion of a
    wide range of issues, including democracy promotion and cooperation in
    the Caucasus, energy diversification, and the shared U.S.-Azerbaijani
    commitment to working together to advance freedom and security.

    The invitation comes as a slap in the face to the Azerbaijani
    opposition, which has long complained about election fraud in the
    country and the lack of adequate pressure from the Western community
    on the Aliyev administration. The Azerbaijani opposition has often
    cited the continuing refusal to invite President Aliyev to Washington,
    while Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko and Georgian President
    Mikheil Saakashvili were welcomed immediately after elections in
    their countries, to show the international community's negative
    assessment of the state of democracy in Azerbaijan. Now this trump
    card has disappeared.

    Local analysts predict that two issues will dominate the talks
    between Aliyev and Bush: Iran and Azerbaijan's long-standing
    conflict with Armenia over the Karabakh enclave. "There will be a
    set of complex issues on the agenda, but Iran will dominate it with
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict being included into the discussion
    through the prism of the Iranian question," independent political
    analyst Ilgar Mammadov told Jamestown. "Everything tells us that the
    negotiations will focus around the Iranian and Karabakh problems,"
    according to an editorial in the opposition Azadliq newspaper on
    April 9. Consequently, the long-anticipated invitation from Washington
    might not be the blessing that was expected by official Baku.

    Political scientist Fuad Gahramanli believes "Aliyev is not interested
    in participating in possible military operations against Iran and
    actively tries to stay away from this process." For that reason,
    the invitation to the United States at this particular moment might
    not please Aliyev that much, concludes Gahramanli (Azadliq, April
    7). Mammadov also believes that Azerbaijan will try to play a careful
    game, but "It is not for sure yet if Azerbaijan will stay completely
    outside of the process."

    Still, some other experts forecast that the Karabakh conflict will
    top the discussions, as Washington is re-energizing peace talks
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan and trying to save the failed talks
    in Rambouillet, outside Paris, on February 11. The intensive trips
    by the OSCE's Minsk group co-chairs into the region in the last few
    weeks have raised speculations about the possibility of reaching an
    agreement on this conflict in 2006. U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan
    Reno L. Harnish III, has told the local Azerbaijani media that there
    are good prospects for settling the conflict in 2006. Furthermore,
    Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov said after his trip to
    the Washington last week "some new, interesting proposals regarding
    the solution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict have been offered
    and the Azerbaijani government will discuss them" (Turan, April 10,
    also see EDM, April 12).

    "The United States is interested in a quick resolution of the conflict
    this year," Mammadov told Jamestown, "but whether Russia will help in
    this process is still not clear." ANS-TV radio quoted Yuri Merzlyakov,
    the Russian co-chair of the Minsk group, as saying that there is no
    competition between the co-chairs and that President Aliyev met with
    Russian President Vladimir Putin long before he is scheduled to meet
    with President Bush (ANS-TV, April 13).

    Much is expected from Aliyev's upcoming trip to Washington, yet most
    local analysts agree that the negotiations will be tough for the
    Azerbaijani president. Particularly, any possible pressures on Aliyev
    to agree to the terms of the referendum that is being proposed for the
    resolution of the Karabakh conflict might produce counter-productive
    results domestically. The Azerbaijani opposition is carefully watching
    what will happen in Washington and they will try to dampen President
    Aliyev's excitement about the long-anticipated meeting with President
    Bush by focusing on the failures of Azerbaijani diplomacy regarding
    the Karabakh conflict. As for President Bush, he is no longer feeling
    the necessity to postpone this invitation, as his re-election in 2004
    has removed the need to take domestic considerations into account
    regarding such an action.

    Now the emphasis is on security and foreign policy, areas in which
    Azerbaijan could be a key ally.
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