AFTER GEORGIA, OIL-RICH AZERBAIJAN WALKS US, RUSSIA TIGHTROPE
by Olga Nedbayeva
Agence France Presse
October 13, 2008 Monday 11:17 AM GMT
The war in Georgia created new dilemmas for its oil-rich neighbour
Azerbaijan, which has walked a tightrope between Moscow and Washington
while dealing with a simmering ethnic conflict of its own.
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, almost certain to be re-elected
for a second term Wednesday, has so far managed to maintain good
relations with Georgia, Russia and the United States.
His country is part of GUAM, a group of Western-leaning ex-Soviet
republics that brings together Georgia, Ukraine and Moldova and is
designed to counter Moscow's influence in the region.
But he has not taken a firm stand on August's war between Russia
and Georgia or Moscow's controversial recognition of two separatist
Georgian regions, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, as independent states.
The issue is sensitive because Azerbaijan has its own rebel region:
Nagorny Karabakh, a mountainous, ethnically Armenian enclave that
Baku has sought to regain ever since it broke free in a bloody war
in the early 1990s.
Aided by a steady flow of petrodollars, Aliyev, who has ruled since
2003, can afford to follow a measured and independent foreign policy,
analysts said.
"The war in Georgia has shown that this prudent policy with regard to
both Russia and the west was good," said Rasim Musabayov, a Baku-based
political analyst.
But experts say Aliyev has received warnings, like the Russian bombs
that fell in August near the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline,
a project dear to Washington because it bypasses Russia.
The fate of BTC and the planned Nabucco gas pipeline, which would also
bypass Russia to link the Caspian region to Europe, was the focus of
US Vice President Dick Cheney's visit to Azerbaijan in September.
Moscow, which backs the rival South Stream pipeline network, views
Nabucco as a "major risk for existing projects," said Musabayov,
who did not rule out "an attack on BTC" as a possible Russian response.
Russia and the west were vying for access to Azerbaijan's energy
resources well before the war, with Russian gas giant Gazprom offering
to buy Azerbaijani gas at market prices in June to prevent it from
going to a western buyer.
An adviser to President Aliyev, Ali Hasanov, said Baku was in no hurry
to choose sides: "For the moment, we are fine. When we need to choose,
we will. We have received proposals, we have to think," he said.
Alexei Malashenko, a Caucasus specialist from the US-funded Carnegie
Moscow Centre, said Aliyev had "haggled well with Moscow to reinforce
his position.
"Without clashing with Moscow, and with a smile, he will continue
the policy of building pipelines that bypass Russia," said Malashenko.
Sabit Baghirov, a former president of Azerbaijani state oil company
SOCAR, agreed that Baku would continue cooperating with the west
despite Russia's rout of Georgia.
"The Russian ambassador in Baku said countries in the region should
learn from events in Georgia. What did Russia get in Georgia, who
has she scared?" Baghirov said.
"There are many people in Azerbaijan who have grown up with Russian
culture, but politics is another thing," he added.
He added, however, that Azerbaijan would now be more cautious in its
policy towards Nagorny Karabakh, whose separatist administration is
backed by Armenia, Russia's main ally in the Caucasus.
"President Aliyev has stopped saying he could use force" to retake
the region, he said.
Hasanov, the presidential aide said he hoped the Georgian crisis
would push the world's major powers to work more actively to resolve
the Nagorny Karabakh conflict.
"Until now, this issue was at the bottom of the list of their
priorities," he said.
by Olga Nedbayeva
Agence France Presse
October 13, 2008 Monday 11:17 AM GMT
The war in Georgia created new dilemmas for its oil-rich neighbour
Azerbaijan, which has walked a tightrope between Moscow and Washington
while dealing with a simmering ethnic conflict of its own.
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, almost certain to be re-elected
for a second term Wednesday, has so far managed to maintain good
relations with Georgia, Russia and the United States.
His country is part of GUAM, a group of Western-leaning ex-Soviet
republics that brings together Georgia, Ukraine and Moldova and is
designed to counter Moscow's influence in the region.
But he has not taken a firm stand on August's war between Russia
and Georgia or Moscow's controversial recognition of two separatist
Georgian regions, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, as independent states.
The issue is sensitive because Azerbaijan has its own rebel region:
Nagorny Karabakh, a mountainous, ethnically Armenian enclave that
Baku has sought to regain ever since it broke free in a bloody war
in the early 1990s.
Aided by a steady flow of petrodollars, Aliyev, who has ruled since
2003, can afford to follow a measured and independent foreign policy,
analysts said.
"The war in Georgia has shown that this prudent policy with regard to
both Russia and the west was good," said Rasim Musabayov, a Baku-based
political analyst.
But experts say Aliyev has received warnings, like the Russian bombs
that fell in August near the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline,
a project dear to Washington because it bypasses Russia.
The fate of BTC and the planned Nabucco gas pipeline, which would also
bypass Russia to link the Caspian region to Europe, was the focus of
US Vice President Dick Cheney's visit to Azerbaijan in September.
Moscow, which backs the rival South Stream pipeline network, views
Nabucco as a "major risk for existing projects," said Musabayov,
who did not rule out "an attack on BTC" as a possible Russian response.
Russia and the west were vying for access to Azerbaijan's energy
resources well before the war, with Russian gas giant Gazprom offering
to buy Azerbaijani gas at market prices in June to prevent it from
going to a western buyer.
An adviser to President Aliyev, Ali Hasanov, said Baku was in no hurry
to choose sides: "For the moment, we are fine. When we need to choose,
we will. We have received proposals, we have to think," he said.
Alexei Malashenko, a Caucasus specialist from the US-funded Carnegie
Moscow Centre, said Aliyev had "haggled well with Moscow to reinforce
his position.
"Without clashing with Moscow, and with a smile, he will continue
the policy of building pipelines that bypass Russia," said Malashenko.
Sabit Baghirov, a former president of Azerbaijani state oil company
SOCAR, agreed that Baku would continue cooperating with the west
despite Russia's rout of Georgia.
"The Russian ambassador in Baku said countries in the region should
learn from events in Georgia. What did Russia get in Georgia, who
has she scared?" Baghirov said.
"There are many people in Azerbaijan who have grown up with Russian
culture, but politics is another thing," he added.
He added, however, that Azerbaijan would now be more cautious in its
policy towards Nagorny Karabakh, whose separatist administration is
backed by Armenia, Russia's main ally in the Caucasus.
"President Aliyev has stopped saying he could use force" to retake
the region, he said.
Hasanov, the presidential aide said he hoped the Georgian crisis
would push the world's major powers to work more actively to resolve
the Nagorny Karabakh conflict.
"Until now, this issue was at the bottom of the list of their
priorities," he said.