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Turkish-Azeri ties face new tensions after Armenia deal

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  • Turkish-Azeri ties face new tensions after Armenia deal

    eYugoslavia.com
    Oct 25 2009


    Current ArticleTurkish-Azeri ties face new tensions after Armenia deal


    By Vasilije Gallak on Oct 25, 2009 in Featured, Turkey

    Istanbul ` Officials in Turkey and Azerbaijan frequently refer to the
    two countries ` bound together by language and culture and, more
    recently, by oil and gas pipelines ` as `one nation-two states.'

    But this slogan is being put to the test these days, following the
    recent signing between Turkey and Armenia of protocols to restore
    diplomatic relations and open up their borders, something Azerbaijan
    is strongly opposed to.

    Observers warn that the tension between Turkey and Azerbaijan could
    not only undermine the two neighbors' relations, but also jeopardize
    some of the energy deals the two countries are involved in,
    particularly the Nabucco pipeline project, which is designed to ease
    Europe's dependence on Russian gas.

    The historic protocols make no mention of Nagorno-Karabakh, a
    mountainous Azeri territory occupied by Armenian forces since 1994.

    Turkey first closed its border to Armenia in response to its
    occupation of the territory and Azeri officials have said Ankara's
    relations with Yerevan should not be restored until the frozen
    Nagorno-Karabakh issue is settled.

    The reaction in Baku to the deal signed by Turkey and Armenia ` which
    must still be ratified by the two countries' parliaments to take
    effect ` has been particularly strong. Turkish flags were taken down
    at official buildings and monuments in the Azeri capital, Baku.

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, speaking at a nationally televised
    cabinet meeting on October 16, suggested his country might stop
    selling Turkey natural gas at a discounted price.

    `It is not a secret to anyone that for many years Azerbaijan has been
    selling its gas to Turkey for one-third of market prices,' Aliyev
    said.

    `What state would agree to sell its natural resources for 30 percent
    of world market prices, especially under current conditions? This is
    illogical,' Aliyev added.

    `Azerbaijan is looking at the opening of the Turkey-Armenia border as
    a betrayal.

    `We are looking at Turkey as our main partner in the region and as
    Armenia as our main enemy. The reaction is natural,' says Vafa
    Guluzade, former foreign affairs advisor to the previous Azeri
    president, Haydar Aliyev.

    `The situation right now is that the Turkish-Azeri relationship is
    threatened by the threat of full destruction. I'm not talking on the
    level of the people ` I'm talking on the level of the leadership,' he
    says.

    Armenian forces in Nagorno-Karabakh and some surrounding districts
    today control some 20 percent of Azerbaijan's territory. The United
    Nation estimates that there are 690,000 internally displaced persons
    from the territory in Azerbaijan.

    Although Azerbaijan and Armenia are engaged in ongoing talks, co-
    chaired by the United States, Russia and France, aimed it resolving
    the issue, although they have made little progress.

    Experts warn that without any movement on the Nagorno-Karabakh front,
    the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border could lead to an even
    stronger reaction from Baku, particularly on energy issues.

    Azerbaijan sits on top of large oil and gas reserves and has emerged
    in recent years a major player in the energy field. Turkey, meanwhile,
    is positioning itself to become a major oil and gas transit country `
    a plan that, to a large extent, depends on access to Azeri energy
    resources.

    `If those countries which are genuinely interested in the Nabucco
    project influence Armenia so that it steps back from the occupied
    territories and both Azerbaijan and Turkey will be satisfied, then
    this will be remembered as only an episode in Turkey-Azerbaijan
    relations,' says Ilgar Mammadov, a political analyst based in Baku.

    `If not, then the relationship between Turkey and Azerbaijan will
    worsen and projects like Nabucco will be undermined.'

    Turkish officials have been making efforts to appease Baku, making it
    clear that they will not move forward on renewing ties with Armenia
    until the Nagorno-Karabakh.

    `Nothing can change the fact that Turkey will always stand by
    Azerbaijan, and Turkey's position on Azerbaijan's territorial
    integrity and its territories under occupation,' Turkish Foreign
    Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said during a Thursday visit to the Azeri
    capital.

    But Guluzade, the former Azeri foreign affairs advisor, says Baku is
    looking for stronger reassurances on the issue.

    `We need something more real in our hands. Armenia has signed
    protocols under the auspices of The United States, Russia and France.
    We only have words. That's not enough,' he says.

    Some Turkish officials, though, have started to express frustration
    with Azerbaijan's strong response to Ankara's budding détente with
    Yerevan.

    `The Azeri reaction is very disappointing. We have a difficulty
    understanding these reactions and the forms and ways in which they are
    happening,' says Suat Kiniklioglu, a member of the governing Justice
    and Development Party (AKP) and spokesman for the parliament's foreign
    affairs committee.

    Huseyin Bagci, a professor of international relations at Ankara's
    Middle East Technical University, says that in the long run the
    opening of the Turkey-Armenia border will also facilitate the solving
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

    `Azerbaijan has to realize that discussion of the Nagorno- Karabakh
    issue can only happen if the Turkey-Armenia border opens,' he says.

    In the meantime, without a resolution to the conflict betwee
    Azerbaijan and Armenia, Ankara and Baku may find the `one nation-two
    states' slogan being further tested, Bagci says.

    `It's a nationalist slogan, it's nice to hear, but it's never been the
    case. We have never been one nation,' he says. (dpa)

    http://eyugoslavia.com/featured/25/turkish- azeri-ties-face-new-tensions-after-armenia-deal-22 12719/
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