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Aliyev: No Help For US Military Action Against Iran

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  • Aliyev: No Help For US Military Action Against Iran

    ALIYEV: NO HELP FOR US MILITARY ACTION AGAINST IRAN

    IranMania, Iran
    April 27 2006

    LONDON, April 27 (IranMania) - According to an AFP report, visiting
    Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev ruled out his country taking part
    in any possible military operations against neighboring Iran and
    said resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Armenia was a top
    priority for his government.

    "Azerbajian will not be engaged in any kind of potential operation
    against Iran and our officials in the past, including myself, have
    made (this) very clear," Aliyev told an audience at the Council on
    Foreign Relations, an influential Washington think tank.

    "Therefore I think it is time to stop speculating on this issue,"
    he said.

    Aliyev, whose official visit here is his first since his election to
    succeed his father in 2003, said his country has a bilateral agreement
    with Tehran that clearly forbids either country from staging aggression
    against the other from their respective territories, AFP said.

    Aliyev comments came ahead of a meeting with US President George W.

    Bush on Friday during which the nuclear stand-off with Iran is expected
    to be raised.

    There has been speculation that Azerbaijan, which is located between
    Iran and Russia and which has troops alongside US forces in Iraq as
    well as in Afghanistan and Kosovo, could be asked by Washington to
    back any potential military action against Iran should diplomacy on
    the nuclear issue fail, AFP added.

    Aliyev, whose White House meeting with Bush has long been sought
    by his government as a way to boost his stature, said he planned to
    discuss a wide range of topics with US officials, including bilateral
    relations, energy and security issues as well as the conflict in the
    Nagorno-Karabakh region, AFP noted.

    He said he hoped Washington would help revive the peace process in
    Nagorno-Karabakh, which is a disputed part of Azerbaijani territory
    that has been controlled since the early 1990s by its majority
    ethnic-Armenian population.

    Aliyev made clear that his country would not relinquish the territory
    and said any settlement would have to guarantee the return of
    Azerbaijani refugees to the region while protecting the rights of
    the local ethnic Armenian population, AFP stated.

    "I think it's time for the Armenian leadership to behave like
    statesemen, to think what will happen in five or 10 years if the
    conflict is not resolved," he said. "The patience of the Azerbaijani
    people has a limit."

    The 44-year-old leader also brushed aside criticism concerning
    his autocratic rule saying that he saw no chance of any "colour"
    revolution in Azerbaijan.

    "For that to happen, people have to be unhappy with the government,"
    he said, pointing to his country's economic prosperity.

    US officials, who have been criticised for inviting Aliyev to
    Washington in light of the US administration's much-touted democracy
    agenda, said democratic reforms would top the agenda during the visit.

    "We have said, and we mean it, that to elevate our relationship
    with Azerbaijan to a qualitatively new level (...) there needs to
    be sustained progress on democracy," Matthew Bryza, Deputy Assistant
    Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs, said.

    The New York-based Human Rights Watch said it has urged Bush in
    a letter to press Aliyev for concrete progress in the country's
    poor human rights record. T The Armenian Assembly of America, a
    Washington-based lobby group, also urged the US leader to denounce
    what it said were efforts by Azerbaijan and Turkey to isolate Armenia,
    AFP noted.

    Observers say Washington's interest in Azerbaijan is related to its
    strategic location and the use of its oil and gas riches to offset
    European dependence on Russia.

    The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, which is expected to become
    operational soon, is designed to avoid shipping oil through congested
    Turkish straits while also bypassing Russia's pipeline network,
    AFP stated.
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