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A Welcome New Stage In Azerbaijani -Israeli Ties

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  • A Welcome New Stage In Azerbaijani -Israeli Ties

    A WELCOME NEW STAGE IN AZERBAIJANI-ISRAELI TIES
    By Alexander Murinson

    AZG Armenian Daily
    17/06/2009

    International

    Israel has actively sought to establish friendly relations with
    Azerbaijan and other Muslim states in the post-Soviet space. Relations
    between Israel, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan serve as a model for
    cooperation between the Jewish state and Muslim nations. As a result
    of the meeting between Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Israel's
    new Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman in Prague on May 6, an agreement
    about a state visit by President Shimon Peres to Baku has been reached.

    Peres is scheduled to visit Azerbaijan near the end of June as a
    part of his tour of the Muslim republics of the CIS. The visit to
    Baku will take place "at the highest level and with all honors."

    In view of increasing tensions between the Iranian mullahs' regime,
    which seeks to build nuclear weapons and threaten the Gulf region, and
    Israel, the invitation for Peres to visit secular Muslim Azerbaijan,
    Iran's northern neighbor, reaffirms the strategic relationship between
    the two countries. Diplomatic relations between the countries were
    established shortly after Azerbaijan's independence in 1992. Premier
    Binyamin Netanyahu paid a working visit in 1997 on his flight from
    China.

    This diplomatic breakthrough was achieved by Lieberman, who emigrated
    from the former Soviet Republic of Moldova. Since his days as the
    minister of strategic affairs (2006-2008), he has pursued a policy
    of deepening relations with the newly independent states of Eastern
    Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia. Lieberman paid special attention
    to the Republic of Azerbaijan, strategically located on the western
    shore of the Caspian Sea. He paid an official visit to Azerbaijan
    in August 2007. During their meeting in Prague, Aliyev and Lieberman
    discussed the development of Azerbaijani-Israeli relations. Lieberman
    mentioned that he intends to visit Baku in the near future.

    THE CRITICAL AREA of cooperation between the two countries is energy
    security. Currently Azerbaijan supplies 20 percent of Israel's
    oil. Due to the high proportion of petrochemicals in bilateral
    trade, the value of imports from Azerbaijan reached $3.5 billion
    in 2008. There are also plans to supply Azerbaijani natural gas via
    Turkey to Haifa. However, there is renewed interest on both sides in
    expanding bilateral cooperation into new areas such as agriculture,
    medical research and hi-tech. As part of this effort, a series of
    events have been organized with the participation of Ambassador to
    Azerbaijan Arthur Lenk, who has represented the Jewish state in Baku
    since 2005 and will leave his post in July.

    In May 2008, the Israel-Azerbaijani business forum took place in Baku,
    with the Israeli side represented by Agriculture Minister Shalom
    Simhon. Tel Aviv hosted a forum with representatives of more than 20
    companies from Azerbaijan and officials of the Ministry of Economic
    Development on May 18. The key part of the forum was the signing of
    an agreement on cooperation between the Israel Export Institute and
    the Azerbaijan Fund for Export and Investments Encouragement (AzPromo).

    This agreement institutionalizes mutual trade and investment. The
    International Agricultural Exhibition Agritech 2009 taking place in
    Israel will also see the Azerbaijani delegation led by Ilham Guliyev,
    deputy minister of agriculture.

    In late September 2008, Azerbaijan agreed to buy military hardware
    from Israel. On September 26, Haaretz reported that Azerbaijan will
    purchase Israeli weapons, including ammunition, mortars and military
    radio equipment worth hundreds of millions of dollars. This is the
    first public acknowledgment of the growing strategic relationship
    between the two countries, even though the relationship goes back
    to the first years of Azerbaijani independence. This political move
    demonstrates Azerbaijani commitment to its Western orientation and
    independence from Moscow and Teheran.

    Israel sought to establish close relations with these countries,
    because the developments in this region profoundly affect the
    stability of the Middle East due to its territorial proximity and
    the size of the predominantly Muslim population of Central Asia and
    Azerbaijan. The Caspian region can become a fertile ground for the
    spread of Islamic radicalism and nuclear proliferation. These threats
    also unite Israel with the elites and secular middle class in these
    nations. The natural riches of the region make cooperation with these
    nations even more attractive.

    The Obama administration would be wise to see Israel under Netanyahu
    as an asset and interlocutor in the American strategy toward Eurasia
    in general and the South Caucasus in particular. Israel's influence
    among the ex-Soviet republics and the Russian Federation is bound
    to increase under Lieberman, who has built a broad network of formal
    and informal relations with the elites of these republics during his
    tenure as minister of strategic affairs.

    News reports about the coming visit of Peres to Azerbaijan have already
    caused consternation among the Iranian military. The Azerbaijani media
    reported on May 21 that the Iranian Chief of Staff Hasan Firudabadi
    made public threats directed at Azerbaijan, saying that a visit by
    the Israeli president would be an "incorrect step." He added: "The
    Shimon Peres visit does not seem like a friendly step in Azerbaijani
    relations with Iran."

    The writer is an independent researcher; his book Turkey's Entente
    with Israel and Azerbaijan: State Identity and Security in the Middle
    East and Caucasus will be published by Routledge in September 2009.
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