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Azerbaijan Opening Supply Route To Afghanistan

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  • Azerbaijan Opening Supply Route To Afghanistan

    AZERBAIJAN OPENING SUPPLY ROUTE TO AFGHANISTAN
    Roger McDermott

    Jamestown Foundation
    http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cac he=1&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=34714&tx_ttnew s%5BbackPid%5D=7&cHash=335b4330ab
    March 17 2009

    As the United States prepares to increase its military deployment in
    Afghanistan, attention is being devoted to the question of supply
    routes for these and other coalition forces. The U.S. European
    Command (EUCOM) held a conference in Baku on March 9 and 10 aimed
    at exploring ways to diversify the supply routes to include the
    South Caucasus. Government officials from Azerbaijan, Georgia, and
    Turkey attended, along with U.S military representatives from the
    Surface Deployment and Distribution Command, Transportation Command,
    Defense Logistics Agency, Department of Defense (DoD), and EUCOM,
    as well as private transport companies. With Taliban pressure on the
    supply route though Pakistan coupled with the Kyrgyz decision to close
    the U.S. airbase at Manas, EUCOM has tried to find solutions to the
    problem by involving private local companies in the South Caucasus
    and Turkey to assist in the transit of non-lethal cargo to Afghanistan.

    According to the Caspian navigation bureau, the new route through
    the South Caucasus has already been successfully tested, with some
    containers going though Azerbaijan and shipped to Afghanistan. Should
    the route prove successful, it is planned to ship upward of 30,000
    containers each month. More than 90 containers have already passed
    through the port of Aktau, Kazakhstan, en route to Afghanistan. Ilham
    Mammadov, the head of the foreign economic relations department of
    the Caspian navigation bureau, explained how this solution would
    make the use of military personnel in the transit of such goods
    unnecessary: "This is related to delivering food to troops serving
    in Afghanistan. The foodstuffs will be brought to Azerbaijan in
    containers and will then be shipped either to Kazakhstan's port of
    Aktau or to Turkmenistan's Turkmenbashy and will then be delivered
    to the U.S. military in Afghanistan" (ANS TV, March 10).

    U.S. ambassador to Azerbaijan Anne Derse emphasized that
    Washington considered Azerbaijan a key security partner and that
    the transportation conference was another example of growing
    practical bilateral security cooperation. Baku has been keen to
    explore additional ways of participating in the war on terror since
    withdrawing its peacekeeping troops from Iraq in late 2008. Derse
    commented, "Cooperating with our partners, we see opportunities for
    investigating the potential to purchase commercial goods produced in
    those countries and keep cargoes in storage. Thus, both directions
    will benefit the local economy and will support Azerbaijan's efforts
    to develop as a regional transport center" (APA News Agency, March 10).

    Terry Davidson, head of the public relations department of the
    U.S. embassy in Baku, pointed to the emerging role of Azerbaijan in
    Washington's search for alternatives to Manas and for diversifying
    supply routes for the coalition forces in Afghanistan:

    We are searching for convenient ways. As a result, some agreements are
    already in place on purchasing and delivering some goods. Non-military
    issues--foodstuffs and everyday goods--were discussed in Baku. It
    is not just about turning Azerbaijan into a depot but also about
    the transport and storage of goods from all countries in the supply
    chain. This is cooperation. On the other hand, the U.S. military will
    be receiving services from various organizations and private companies
    (ANS TV, March 10).

    Some Azeri analysts argue that such transit agreements could also
    pave the way for U.S. military basing within the country, should this
    become necessary, making use of the warehouses for humanitarian aid as
    arms depots. While such options remain plausible, it seems unlikely
    that Washington will press the military dimension too far within the
    South Caucasus, concentrating instead on using commercial companies
    to resolve the logistical needs of the coalition forces in Afghanistan
    (Azadliq, March 10).

    On March 5 Armenian Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan reportedly told
    Zalmay Aziz, Afghanistan's ambassador in Yerevan, that Armenia was
    ready to assist coalition forces in Afghanistan by opening its airspace
    for the transport of personnel. "Since the coalition forces launched an
    operation in Afghanistan, Armenia has been expressing its readiness to
    assist in transiting military cargo and to make its air space available
    for transporting personnel," Ohanyan said (Interfax, March 6).

    Georgia has also confirmed its readiness to facilitate the formation
    of a new transit route. Moreover, it does not rule out hosting a
    U.S. airbase, should Washington pursue this possibility. "If the
    United States thinks it wants to establish a base, we would seriously
    consider it," Georgian Foreign Minister Grigol Vashadze told Japan's
    Nikkei newspaper on March 12 (AFP, March 12). Such military basing
    plans would undoubtedly prove highly controversial, given the tense
    relationship that persists between Moscow and Tbilisi following the
    war last August. The more urgent priority for U.S. and NATO military
    planners is to diversify the existing supply lines for the mission
    in Afghanistan

    Through EUCOM's close cooperation with the U.S. Central Command,
    a new supply route is likely to emerge with the South Caucasus
    connecting to the overland route passing though Central Asia. Air
    transportation routes transiting the South Caucasus could either go
    from Turkey through Armenia or Georgia, Azerbaijan across the Caspian,
    and use Kazakh and Uzbek airspace; or a more direct route could go
    through Turkmen airspace. The South Caucasus overland supply routes
    could begin in Turkey or alternatively could use local purchases
    of goods in Azerbaijan before being shipped across the Caspian to
    Kazakhstan or Turkmenistan. A cheaper option would be to fly goods
    from Azerbaijan though Turkmen airspace into Afghanistan. Azerbaijan
    looks set to benefit from the closure of Manas, while Western planners
    refocus on expanding supply routes in a way that does not involve a
    scramble for alternative bases.
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