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Spate Of Arrests Spurs Azeris To Closely Monitor Iran Talks

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  • Spate Of Arrests Spurs Azeris To Closely Monitor Iran Talks

    SPATE OF ARRESTS SPURS AZERIS TO CLOSELY MONITOR IRAN TALKS

    http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/world/2012/0414/1224314728580.html
    Saturday, April 14, 2012

    Recent incidents highlight delicate links between Azerbaijan and Iran,
    writes DANIEL McLAUGHLIN in Baku

    INTERNATIONAL TALKS today on Iran's nuclear programme are being
    closely watched by Azerbaijan, which borders Iran, as spy scandals,
    smuggling arrests and alleged terror plots stoke tensions between
    the energy-rich Caspian Sea states.

    Azerbaijan is long used to balancing delicate relations between the
    huge and often abrasive states on its borders - Iran, Russia and
    Turkey - while continuing as yet fruitless negotiations to secure a
    peace deal with another neighbour, Armenia, following a 1988-94 war.

    A spate of sinister incidents in secular Azerbaijan has highlighted
    the highly sensitive nature of its relations with the Islamic republic
    of Iran - home to some 20 million ethnic Azeris - and focused Baku's
    attention on the talks between Iran and six major powers in Istanbul.

    Last month, Azerbaijan arrested 22 of its citizens who had allegedly
    been recruited by Iran's Revolutionary Guard to attack western targets,
    including the US and Israeli embassies in Baku. A large cache of guns,
    ammunition and explosives was seized in that operation.

    This came just weeks after Azeri security services arrested two men
    who were allegedly plotting to kill Israeli targets in Azerbaijan,
    home to several thousand Jews. These arrests came in the same month
    as alleged Iranian bomb plots against Israeli diplomats in another
    neighbour, Georgia, and in Thailand and India.

    Just two days ago, Baku's security services announced the arrest of
    five Azeris and two Iranians for smuggling weapons into Azerbaijan
    from Iran.

    Tehran has accused Azerbaijan of helping Israeli agents to assassinate
    Iranian nuclear scientists - a claim Baku dismissed as "slander" - and
    questioned its neighbour's recent ~@2 billion arms deal with Israel.

    Tehran summoned Azerbaijan's ambassador to discuss the deal and to
    receive a warning that Israel should not be allowed to use his country
    as a launch-pad for "terrorist acts" against Iran.

    Azerbaijan has good relations with Israel, but ministers bluntly
    rejected a recent report in the US Foreign Policy magazine suggesting
    Israeli jets could use Azeri airbases as staging posts for a bombing
    raid on Iran's nuclear facilities.

    This week, Azerbaijan again came under the spotlight when Iran's
    intelligence ministry announced it had broken up one of Israel's
    "biggest terror and sabotage networks", leading to the identification
    of "the Zionists' regional headquarters in one of the regional
    countries".

    Analysts said that, given recent events, Iran was probably referring
    to Azerbaijan.

    The comments sharpened Baku's focus on today's meeting between Iran
    and the US, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany, aimed at
    easing fears over Tehran's nuclear programme and the possibility of
    a pre-emptive strike by Israel that could trigger a wider conflict.

    "It's not true that Azerbaijan is providing support to Israeli
    agents," Azeri foreign minister Elmar Mammadyarov told The Irish
    Times yesterday.

    "Azerbaijan and Iran recognise that good neighbourly relations are
    extremely important for the stable development of both countries
    and for the region as a whole," he said, adding: "But then, you have
    the other story, that moles are moles, and you cannot stop this in
    any country."

    Mr Mammadyarov said he hoped for progress in Istanbul over Iran's
    nuclear programme, stressing "diplomacy is not exhausted, and we
    should double and triple our diplomatic efforts to find a common
    solution to this issue".

    Elnur Aslanov, a senior aide in the administration of Azeri president
    Ilham Aliyev, said it was "absurd" to suggest Israel could use Azeri
    bases to bomb Iran.

    "But this region is very sensitive," he acknowledged.

    "Of course various parties are interested in keeping the region boiling
    and preventing peace . . . A number of factors are now on the surface
    that may not have been felt before. Certain parties are trying to use
    groups to change the game. Parties want to create their own fifth
    columns in the region," he said, without revealing the country or
    groups he had in mind.

    "The statistics of recent months show that there has been increasing
    activity. But that can be connected to the regional situation . . .

    And we have all the resources necessary to prevent these activities."



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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