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Strange Bedfellows: Israel And Azerbaijan

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  • Strange Bedfellows: Israel And Azerbaijan

    STRANGE BEDFELLOWS: ISRAEL AND AZERBAIJAN
    Kenan Guluzade

    The Monitor (McAllen, Texas)
    Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune News Service
    July 13, 2009 Monday

    BAKU, Azerbaijan _ The recent visit by the president of Israel to
    Azerbaijan, and the outrage it inspired in Iran, shows just how complex
    international relations have become in this volatile part of the world.

    President Shimon Peres' visit to Baku in late June was the first
    time a high-ranking official from the Jewish state has visited this
    overwhelmingly Muslin nation. During his stay, the two countries
    signed an agreement dealing with cooperation in the fields of science,
    education and culture, as well as a pact related to information and
    communication technologies.

    The two countries have long maintained cordial relations: Israel
    has maintained an embassy in Baku since the early 1990s, soon
    after Azerbaijan declared independence from the collapsing Soviet
    Union. Azerbaijan has yet to open an embassy in Israel.

    Local analysts note that maintaining close ties with Israel presents
    difficulties for a country like Azerbaijan, which has a large Muslim
    population.

    "Azerbaijan is a secular state, but most of the population is Muslim
    and overfriendly relations with Israel might be misinterpreted by
    allies in the Organization of the Islamic Conference as a breach of
    Muslim unity," said Boyukaga Agayev, head of South Caucasus Research
    Center.

    That was clearly what happened in Tehran, which expressed outrage
    over the visit.

    "Tehran actively objects to us opening an embassy in Israel, as well
    as to the visit of officials from that country to Baku," Agayev said.

    The day before Peres arrived, Iran sharply reminded Azerbaijan of its
    feelings, urging Baku to close the Israeli embassy and describing the
    visit of the Israeli head of state as an insult to the Islamic world.

    Azerbaijan's foreign minister, Elmar Mammadyarov, replied that Baku
    would do no such thing, and reminded Tehran that Baku had its own
    grievances with Iran.

    "Iran's declaration about the need to close the Israeli embassy in
    Azerbaijan is surprising," he said, noting that Iran continued to
    "receive officials from Armenia at the highest level." Azerbaijan
    and Armenia remain locked in a decades-long dispute over the region
    of Nagorny Karabakh.

    Tehran eventually recalled its ambassador to Baku "for consultations"
    while Peres was in the country.

    What became clear though the incident is that ties between Azerbaijan
    and Israel have become increasingly important to both countries.

    The value of trade between the two nations has risen to $3.6 billion
    a year, due in large part to Azerbaijani oil exported to Israel.

    Political scientist Rasim Musabayov says commercial relationships
    will trump ideology every time.

    "Israel is interested in a relationship with a secular Muslim country,
    which is at the same time an energy supplier," Musabayov said. "Israel
    is already the third largest buyer of Azerbaijan's oil in terms of
    volume." And there may be more trade ahead.

    "Israel wishes to export agricultural products and technology to
    Azerbaijan and, as it emerged during Peres' visit, military equipment
    as well," Musabayov said.

    And the fact that tens of thousands of Azeri Jews have migrated to
    Israel in recent years further serves to bind the nations together
    culturally, as well as economically.

    "The economic and political relationship [between the two states]
    makes the partnership of Azerbaijan and Israel inevitable _ in spite
    of the possibly negative reaction of the OIC and Iran above all,"
    said analyst Agayev.

    Of course, not everyone welcomed Peres' visit.

    Haji Ilgar Ibrahimoglu, a Muslim scholar and head of the Center for
    Protection of Freedom Conscience and Religion, said he reacted "very
    negatively from the point of view of Muslim unity" to the Jewish
    president's visit.

    But few others followed his lead, and Peres's trip went off peacefully,
    leaving Iran further isolated, and Israel with an unlikely friend.
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