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Baku Upset Over Lack Of NK Progress Steps Up Anti-Western Rhetoric

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  • Baku Upset Over Lack Of NK Progress Steps Up Anti-Western Rhetoric

    AZERBAIJAN: BAKU UPSET OVER LACK OF KARABAKH PROGRESS, STEPS UP ANTI-WESTERN RHETORIC

    Eurasianet
    Dec 4 2009
    NY

    Azerbaijani officials have taken aim at the West in recent weeks,
    in what some analysts believe could be an attempt to secure Russia's
    support for a Baku-friendly settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh peace
    process.

    The most surprising proposal in recent days to come out of Baku was
    a call for Russia to reestablish a military presence in Azerbaijan;
    Russian troops departed the country in 1993, and no mention had been
    made, until now, about their possible return.

    On November 26, MP Gudrat Hasanguliyev proposed that Azerbaijan should
    join the Collective Security Treaty Organization, a Moscow-dominated
    military pact, and allow Russia to establish a military base in
    Azerbaijan. Hasanguliyev, a leader of the United Popular Front of
    Azerbaijan Party, presented the idea as a trade-off for Russian
    recognition of "Azerbaijan's sovereignty over Karabakh."

    Although Baku's national security strategy, approved in 2007, clearly
    defines "pursuing Euro-Atlantic integration" as a diplomatic priority
    for Azerbaijan, Hasanguliyev and others now complain that Baku has
    received little from the West in exchange for its interest in closer
    ties. Georgia's own experience with the Atlantic Alliance suggests
    that Azerbaijan would never gain NATO membership, Hasanguliyev
    contended. Baku has not applied to join the Brussels-based military
    alliance.

    Representatives of the government and the governing Yeni Azerbaijan
    Party have not disavowed Hasanguliyev's statement. Moreover,
    the statement appears to be part of a trend. At a November 20
    conference in Baku organized by the presidential administration's
    Center for Strategic Research, the United States and European Union
    came in for heavy criticism for their alleged failure to resolve the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. Russia, which mediates the talks along with
    France and the United States, escaped censure. [For background see
    the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The pressure recently put on Armenia and Turkey to sign protocols on
    rapprochement "has never happened on the Karabakh issue," charged
    Novruz Mammadov, head of the presidential administration's Foreign
    Policy Department. Such an imbalance could lead to changes in
    Azerbaijan's foreign policy, he suggested. [For background see the
    Eurasia Insight archive].

    Mammadov went on to accuse the West of ingratitude for Azerbaijan's
    cooperation with the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline. The lack of
    economic assistance for the $1 billion Mammadov says Azerbaijan lost
    from the 2008 economic crisis shows that "the West forgot us and
    helped Armenia," he said.

    Deputy Parliamentary Speaker Ziyafet Askerov went a step further:
    Since force has been shown to be more effective than international
    law -- a reference to the 2008 Georgia-Russia war and recognition of
    Kosovo -- "the Karabakh conflict [could] be solved by the Azerbaijani
    army," he threatened. "US foreign policy has become a hostage of the
    Armenian lobby," he added.

    Discontent over Western criticism of the trial of two Azerbaijani
    bloggers - "Western media wrote more about the bloggers' trial than
    about the Karabakh conflict since it began," Novruz Mammadov claimed
    - and perceived NATO ingratitude for the 90 Azerbaijani peacekeepers
    serving in Afghanistan has added to the chill.

    Baku analysts are divided over the cause of this rhetoric.

    Azerbaijan's irritation that more progress has been made on
    rapprochement between Armenia and Turkey than with the Karabakh peace
    process, now in its 15th year, could be driving Baku's criticism of
    the West, believes Elhan Shahingolu, director of the Atlas Center for
    Political Research. "After the Turkish-Armenian protocols, Azerbaijan
    feels itself isolated and needs fast progress on the Karabakh issue,"
    Shahinoglu said.

    Russia's absence from the criticism of the Karabakh mediators indicates
    that Baku hopes that "increased volumes of gas supplies and wider
    economic cooperation" mean that "Moscow would help in the Karabakh
    conflict," Shahinoglu added. Annual trade turnover between Azerbaijan
    and Russia currently stands at $2.5 billion.

    After a November 24 meeting with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
    at which the Karabakh conflict was discussed, an upbeat Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliyev declared that "if every country would have
    such relations as exist between Russia and Azerbaijan, there would
    be no problems in the world," news agencies reported.

    Another political analyst, Zafar Guliyev, believes that more than the
    Karabakh conflict stands behind Baku's anti-Western statements. An
    uptick in Western criticism of Azerbaijan's democratization and
    human rights record - particularly the recent sentencing of two youth
    activists to prison terms -- could play a role, too, he said. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    As Baku sees the West start to stick its neck out on such issues,
    the Azerbaijani government feels obliged to nudge it back into place,
    Guliyev noted. "In 2009, the Western powers and Turkey undertook
    efforts to reinforce their positions in the South Caucasus, and it is
    likely that some forces in the Azerbaijani government are concerned
    that the balance between the West and Russia [in the region], which
    always helped Baku to maneuver, could be broken," Guliyev said.

    Both experts, however, believe that the rhetoric does not signal an
    official foreign policy line. The comments "so far" are "more muddled
    and emotional statements than a defined concept," noted Guliyev.

    Shahinoglu, who opposes closer ties with Moscow, also believes that
    Baku is unlikely to change horses in mid-stream. "Azerbaijan has been
    pursuing Euro-Atlantic integration for more than 15 years and such
    abrupt changes now would not deliver anything positive," he said.

    Editor's Note: Shahin Abbasov is a freelance correspondent
    based in Baku. He is also a board member of the Open Society
    Institute-Azerbaijan.
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