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  • Azerbaijan balancing strategic interests

    Birmingham Star, AL
    Dec 3 2008

    Azerbaijan balancing strategic interests

    Birmingham Star
    Wednesday 3rd December, 2008


    The newly reelected President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, was sworn
    in for a second term last month after winning the October 15th
    election with 89 percent of the vote.

    Opposition parties boycotted the election, and monitors from the
    Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe criticized the
    poll's shortcomings, especially during counting and tabulation.

    But whatever the shortcomings of the election, President Aliyev enjoys
    enormous popularity in his own country, according to Paul Goble,
    Director of Research and Publications at the Azerbaijan Diplomatic
    Academy in Baku. Speaking with host Judith Latham of VOA News Now's
    International Press Club, Goble says, even if the election had been
    fully free and fair with all the major parties taking part, the
    Azerbaijani President would still have been reelected with a
    significant majority.

    The Azerbaijan perspective

    Mr. Aliyev's election victory cemented his family's long grip on power
    in Azerbaijan. He was elected in 2003 following the death of his
    father, Heydar Aliyev, who himself dominated politics in the country
    for 30 years. Paul Goble says that stability has been an important
    factor in one of the most dangerous and unstable parts of the world. A
    key reason is Azerbaijan's strategic position on the pipeline carrying
    crude oil from the Caspian Sea through Georgia and Turkey. Goble notes
    that Azerbaijan sits at a unique juncture of a north-south, and an
    east-west, axis of influence. Therefore, he says, Azerbaijan almost
    has to pursue what President Aliyev has called a `balanced' foreign
    policy, taking into account the views of Russia, Iran, Central Asia,
    Turkey, Europe, and the United States. And as Goble points out, the
    recent war in Georgia demonstrated that the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    pipeline is not absolutely secure.

    A Georgian Perspective

    Georgian journalist and political analyst Ghia Abashidze in Tbilisi
    agrees. Abashidze says the war with Russia in August made the issue of
    energy supplies in the Caucasus abundantly clear to
    everyone. According to the latest reports, Abashidze says, the
    pipeline is not working at its full prewar capacity, and it is unclear
    when it will. And that's not only because of the world economic crisis
    but also because of the aftermath of last summer's war. There are
    still Russian troops on Georgian soil, so investors are reluctant to
    restart the pipeline at its full capacity, Abashidze says.

    Nonetheless, Ghia Abashidze says the Georgian leadership sees
    Azerbaijani President Aliyev's reelection in a positive light. People
    there remember how Azerbaijan helped Georgia in recent years when
    Russia cut off gas and energy supplies, he says, so Georgians expect
    that friendly relations with Azeris will continue.

    An Armenian Perspective

    However, relations between Baku and Yerevan are fraught with tension
    because of a long-standing struggle between Azerbaijan and Armenia
    over the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh. According to Paul
    Goble, Moscow has not played a very helpful role there, despite the
    new Russian President's overtures to both sides.

    The reality is that the Russian government has not wanted an agreement
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Goble says. He suggests that President
    Dmitri Medvedev may have invited the presidents of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan to go to Moscow last month for negotiations partly as a way
    of demonstrating Russia's preeminent position vis-a-vis the other
    Minsk Group countries. Goble says that, if Moscow decides it is in its
    greater interest to back Azerbaijan, there will be in his words a
    `possibility of movement.' But, he adds Russia's geopolitical
    calculations in the southern Caucasus have clearly changed.

    Emil Sanamyan, Washington editor of the Armenian Reporter, agrees with
    Paul Goble that the Kremlin might have ulterior motives in last
    month's meetings. Sanamyan says Russia's brokering of talks does not
    necessarily aim at resolution and agreement, but rather is an attempt
    to recapture the dominance it used to have in the region. And in fact
    Armenian President Serge Sarkissian made the point that, after Georgia
    failed in its recent attack on South Ossetia, Azerbaijan would
    probably think twice about using military options in
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Sanamyan suggests that factor alone may improve the
    prospects for a peace deal.

    U.S. Policy Perspective

    According to Paul Goble, Azerbaijan is critically important to
    Washington as well as to Moscow. First, he says, there is an interest
    in access to oil and gas. Second, he notes there are strategic
    considerations and making sure that Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Armenia
    understand that the `east-west line' is more beneficial to them. And
    third, Goble cautions, progress toward democracy in the region should
    not be sacrificed in the name of geo-strategic or economic interests.

    http://story.birminghamstar.com/index. php/ct/9/cid/b8de8e630faf3631/id/437893/cs/1/
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