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  • AZERBAIJAN: GOING SOUR ON MOSCOW?

    Date: Fri, 13 Feb 2009 14:34:20 -0800 (PST)
    Subject: Azerbaijan: Going Sour On Moscow?

    AZERBAIJAN: GOING SOUR ON MOSCOW?
    Shahin Abbasov

    EurasiaNet
    Feb 13 2009
    NY

    Azerbaijani trust in Russia as an unbiased mediator for the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is melting away amid lingering outrage
    over a suspected arms transfer to Armenia, and growing interest in
    the Western-backed Nabucco gas pipeline project. But with an eye
    to Russia's regional weight, Baku is avoiding outright challenges
    to Moscow.

    The scandal surrounding an alleged Russian transfer of tanks, armored
    combat vehicles, artillery and other materiel to Armenia drives
    Baku's concerns about Moscow's reliability as a co-chair of the Minsk
    Group, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. The Minsk group is the
    body that oversees the Karabakh peace process. [For background see
    the Eurasia Insight archive].

    "Russia would seriously undermine its image as an unbiased mediator" if
    allegations about the arms transfer are accurate, said Novruz Mammadov,
    head of the administration's international affairs department, Turan
    news agency reported. "[S[uch actions do not correspond with Russia's
    Minsk Group co-chair status."

    Debate about the arms scandal is expected during the current session
    of Azerbaijan's parliament. In petitioning for such a discussion,
    15 pro-government members of parliament also noted that the alleged
    transfer raises "doubts about Russia's sincerity and its impartiality
    as a Minsk Group co-chair."

    A spokesperson for the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry stressed to
    EurasiaNet that the government plans to "keep the issue in its
    focus." Nonetheless, the government has refrained from publicly
    questioning Russia's role in the Minsk Group. "It would be impossible
    while everyone understands how important Russia's role in the Karabakh
    peace process is," commented political analyst Hikmet Hajizade.

    Azerbaijani officials likewise avoided creating any public scandals
    at the January Minsk Group meetings, which took place weeks after
    the arms scandal story broke. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and
    Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan instructed their foreign ministers
    to continue negotiations, in cooperation with Minsk Group co-chairs
    Russia, France and the United States.

    But memories die hard inside Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry. "The fact
    that there was a gratuitous, $1 billion arms transfer by Russia to
    Armenia in 1996 is forcing us to do it," spokesperson Khazar Ibrahim
    commented in reference to the ministry's ongoing attention to the
    arms transfer allegations. (The Russian government denied making the
    1996 transfer, just as it has rejected the recent allegations).

    Azerbaijani Defense Minister Safar Abiyev reportedly discussed the
    alleged transfer with his Russian counterpart, Anatoly Serdukov,
    during a visit to Moscow in late January, but the Defense Ministry
    has not released any details.

    The criticism of Moscow contrasts sharply with Baku's behavior
    following Russia's August 2008 war with Georgia, when Azerbaijan
    pointedly avoided offending the Kremlin. After the November signing
    of the Moscow Declaration, a document that binds Azerbaijan to the
    non-use of force in resolving the Karabakh conflict, an "atmosphere
    of trust" in Russia was said to prevail within the government. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The current changes in position take place against the backdrop
    of increased Azerbaijani support for a project that poses another
    challenge to Moscow -- Nabucco, a heavily Western-promoted pipeline
    that would offer an alternative delivery route to Europe for Caspian
    Sea gas supplies. [For details, see the Eurasia Insight archive]. The
    project is believed to have been addressed during a February 13 visit
    to Baku by the Czech Republic's prime minister, Mirek TopolÃ~C¡nek,
    to discuss energy cooperation. TopolÃ~C¡nek is currently serving as
    the president of the European Union Council.

    While the head of the Russian parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee
    has stated that Moscow does not oppose the Nabucco project, one
    January 30 comment published in Kommersant-Vlast predicted that
    Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin might consider war between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh as a way "to prevent
    strong competitors from emerging in the European market" for gas.

    Russian nationalist Alexander Dugin, thought to be close to the
    Kremlin, has asserted that "Nabucco has to be wrecked at any cost
    because we are talking about gas geopolitics."

    "If we need to initiate new military conflict for this purpose,
    we should do it without hesitation," he told Russian journalists on
    January 31, RIA-Novosti news agency reported.

    The Kremlin has not commented on these allegations, although
    Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin in a January 28 interview with
    the television channel Euronews stated that Russia does not believe
    Nabucco is viable.

    Nothing, however, indicates that the Azerbaijani government
    is concerned about a Russian military tactic to scuttle
    Nabucco. Meanwhile, it continues to play its energy cards
    carefully. Even as President Aliyev actively promotes Nabucco, the
    State Oil Company of the Azerbaijani Republic (SOCAR) is continuing
    to talk with Gazprom about the possible sale of all gas from the
    Shah Deniz field to the Russian energy giant. SOCAR and BP-Azerbaijan
    recently inspected a pipeline near the Russian border "to define the
    prospects of exporting gas from Shah Deniz through the pipeline,"
    the Ekspress newspaper reported on February 10.

    Baku-based energy expert Ilham Shaban, however, noted that while
    SOCAR has small amounts of its own gas to sell Russia for use in
    neighboring Dagestan, the government wants to sell the big-ticket item
    -- Shah Deniz gas -- "to Europe via Nabucco and the Interconnector
    (Turkey-Greece-Italy) pipelines."

    The ongoing talks with Russia about gas sales are just part of Baku's
    constant balancing act, agreed Elhan Shahinoglu, an expert at the
    Atlas research center. "Baku has limited capacity to be anti-Russian
    because this country [Russia] still, in fact, controls the Karabakh
    peace process, while the European energy plans remains quite unclear,"
    Shahinoglu said. "Therefore, the government has to keep playing
    with Russia."

    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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