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  • Aliyev in Washington: No change on Iran position

    EurasiaNet, NY
    April 28 2006

    ALIYEV IN WASHINGTON: NO CHANGE ON IRAN POSITION

    Shahin Abbasov 4/28/06

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said April 28 that his three-day
    visit to Washington would play an "instrumental" role in promoting
    the democratization of the Caucasus nation. He added that the visit
    had not altered Baku's position on the Iran crisis, appearing to
    reduce the White House's room for geopolitical maneuver on the issue.

    Aliyev met with top US officials on the final day of his Washington
    stay - President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and
    Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. Speaking to journalists, the
    Azerbaijani leader said his talks with Bush "covered all aspects of
    our bilateral relations." Bush said he emphasized three topics -
    energy, Iran and democratization. The US president added that global
    democratization efforts would benefit from Azerbaijan's emergence as
    "a modern Muslim country that is able to provide for its citizens,
    that understands that democracy is the wave of the future."

    The Azerbaijani leader said the trip would prove "instrumental in the
    future development of Azerbaijan as a modern, secular state." Aliyev
    went on to stress the stalemated Nagorno-Karabakh peace talks,
    expressing hope for a negotiated end to the conflict and adding that
    any settlement would have to preserve Azerbaijan's territorial
    integrity. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].
    "Armenian troops have to withdraw from occupied territories,
    Azerbaijani internally displaced persons have to return, and after
    that we can discuss the status of Nagorno-Karabakh," Aliyev said.

    On Iran, the two presidents provided scant details on their
    discussions, suggesting that a significant geopolitical difference
    exists. Political analysts in Baku believed that US officials were
    eager to obtain Azerbaijani support for possible military strikes
    against Iran in order to prevent Iran from continuing with its
    nuclear research. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].
    Baku has been opposed to the use of force against Iran, which is
    Azerbaijan's southern neighbor. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive]. Aliyev told Azerbaijani television April 28 that
    "our position has not changed - the problem should be resolved by
    diplomatic means."

    Prior to the presidential meeting, Elmar Mamedyarov, Azerbaijan's
    foreign minister, said the Bush-Aliyev discussions would aim to
    provide US officials with a clearer picture of Azerbaijani-Iranian
    relations. "Iran is our neighbour and many Azerbaijanis are living
    there. We carry cargo to Nakhchivan [an Azerbaijani exclave] via
    Iran. We supply Nakhchivan with Iranian gas. That is why we do not
    want a military solution to the Iranian problem," he told journalists
    on April 27. Mamedyarov also discouraged speculation that Aliyev was
    acting as a go-between in the US-Iranian dispute. He denied that
    Iran's defense minister, Mostafa Mohammad-Najjar, who visited Baku on
    April 19, had asked Azerbaijani officials to pass along a message to
    the Bush administration.

    Though military cooperation and US access to bases in Azerbaijan now
    seem out of the question, the United States may tighten intelligence
    gathering and sharing, suggested Kaan Nazli, a Europe and Eurasia
    analyst with the New York-based consulting firm, Eurasia Group. "The
    real issue is continuation of intelligence cooperation," Nazli said.
    That Aliyev met with John Negroponte, director of national
    intelligence, and that the Azerbaijani president's entourage included
    National Security Minister Eldar Makhmudov lend credence to the idea
    that the two states explored ways to enhance intelligence
    cooperation.

    Some analysts in Baku characterized the Washington visit as an
    all-around success for Aliyev. "His position in Azerbaijan is stable,
    and he did not have to ask any favors of the United States.
    Meanwhile, the United States needs Azerbaijani support in the Iran
    issue," said Ilgar Mammadov, an independence political analyst.

    Opposition leaders in Baku, struggling to regain traction after
    parliamentary elections in late 2005, attempted to stir up the
    domestic political scene with unsubstantiated speculation that Aliyev
    cut a secret deal with Bush to make Azerbaijani bases available to US
    forces. A report posted April 27 on the Day.az web site quoted Isa
    Gambar, head of the anti-Aliyev Musavat Party, as saying, "now it is
    time for official recognition of the existence of such agreements
    between Azerbaijan and US."

    Upon his return to Baku, experts expect Aliyev to follow up on his
    democratization rhetoric with reforms -- both substantive and
    symbolic - that are designed to improve Azerbaijan's international
    image. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Arif
    Yunusov, head of the Conflict Prevention Department at the Baku-based
    Institute for Peace and Democracy, suggested that Aliyev might reopen
    channels of communication with his political opponents, adding that
    the opposition could very well win a few additional seats in repeat
    parliamentary elections, scheduled for May 13.

    Mammadov said that Aliyev's enhanced international stature could
    prompt him to undertake liberalizing economic and political changes.
    "There is no elections scheduled in the country soon and the
    opposition is weak, so the president may easily initiate some liberal
    steps and reforms," Mammadov said.

    Concerning the Karabakh issue, Azerbaijani officials are now looking
    forward to the next meeting of the OSCE Minsk Group, which
    Mamedyarov, the foreign minister, indicated would convene May 2 in
    Moscow. The Minsk Group is charged with mediating peace talks, and
    Baku's expectations are high that US negotiators will press for a
    settlement that conforms to Azerbaijan's wishes. "They [US officials]
    need stability in the South Caucasus given the rise of tension over
    Iran," Yunusov said.


    Editor's Note: Shahin Abbasov is a free-lance journalist based in Baku

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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