AZERBAIJAN BETWEEN EAST AND WEST
RIA Novosti, Russia
Nov 8 2006
MOSCOW. (Dzheikhun Nadzhafov for RIA Novosti) - Before coming to
Moscow on November 8, Azerbaijani President Ilkham Aliyev visited the
opposite geopolitical pole, Brussels. He is carrying on his father's
policy of balancing and maneuvering.
The Azerbaijani president wants to maintain and develop constructive
relations with Moscow, although the country is also trying to strike
a geopolitical balance between East and West. Aliyev has to tread
very carefully so as not to irritate either side. However, it looks
as if relations with the Kremlin are reaching a new level.
Moscow's influence in Azerbaijan is focused on political factors.
Azerbaijan does not receive Russian state investment, loans or grants,
and Russian capital does not play a major role in the Azerbaijani
economy.
A year ago, Baku signed a framework agreement with Russian aluminum
giant RusAl on the construction in Azerbaijan of an aluminum plant
worth $1 billion, but ground has still not been broken on the project.
In early December, Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov will
visit Baku, becoming the first Russian premier to visit Azerbaijan
since Soviet times. His visit should add zest to bilateral economic
relations.
The Kremlin has a strong political standing in Azerbaijan, notably in
settling the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, NATO's
Secretary General, said during his visit to Moscow that Russia played
a major role in resolving South Caucasian conflicts. He said Russia
was an irreplaceable factor in the efforts to restore peace in areas
of ethnic tension in the former Soviet states.
Some Azerbaijani politicians think NATO might join forces with Russia
to settle the Karabakh problem.
Now that the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, which bypasses
Russia, has been inaugurated, the West intends to ensure the safe
and uninterrupted flow of oil along it. This calls for settling the
Karabakh problem, which is impossible without Russia.
The pipeline can be described as an American political and economic
project in a region that is in the sphere of Russian interests. The
parties may decide to follow up the oil pipeline with a gas pipeline
from Baku through Tbilisi to Erzurum.
President Aliyev recently made an interesting comment, with Moscow
and Tehran in mind. He said in an interview with the Qatar-based
television channel Al Jazeera: "The [Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan] pipeline
is not spearheaded against anyone. On the contrary, we hope that
it will also benefit our neighbors after we expand it and build a
parallel pipeline."
He did not specify what kind of "parallel pipeline" might be built
and how Azerbaijan's neighbors would use it, but he had an important
reason for disclosing the possibility.
In principle, the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline will have
sufficient capacity for delivering oil from Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan,
which means that Aliyev has offered a purely political project (the
parallel pipeline) to the neighboring oil producers, Russia and Iran.
Russia will be able to use the BTC pipeline to transport its oil
only after 2015-2020, when Azerbaijan's Azeri, Chyrag and Gyuheshli
oilfields become depleted.
However, the presidents of Russia and Azerbaijan will discuss not
only oil projects in Moscow, but also Azerbaijan's relations with
NATO. Political analysts in Azerbaijan say uncertainty surrounding
Azerbaijan's admission to NATO is creating problems in the
Baku-Moscow-Brussels triangle.
When Geidar Aliyev, the father of the current president, came to
power in Azerbaijan, he made certain promises to NATO in a bid to
strengthen his own and the country's position. After the dissolution
of the Soviet Union, Azerbaijan intuitively moved toward the West.
But when Russia got back on its feet, Baku halted its incorporation
into NATO.
The current balancing act between Moscow and NATO suits the Azerbaijani
elite, because it offers them a chance to obtain support from both
sides. Moreover, a vague foreign policy allows the government to avoid
"cumbersome commitments."
So, where will Azerbaijan move? Ilkham Aliyev may have to answer this
question on his trip to Moscow.
Dzheikhun Nadzhafov is deputy editor-in-chief of the Azerbaijani
weekly Obozrevatel.
The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and
may not necessarily represent the opinions of the editorial board.
RIA Novosti, Russia
Nov 8 2006
MOSCOW. (Dzheikhun Nadzhafov for RIA Novosti) - Before coming to
Moscow on November 8, Azerbaijani President Ilkham Aliyev visited the
opposite geopolitical pole, Brussels. He is carrying on his father's
policy of balancing and maneuvering.
The Azerbaijani president wants to maintain and develop constructive
relations with Moscow, although the country is also trying to strike
a geopolitical balance between East and West. Aliyev has to tread
very carefully so as not to irritate either side. However, it looks
as if relations with the Kremlin are reaching a new level.
Moscow's influence in Azerbaijan is focused on political factors.
Azerbaijan does not receive Russian state investment, loans or grants,
and Russian capital does not play a major role in the Azerbaijani
economy.
A year ago, Baku signed a framework agreement with Russian aluminum
giant RusAl on the construction in Azerbaijan of an aluminum plant
worth $1 billion, but ground has still not been broken on the project.
In early December, Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov will
visit Baku, becoming the first Russian premier to visit Azerbaijan
since Soviet times. His visit should add zest to bilateral economic
relations.
The Kremlin has a strong political standing in Azerbaijan, notably in
settling the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, NATO's
Secretary General, said during his visit to Moscow that Russia played
a major role in resolving South Caucasian conflicts. He said Russia
was an irreplaceable factor in the efforts to restore peace in areas
of ethnic tension in the former Soviet states.
Some Azerbaijani politicians think NATO might join forces with Russia
to settle the Karabakh problem.
Now that the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, which bypasses
Russia, has been inaugurated, the West intends to ensure the safe
and uninterrupted flow of oil along it. This calls for settling the
Karabakh problem, which is impossible without Russia.
The pipeline can be described as an American political and economic
project in a region that is in the sphere of Russian interests. The
parties may decide to follow up the oil pipeline with a gas pipeline
from Baku through Tbilisi to Erzurum.
President Aliyev recently made an interesting comment, with Moscow
and Tehran in mind. He said in an interview with the Qatar-based
television channel Al Jazeera: "The [Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan] pipeline
is not spearheaded against anyone. On the contrary, we hope that
it will also benefit our neighbors after we expand it and build a
parallel pipeline."
He did not specify what kind of "parallel pipeline" might be built
and how Azerbaijan's neighbors would use it, but he had an important
reason for disclosing the possibility.
In principle, the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline will have
sufficient capacity for delivering oil from Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan,
which means that Aliyev has offered a purely political project (the
parallel pipeline) to the neighboring oil producers, Russia and Iran.
Russia will be able to use the BTC pipeline to transport its oil
only after 2015-2020, when Azerbaijan's Azeri, Chyrag and Gyuheshli
oilfields become depleted.
However, the presidents of Russia and Azerbaijan will discuss not
only oil projects in Moscow, but also Azerbaijan's relations with
NATO. Political analysts in Azerbaijan say uncertainty surrounding
Azerbaijan's admission to NATO is creating problems in the
Baku-Moscow-Brussels triangle.
When Geidar Aliyev, the father of the current president, came to
power in Azerbaijan, he made certain promises to NATO in a bid to
strengthen his own and the country's position. After the dissolution
of the Soviet Union, Azerbaijan intuitively moved toward the West.
But when Russia got back on its feet, Baku halted its incorporation
into NATO.
The current balancing act between Moscow and NATO suits the Azerbaijani
elite, because it offers them a chance to obtain support from both
sides. Moreover, a vague foreign policy allows the government to avoid
"cumbersome commitments."
So, where will Azerbaijan move? Ilkham Aliyev may have to answer this
question on his trip to Moscow.
Dzheikhun Nadzhafov is deputy editor-in-chief of the Azerbaijani
weekly Obozrevatel.
The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and
may not necessarily represent the opinions of the editorial board.