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  • Azerbaijan Faces Iran Dilemma

    AZERBAIJAN FACES IRAN DILEMMA
    By Kenan Guluzade in Baku

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    May 19 2006

    Baku uncomfortable as its major ally confronts its southern neighbour.

    As tension grows between Iran and the West over Iran's nuclear
    programme, agonised debate has begun in Azerbaijan about what stance
    the country should take if the crisis escalates and it is called on
    to join an anti-Iranian coalition.

    Should it come to military action, many observers assume that the
    United States would want to use Azerbaijani territory for its troops.

    Former UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter was quoted by the Azerbaijani
    information agency APA as saying that Azerbaijan would be a likely
    base from which the US would launch military strikes.

    The US government has already paid for a radar station to be built
    in the south of the country, on the border with Iran.

    However, Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliev has explicitly ruled out
    joining any anti-Iranian coalition. Speaking on an official visit to
    Washington on April 26, Aliev said, "Azerbaijan, of course, will not
    be engaged in any kind of potential operations against Iran, and our
    officials [have] made it very clear, including myself in the past...
    it's time to stop speculating on this issue.

    "We have a bilateral agreement with Iran which clearly says that the
    territories of our countries cannot be used for any danger towards
    each other."

    The non-aggression pact between Iran and Azerbaijan was signed two
    years ago in Tehran by the defence ministers of the two countries.

    During a visit to Azerbaijan by Iranian defence minister Mostafa
    Mohammad Najjar in April, the two sides discussed implementing the
    agreement. The Iranian minister said a second agreement covering
    military cooperation could be signed if necessary.

    Many Azerbaijani experts warning that the risks entailed in getting
    involved in any operation against Iran would be high.

    Political analyst Zardusht Alizade says it could mean Baku losing
    all hope of regaining Nagorny Karabakh. "We have always called for
    a solution to the Karabakh problem which is within the framework
    of international law," he said. "If we take part in an anti-Iran
    coalition, we will lose Karabakh. The US flouts international law
    and wants other countries to support it in doing so."

    Noting that Azerbaijan has no serious quarrels with Iran and obtains
    some of its electricity from that country, Alizade asked, "On what
    grounds would we join some mythical anti-Iran coalition?"

    Hikmet Hajizade, a former Azerbaijani ambassador to Moscow who is now
    a political analyst with the opposition party Musavat, said Azerbaijan
    would be hit hard by any imposition of sanctions against Iran and
    trade would suffer. According to the Iranian embassy, trade between
    the two countries came in at an estimated 450 million dollars last
    year. Trading with Iran is the main source of income for people in
    the south of the country.

    Hajizade pointed out that if the crisis escalates, the Nakhichevan
    Autonomous Republic, an exclave cut off from the rest of Azerbaijan
    and whose border with Armenia is sealed, would be in particularly
    deep trouble, as it gets all its gas and electricity from Iran.

    He said that if it came to war, Azerbaijan would have to deal with
    an influx of refugees from Iran - particularly ethnic Azerbaijanis -
    and would itself be vulnerable to attack.

    "It would not be at all hard to break the backbone of the economy:
    all that would be required are several torpedoes... and two or three
    medium-range missiles," Hajizade said, speculating that offshore
    oil platforms and the Sangachal terminal that supplies oil to the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline would be targeted.

    Most Azerbaijanis, like the Iranian state, are Shia Muslims, and a
    rise in tension could provoke an angry backlash from them. "There
    are too few pro-Iranian Islamists in Azerbaijan to destabilise the
    country, but there are enough of them to carry out various terrorist
    and diversionary acts," said Hajizade.

    However, some experts argue that it would be dangerous for Azerbaijan
    if Iran were to produce nuclear weapons, as the country - which
    currently has better relations with Armenia - would become even
    more powerful.

    Parliamentary deputy Igbal Agazade argues that by supporting
    Washington, Azerbaijan will be choosing the lesser of two evils,
    and that it would be better to avert the Iranian threat and reap the
    political rewards. Agazade said that as a result, Baku might receive
    US support over the dispute over Karabakh and adjoining Armenian-held
    regions close to Iran.

    "Membership of the coalition will mean greater defence for Azerbaijan
    against an Iranian threat, and will help in solving a potential
    humanitarian crisis," argued Agazade.

    During a two-day visit to Baku, Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
    refrained from expressing an opinion on the position Azerbaijan should
    take in the current crisis, saying only that Iran is a peace-loving
    state and that Baku and Tehran are friends.

    Visits to Azerbaijan by Iranian officials and President Aliev's trip
    to the US give the impression that some serious horse-trading is
    going on over the Iran crisis.

    Azerbaijan's position can be compared with that of Turkey, which is
    similarly hesitant about strong action against Iran but reluctant to
    offend the United States. Turkey saw its relations with Washington
    deteriorate after it failed to offer support for the war in Iraq. As
    the crisis over Iran develops, the Baku authorities will be mindful
    of this experience.

    Kenan Guluzade is deputy editor of Zerkalo newspaper in Baku.
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