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IWPR: Azerbaijan, US Ties Strained: Baku Blames "Armenian Lobby" for

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  • IWPR: Azerbaijan, US Ties Strained: Baku Blames "Armenian Lobby" for

    AZERBAIJAN: US TIES STRAINED Baku Blames "Armenian Lobby" For Spoiled Relations With US
    Idrak Abbasov and Shahin Rzaev in Baku

    Institute for War & Peace Reporting IWPR
    April 27 2010
    UK

    Discontent in Azerbaijan over the United States' role in seeking a
    settlement of the Nagorny Karabakh issue highlights the delicate path
    that Baku must tread in its foreign relations.

    A top Azerbaijan official recently strongly criticised Washington's
    role in peace negotiations over Karabakh, saying negotiators were
    biased by the influence of the "Armenian lobby".

    The criticism is just the latest sign of deteriorating relations
    between the two countries, which have been working closely on energy
    projects and other issues.

    Ali Hasanov, head of the presidential administration's social-political
    department, told the Interfax news agency that the US's work in the
    Minsk Group of countries aimed at helping to settle the Karabakh
    conflict was unsatisfactory.

    "We are dissatisfied with the actions of the United States in the
    framework of the Minsk Group, and we state this openly," Hasanov said.

    He said Washington seemed indifferent to resolving the questions
    around Karabakh - which is ruled as a self-proclaimed independent
    state by Armenians but internationally considered part of Azerbaijan -
    despite Baku's insistence on the urgency of the issue.

    "Sadly in this question, some circles in the United States under
    the influence of the Armenian lobby lose their neutrality and openly
    support Armenia," he said.

    The US said it is committed to the Minsk process, while its embassy in
    Baku declined to comment on Hasanov's allegations. "The US embassy is
    not ready to comment on specific anti-American statements of officials
    in Azerbaijan, but the United States as before regards Azerbaijan as
    a strategic partner," it said in a statement.

    The statement is one of several that show the strained relations
    between the two countries this year. On March 1, the State Department
    released its International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, which
    some Azerbaijan media outlets - because of a translation error -
    thought said a third of all students in Azerbaijan were addicts.

    Although the report in fact said a third of addicts were students,
    officials were outraged, and students protested outside the US embassy.

    Just four days later, the House of Representatives voted to recognise
    the World War One massacres of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey as
    genocide - something denied by Baku. On the same day, the Washington
    Post published an investigation into 75 million US dollars worth of
    Dubai property owned by people with the same names as President Ilham
    Aliev's children.

    The newspaper presented circumstantial evidence that they were the
    same people and said officials in Baku would not confirm or deny that
    they were Aliev's offspring.

    The story was immediately translated into Azeri by the US-funded
    Radio Liberty and posted on the internet, which infuriated local
    politicians across the spectrum.

    "Perhaps when the question came to appoint a new leadership for Radio
    Liberty the hand of the Armenian lobby had a role," said Araz Alizade,
    co-chairman of the opposition Social Democratic Party.

    According to Rauf Mirqadirov, a political commentator from Zerkalo
    newspaper, bilateral relations had been souring for months before the
    various scandals, and the decline could be dated back to the five-day
    war between Russia and Georgia in August 2008.

    "The United States had a Georgian project in the region, connected
    to democratisation and the creation of a military-political launch
    pad, and an Azerbaijan project connected to energy security. But the
    August war showed that the West and the United States don't give any
    guarantees for the security of the region," he said.

    "This, plus Baku's unfulfilled expectations that America would help
    resolve the Karabakh problem, and other questions, made Azerbaijan part
    from the United States, and once more focus on relations with Russia."

    Rasim Musabaev, an independent political analyst, said however that
    it was wrong to declare Azerbaijan's ties with the US ruined.

    "Yes, Azerbaijan has not received the expected support from the United
    States in the resolution of the Karabakh conflict. But Baku has always
    fulfilled American interests in cooperation in energy security and
    the coalition against terror, and in other questions. It remains a
    fact that the United States sees Azerbaijan as a strategic partner,"
    he said.

    Alizade said that Azerbaijan was obliged to follow policies friendly
    towards Russia.

    "First of all, Russia is a key figure in solving the Karabakh conflict,
    and second more than two million Azeris are working in Russia, and
    there are many rich Azeri oligarchs in that country," he said.

    He said that Azerbaijan would try to balance the two countries in
    its external policies.

    "For example, Azerbaijan is refusing to offer its territory to the
    United States for an attack on Iran. Our energy resources are not
    only sold to the West, but also to Russia, nor do we conceal our
    desire to sell energy to Iran as well. Of course, the United States
    does not like all of this," he said.

    He said that even the Washington Post article about the holdings in
    Dubai did not worry the government.

    Hasanov of the presidential administration told APA news agency that
    there was no law against members of the president's family holding
    property or running a business. He said one of Aliev's daughters is
    the daughter-in-law of Aras Agalarov, a rich Russian businessman of
    Azeri origin.

    Officially, Baku is hopeful that relations will improve. At the start
    of April, Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov said that US-Azerbaijan
    ties had been getting better for two decades, and that a new ambassador
    would come soon. This was a message repeated in the embassy.

    "The delays in naming a new US ambassador in Azerbaijan are connected
    only to internal processes," a US embassy spokesman said.

    "Studying the personal affairs of the candidates for ambassador takes
    a long time, and besides, the embassy is not restricted just to the
    ambassador. At the moment, more than 80 Americans work in the embassy."

    Idrak Abbasov is a journalist with Ayna-Zerkalo newspaper and a member
    of IWPR's Cross-Caucasus Journalism Network. Shahin Rzaev is IWPR's
    country director in Azerbaijan.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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