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ANKARA: Azerbaijan Cancels US Military Exercises Amid Tensions

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  • ANKARA: Azerbaijan Cancels US Military Exercises Amid Tensions

    AZERBAIJAN CANCELS US MILITARY EXERCISES AMID TENSIONS

    Hurriyet
    April 20 2010
    Turkey

    Azerbaijan cancelled planned joint military exercises with the United
    States amid increasing tensions between Washington and the energy-rich
    former Soviet republic, the Defense Ministry said.

    Ministry spokesman Eldar Sabıroglu refused to specify a reason for
    the move late Monday, but other Azerbaijani officials have recently
    expressed dismay with the U.S. stance on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    The announcement came after Azerbaijan last week questioned
    Washington's neutrality as a mediator in the conflict over the
    breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region and accused the United States of
    increasingly siding with foe Armenia.

    "The exercises have been cancelled," Azerbaijani defense ministry
    spokesman Eldar Sabıroglu said on ANS television.

    A U.S. Embassy spokesman confirmed that the exercises, scheduled for
    next month and involving about 200 U.S. troops, had been cancelled
    at Azerbaijan's initiative. "The cancellation is from the Azerbaijani
    government," the spokesman told AFP, declining to comment further.

    'Baku not happy'

    Ali Hasanov, a senior aide to President Ilham Aliyev, last week said
    that Azerbaijan was "not happy" with recent actions in Washington
    and accused some in the United States of "losing their neutrality
    and openly supporting Armenia."

    The United States is one of three co-chairs, along with France and
    Russia, of the so-called Minsk Group, which is trying to negotiate
    a resolution to the longstanding conflict over Karabakh.

    Tensions over Karabakh have risen in recent months amid U.S.-backed
    efforts by Armenia and Turkey, a close ally of Azerbaijan, to establish
    diplomatic ties and reopen their border after decades of hostility.

    Azerbaijan insists that the reconciliation process should not
    move forward without progress on Karabakh and has accused Western
    governments and Ankara of ignoring its interests.

    The energy-rich country is a key Western partner in strategically
    important projects to ship oil and gas from the Caspian Sea region
    to Europe through Turkey, bypassing Russia.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan have cut direct economic and transport links
    and failed to negotiate a settlement on the region's status.
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