Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Azerbaijan: Where East Meets West, A Den Of Spies

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Azerbaijan: Where East Meets West, A Den Of Spies

    http://www.npr.org/2012/02/17/147049537/azerbaijan-where-east-meets-west-spy-meets-spy

    Azerbaijan: Where East Meets West, A Den Of Spies
    by Sheera Frenkel
    February 17, 2012

    The small Central Asian country of Azerbaijan has found itself caught
    up in the rising international tensions over neighboring Iran and its
    nuclear program. Despite traditional ties with Iran, the former Soviet
    republic has increasingly aligned itself with the West, and with
    Israel.

    An incident at a recent soccer match in the Iranian city of Tabriz is
    still a point of pride in Azerbaijan. In the middle of the match,
    hundreds of ethnic Azeris in the crowd broke out their national flags
    and began to chant that the city belongs to them.

    The video was a big hit in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan. It was a
    rare demonstration by Iran's ethnic Azeri minority, many of whom argue
    that northern Iran should be part of a greater Azerbaijan - a
    sentiment that is shared by many in Baku.

    And that is not the only point of tension between the two Central
    Asian neighbors. Recently, Baku and Tehran have traded accusations of
    cross-border conspiracies and assassinations.

    Like Norway Or Casablanca During WWII

    Wedged between more powerful neighbors Russia, Turkey and Iran,
    Azerbaijan has long served as an East-West meeting ground and
    something of a den of spies where rival intelligence agents keep a
    close eye on one another.

    Mehman Aliyev is director of Turan, an independent Azerbaijani news
    agency. He says that Azerbaijan realizes its position as a kind of
    listening post.

    "Of course Azerbaijan is the intersection of many foreign states,
    whether it's Russia, Iran, Turkey. It is where they mingle. And where
    they obviously collect intelligence," he says.

    Azerbaijan's role was established in the early 1980s, when it was
    still part of the Soviet Union. The Soviets built military
    installations along Azerbaijan's southern border with Iran. In Gabala
    in northern Azerbaijan, the Soviets built a missile early warning
    system and intelligence base, which remain in use today. And the local
    newspapers say there are two U.S. military installations now on
    Azerbaijani territory.

    Arastun Orujlu, a former counterintelligence officer and director of
    the East-West Research Center in Baku, compares Azerbaijan's
    intelligence community to that of Norway or Casablanca during World
    War II.

    [Photo: Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (right) meets with
    Azerbaijan's foreign minister, Elmar Mammadyarov (left) in Tehran in
    March 2011. Tensions have been growing between the countries,
    including a recent incident in which Tehran summoned the Azerbaijani
    ambassador to protest alleged Israeli intelligence activity in
    Azerbaijan.]

    Western and Russian agents are deployed, and Orujlu estimates that
    thousands of Iranian agents operate in Azerbaijan.

    Orujlu says Iran's intelligence is very active in Azerbaijan, which he
    says acts as a "buffer zone" between Iran and Russia, as well as Iran
    and the West.

    Blossoming Ties To Israel

    According to Aliyev, the journalist, it's long been an open secret
    that Azerbaijan serves a purpose for Iran and for the West - including
    Israel, which also has intelligence agents on the ground in the
    country.

    "Iran is trying to find out what are the military operations of the
    Western states intended for Iran," Aliyev says. "And of course Israel
    and the West [are] trying to use the opportunity of being here to find
    out what is happening in Iran," he says.

    In fact, the Iranian state-run media recently reported that Tehran had
    summoned Azerbaijan's ambassador to protest alleged Israeli
    intelligence activity there, including allowing Israel to launch
    activities against Iran from Azerbaijani territory and aiding in the
    escape of Israeli agents Tehran says were behind the recent killings
    of Iranian nuclear scientists.

    Israel's relationship with Azerbaijan has blossomed in recent years,
    fueled by lucrative military and business deals. Israel buys 30
    percent of its oil from Azerbaijan, and recently awarded a lucrative
    gas-drilling contract off its Mediterranean coast to an Azerbaijani
    firm.

    Orujlu says that the ties between Azerbaijanis and Israel have grown
    so deep, that in the event of an Israeli military strike on Iran's
    nuclear facilities, many Azerbaijanis would side with Israel.

    But some feel that all that could change in the case of an actual war,
    especially if it included attacks on areas inhabited by Iran's ethnic
    Azeris.

    Ilgar Ibrahimoglu is imam of the Juma mosque in a suburb of Baku with
    a large Iranian population. He says that phobia of Iran has been
    increasingly encouraged in Azerbaijan.

    "Every Azerbaijani," he says, "understands that this war will affect
    Azeris in Iran and holy sites there."

Working...
X