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Is Azerbaijan New Area of Confrontation Between Iran and Israel?

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  • Is Azerbaijan New Area of Confrontation Between Iran and Israel?

    IS AZERBAIJAN BECOMING AREA OF CONFRONTATION BETWEEN IRAN AND ISRAEL?

    By Emil Souleimanov (02/08/2012 issue of the CACI Analyst)

    In January, Azerbaijani authorities made a series of announcements
    stating they had revealed a plot by three Azerbaijani citizens to
    assassinate leading members of Azerbaijan's Jewish community and a
    prominent Israeli official. Of even higher significance were Baku's
    allegations of Hezbollah and Iran being the masterminds of the
    prepared assassinations. The circumstances around the event signify
    Azerbaijan's increasingly difficult relationship with Iran and
    highlight both the country's vulnerability to Iranian leverage and its
    strategic significance as a conduit for intelligence and potential
    military operations against Iran.

    BACKGROUND: According to Azerbaijan's Ministry of National Security,
    Rasim Aliyev and Ali Huseynov were captured along with automatic
    weapons and explosives smuggled from Iran. They were preparing attacks
    on the Israeli ambassador in Baku, Michael Lotem, and Rabbis Shneor
    Segal and Mati Lewis, both working in Baku's largest synagogue and an
    affiliated Jewish religious school. The third conspirator and likely
    leader of the plot is identified as Balagardash Dadashov and has
    allegedly been based in the Iranian city of Ardebil across the Araxes
    River, hence out of reach of Azerbaijani authorities. The three men
    are believed to be members of an Azerbaijani cell of Hezbollah, a
    militant Shiite organization and Iran's `terror proxy' in the Middle
    East. According to the Ministry of National Security, Aliyev,
    Huseynov, and Dadashov were supplied with all necessary equipment to
    carry out the operation and US$ 150,000 by Iranian intelligence
    officers. According to some sources, the conspirators were also
    instructed by Iranians to assassinate Gaby Ashkenazi, chief of the
    Israeli defense forces, who was expected to visit the Azerbaijani
    capital in a few months.

    The Azerbaijani government has long sought to profile itself as a
    leading partner of Israel in the post-Soviet space in general and the
    South Caucasus in particular. Baku incessantly emphasizes the fact
    that there have never been cases of anti-Judaism or anti-Semitism in
    Azerbaijan and that the country's Jews have always been a thriving
    community that has enjoyed trouble-free relations with the Azerbaijani
    majority. Accordingly, local elites have traditionally stressed the
    highly secular character of the Azerbaijani regime and society and its
    general lack of religious fundamentalism, in contrast to its direct
    neighbors to the north and south, in an attempt to display Azerbaijan
    as a pro-Western, pro-American and to a certain extent also
    pro-Israeli democracy, although with some local peculiarities when it
    comes to the practical implications of that democracy. This is
    attested by the fact that notwithstanding the recent - and significant
    - deterioration of Turkish-Israeli relations, Baku has made its best
    effort to maintain a cordial relationship with Israel, improving
    cooperation with the Jewish state in a wide range of areas. This is
    perhaps the reason why the former chief of Israel's ministry of
    defense and current Knesset member Binyamin Ben Eliezer has claimed
    that `Azerbaijan-Israel relations are so reliable that they will not
    be affected by the tensions with Turkey.'

    IMPLICATIONS: Israel has recently intensified its activities in the
    South Caucasus, a development that is conditioned by a number of
    factors. First, the region is host to a relatively large Jewish
    community which counts around 45,000 in Georgia and up to 40,000 in
    Azerbaijan, where the number of citizens adhering to the Jewish
    religion has tripled over the last fifteen years. Second, the region
    has still not entirely realized its potential as an exporter of oil
    and natural gas, as well as a transit hub that would link the Caspian
    with global markets. Today, around one-sixth of Israel's oil inflow
    comes from Azerbaijan. Last but not least, Israel's interest in the
    region has increased in the context of the fiercely debated
    possibility of an attack on Iran's nuclear facilities and the
    necessity to safeguard overland access to the Islamic Republic. With
    the considerable deterioration of Turkish-Israeli relations in recent
    years, Armenia's pro-Iranian stance, Turkmenistan's neutrality, and
    the ongoing turmoil in both Iraq and Afghanistan, Azerbaijan has
    attracted Israeli interest. While Baku's hypothetical consent to any
    country that would launch an attack on Iran is under current
    circumstances highly unrealistic given Azerbaijan's vulnerability to
    an Iranian counterattack, this probability cannot be ruled out
    completely. Most importantly, Azerbaijan's geographical location and
    its interconnection with Iran's 20 million-strong Azerbaijani minority
    might become instrumental for Israeli intelligence and secret
    services.

    Following the Azerbaijani authorities' allegations, a number of
    observers both within and outside the country have interpreted them as
    another effort by the Aliyev government to strengthen its ties with
    Israel, securing support from both the Jewish state and the Jewish
    Diaspora, and gaining sympathies from the U.S. and key Western nations
    for the secular Azerbaijani state that has been at the forefront of
    the civilized world's struggle against religious fanaticism, a popular
    ethos that has been widely used by official Baku for at least a
    decade.

    Even though this viewpoint cannot be completely ruled out, some facts
    indicate Tehran's involvement. Similar attempts have recently been
    foiled in Thailand and Bulgaria, with a range of similarities in the
    way the plots were organized. In all cases Israeli authorities have
    voiced considerable concern over the planned attacks, causing some
    observers to speculate that Mossad officers might have been involved
    in foiling the planned assassinations in Baku. Indeed, this was not
    the first attempt to assassinate Jewish - or Israeli - persons in
    Azerbaijan as a similar case was foiled in 2008. After being convicted
    to long sentences in Azerbaijan, the conspirators Ali Karaki and Ali
    Najmeddin, both Lebanese Shiites affiliated with Hezbollah, and an
    Iranian citizen were unexpectedly released and deported to Iran in
    August 2010, following sustained pressure from Tehran.

    It has recently become obvious that Iranian secret services are
    intensifying their efforts to use the Shiite factor to destabilize
    Azerbaijan from within. An overwhelming part of Azerbaijanis share the
    Shiite faith and religion has become increasingly appealing to a
    certain segment of the Azerbaijani population as a protest ideology to
    what they consider the degradation of traditional values and
    omnipotent corruption. The lack of a strong and widely supported
    (secular) opposition party has also played a role in this shift. In
    addition to ordinary believers, Tehran has reinforced its efforts to
    win the minds of the Azerbaijani Shiite clergy particularly in the
    peripheral areas, championing the rights of the `pro-headscarf party'
    in the recent clashes following the criminalization of head scarves in
    Azerbaijani educational institutions. Accordingly, the language used
    by Iran-based Azerbaijani-language TV and broadcast services aired to
    Azerbaijan has become more aggressive, contributing to increased
    tensions between Azerbaijan's pro-secular and increasingly vocal and
    violent pro-religious camps. Indicative of this was the murder in
    November of the `Azerbaijani Salman Rushdie,' Rafik Taghi, a
    well-known physician and publicist known for his influential articles
    aimed against Islamic radicalism, as well as the Islamic regime in
    Iran. A fatwa sanctioning Taghi's murder was issued in 2006 by the
    Iranian ayatollah Mohammad Fazel Lankarani, which was de facto
    approved of by Iranian authorities.

    CONCLUSIONS: Whoever masterminded the recent events, they boosted
    Baku's role as a secular Muslim bastion of pro-Western forces in the
    turbulent region and further strengthened the crucial
    Azerbaijan-Israeli axis. Lacking strong allies and in a situation of
    latent conflict with at least two of its immediate neighbors, this is
    a rather favorable development for Azerbaijan, which cannot afford a
    one-off stand against Iran. For Iran, the world was reminded of an
    anti-Jewish - and prospectively also anti-Western - Islamist network
    operating in Azerbaijan that is capable of carrying out attacks on
    Iran's enemies. In the current situation marked by the newly imposed
    sanctions on oil exports from Iran by the U.S. and key EU states,
    reducing Azerbaijan's potential as a stable energy supplier and
    highlighting the existence of militant Islamist groups could help
    minimize prospective plans to base a possible attack on Iran on
    Azerbaijani soil. Azerbaijan's importance to Israel also increases, as
    it is seen as a friendly country with a deeply contested relationship
    with its southern neighbor - a fact that has increased in significance
    following the recent deterioration of Jerusalem's relationship with
    Ankara and consequent inability to use Turkish soil for the activities
    of Israeli intelligence. Following the intensification of the
    Israeli-Iranian rivalry, Azerbaijan's key geographical location and
    the existence of a strong Azerbaijani minority with increasingly
    active pro-separatist and anti-Iranian sentiments is regarded with
    increasing interest in Israel and might turn the South Caucasian
    country into an area of Israeli-Iranian confrontation.

    AUTHOR'S BIO: Dr. Emil Souleimanov is assistant professor at the
    Department of Russian and East European Studies, Charles University in
    Prague, Czech Republic. He is the author of `An Endless War: The
    Russian-Chechen Conflict in Perspective' (Peter Lang, 2007).

    http://www.cacianalyst.org/?q=node/5711

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