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  • Azerbaijan: American Ambassador Confirmation Process Stalled

    EurasiaNet , NY
    Sept 17 2010


    Azerbaijan: American Ambassador Confirmation Process Stalled
    September 17, 2010 - 3:05pm, by Shahin Abbasov

    The Senate confirmation process for the Obama administration's nominee
    as US envoy to Azerbaijan appears stuck in neutral. Experts believe
    that the confirmation has become entangled in partisan politics.

    The ambassadorial post in Azerbaijan, a key strategic partner for
    Washington, has been vacant for the past 15 months. In late May, the
    White House nominated to the post Matthew Bryza, a seasoned South
    Caucasus diplomatic hand who was widely believed to be favored by the
    Azerbaijani government.

    But those contacts - via energy and mediation of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    dispute - proved to play against Bryza's confirmation. US-based
    Armenian diaspora groups have lobbied actively against his
    appointment, pushing several senators to question whether his close
    ties to the Azerbaijani government might cloud influence his
    diplomatic behavior. [For details, see the EurasiaNet.org archive].

    Discussions in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee are expected to
    continue on September 21.

    Long-time Caucasus analyst Thomas de Waal, a senior associate at the
    Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, DC, believes
    that Bryza's confirmation is being held `hostage to the November
    Senate elections and to three Senators with strong Armenian
    connections - Barbara Boxer (California), Harry Reid (Nevada) and
    Robert Menendez (New Jesey).' All three are Democrats who have been
    outspoken supporters for recognition of Ottoman Turkey's 1915
    slaughter of ethnic Armenians as genocide. [For background see
    EurasiaNet's archive].

    `But it is my feeling that after November, Bryza will be confirmed,'
    de Waal continued in an email interview with EurasiaNet.org. `The
    absence of an ambassador in Baku is becoming too much of an irritation
    and hurting US interests in the region.'

    Aside from its long history of cooperation with US energy companies,
    Azerbaijan also serves as a forwarding point for shipments of
    non-military supplies to Afghanistan. [For background see EurasiaNet's
    archive].

    Of late, criticism of Washington's choice for ambassador has started
    coming from Baku. On August 6, the Yeni Azerbaijan daily, the official
    outlet of President Ilham Aliyev's Yeni Azerbaijani Party, published
    an article that criticized the `show organized in the Senate,' a
    reference to Bryza's confirmation process, describing it as an attempt
    to put pressure on Azerbaijan.

    `The delay of such a minor issue by the United States and the attempt
    to make a show out of a simple appointment is not something positive,'
    the article stated.

    The story also targeted Bryza himself. `Our nation was not happy with
    Bryza's activity, either as an assistant to the Secretary of State or
    as a co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group [which mediates talks between
    Baku and Yerevan over the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region],' the
    commentary said. `On the contrary, in many cases his behavior and
    statements created serious discontent.' [For details, see the
    EurasiaNet.org archive.]

    The newspaper commentary added that it makes `no big difference for
    Azerbaijan if a Bryza or a John or a Michael is appointed ambassador.'

    Officials in Baku have so far avoided any public criticism of Bryza.
    Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov has said several times that it is
    up to Washington to decide whom to appoint ambassador to Baku, and
    when to send an envoy.

    A representative of President Ilham Aliyev's administration, speaking
    on condition of anonymity, told EurasiaNet.org that the Yeni
    Azerbaijan article indeed reflects growing government irritation over
    Bryza's prolonged confirmation process. `It is not a matter of Bryza's
    personality. It is just not good for bilateral relations that the
    United States does not have an ambassador to Baku for so long,' the
    source said.

    Terming the allegations against Bryza `false,' the source stressed
    that the administration is not happy that the Armenian Diaspora
    appears to have enough power in the US Senate to delay sending an
    ambassador to Baku.

    One Baku-based political analyst, Elhan Shahinoglu, believes that the
    Azerbaijani government now has its doubts that the Senate will confirm
    Bryza. `They think that the White House could run another candidate,'
    said Shahinoglu, who runs the Atlas think-tank. `Why should Baku take
    the risk and later be accused of lobbying for Bryza?'

    By contrast, de Waal believes that the Azerbaijani establishment wants
    to see Bryza confirmed. `Firstly because having a US ambassador is
    better than not having one and also because he is a man they know and
    can do business with,' he said.

    Washington-based Azerbaijani journalist Alakbar Raufoglu, who has been
    following the Senate confirmation process closely, believes that
    Azerbaijan's earlier attempts to lobby for Bryza's confirmation could
    have damaged his prospects.

    In late August, The Washington Examiner, a local paper, published an
    op-ed by former Senator Conrad Burns (a Montana Republican) in support
    of Bryza. Once the paper learned from an Armenian Diaspora group that
    Burns advises a company founded by a senior advisor to a firm that has
    been linked to President Aliyev's family, it attacked Burns for
    allegedly misleading editors and denounced Bryza's nomination.

    `This fact again shows that as long as the Azerbaijani government
    appears in Bryza's background, instead of helping him, they harm him,'
    commented Raufoglu.

    Editor's note: Shahin Abbasov is a freelance correspondent based in
    Baku. He is also a board member of the Open Society
    Institute-Azerbaijan.




    From: A. Papazian
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