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Azerbaijan: Between Iran And A Hard Place

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  • Azerbaijan: Between Iran And A Hard Place

    AZERBAIJAN: BETWEEN IRAN AND A HARD PLACE
    By Ariel Cohen

    Tert.am
    22.03.12

    Republished from The National Interest

    The Former Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan is a small country sandwiched
    between Russia and Iran along the coast of the Caspian Sea, which
    is in fact the largest salt lake on earth, not a sea. Americans
    should not feel bad if they can't find it on a geography quiz. But
    due to its unique location, the country is playing an increasingly
    important role in the West's confrontation with Iran. So far this
    year, Azerbaijani security services have arrested three groups of
    Iranian agents planning terrorist attacks against American businesses,
    Western oil companies, Israeli diplomats and prominent members of the
    Jewish community. Just last week, a network of twenty-two Iranian
    agents trained by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps was rolled
    up in this Caspian Sea country.

    Theocrats in Tehran also have a problem with the Azerbaijani
    leadership's secular nature. This is not surprising, as millions
    of ethnic Azeris live in northern Iran-or Southern Azerbaijan-under
    ethnic and linguistic discrimination and may want a freer life like
    their brethren in Azerbaijan.

    Iran is attempting to undermine secular Azerbaijan by paying off
    preachers in mosques, stirring up religious extremism in the country's
    South, beaming in Shiite Islamist propaganda broadcasts and supporting
    radical organizations. The government in Azerbaijan's capital, Baku,
    is guarding against radical Shiite organizations that may try to gain
    political power.

    The Larger Neighborhood

    Yet the animosity is not only about religious observance but also
    about geopolitics. Relations between Iran and Azerbaijan have steadily
    deteriorated as Azerbaijan continues to develop its ties to its
    "older sister" Turkey, the United States, NATO and Israel.

    Azerbaijan is caught between the rock of the Iran nuclear-program
    sanctions and the hard place of the Iranian reaction. The United
    States and the West, with Israel's encouragement, have led the effort
    to impose sanctions to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon.

    As the 2010 U.N. Security Council vote demonstrated, even Russia and
    China may agree to support such sanctions under proper conditions-even
    if the critics say that the sanctions were massively diluted. As
    sanctions start to bite, Iran may grow more wary of its small northern
    neighbor-and become more aggressive.

    Azerbaijan is not the only country in the region that Iran targets.

    The Iranian intelligence and its Hezbollah subsidiary last month
    conducted operations against Israeli targets in Tbilisi, Georgia as
    well as in New Delhi and Bangkok. According to some experts, Iran
    is wary of a major confrontation, but wants to provoke Israel into
    smaller confrontations because it needs an external threat around
    which it can organize its increasingly dissatisfied population.

    Common interests have led to stronger ties between Azerbaijan and
    the West. For Baku, this partnership has meant more options for
    countering Iranian influence in the region. For example, Israel has
    supplied Azerbaijan with $1.6 billion worth of arms while reportedly
    building a drone factory there. Iran's ally Armenia, embroiled in a
    long conflict with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh, is livid. And
    a glance at a map reveals that should Washington or Jerusalem decide
    to execute an air strike against Iranian nuclear targets, Azerbaijan
    may become prime real estate.

    It is highly unlikely Baku would agree to provide air bases for such
    a strike. The operation would end, but the neighborhood won't change:
    geography condemns Iran and Azerbaijan to be neighbors. It is up to
    them to define the quality of their neighborhood.

    Tensions Rise

    Azerbaijan's ministers of foreign affairs and defense recently went
    out of their way to point out that relations between Baku and Tehran
    are good, reiterating that Azerbaijan will not allow its territory
    to be used for a strike against Iran. But the ayatollahs appear not
    to be listening.

    During the recent visit to Iran by the Azerbaijani defense minister
    Safar Abiyev, the national flag of Azerbaijan was hung upside down-with
    the green strip symbolizing Islam up top. Iran wants Shiite Azerbaijan
    to fall in line with its version of religion and not to emphasize
    Turkic identity, which brings it closer to Turkey. (This wasn't the
    first time the Iranians have offended their neighbors to the north
    by disrespecting their flag; a similar incident occured during a 2005
    Tehran visit by President Ilham Aliyev.)

    Iranians are not only operating terrorist networks on Azerbaijani
    territory. Senior ayatollahs were also allegedly behind the 2006 murder
    of Rafiq Tagi, a prominent Azeri writer against whom a senior cleric
    issued a fatwa sentencing him to death. Though Baku kept relatively
    quiet about the murder, the third wave of antiterrorist arrests since
    the beginning of the year is seen as a reprisal by Baku, signaling
    Iran to "play by the rules."

    The United States has a clear national-security interest in keeping
    Baku safe. Washington should lead the West's efforts to boost
    cooperation with Azerbaijan, including counterterrorism, intelligence
    cooperation and border-security improvements. The White House is also
    likely to ask for relaxation of tough domestic political controls.

    To facilitate the relationship, however, the Obama administration
    should appoint a new, highly visible U.S. ambassador to Baku after
    Matthew J. Bryza's recess appointment expired at the end of 2011.

    Before Bryza's appointment, the ambassador's residence in Baku
    was empty for over a year, which immensely annoyed the Azeris. The
    United States also lacked an Ambassador in Ashghabad, on the other
    side of the Caspian, for many years. That's no way to win friends
    and influence gas-rich countries.

    Finally, it is time to facilitate an agreement over the
    Nagorno-Karabakh issue and engage Azerbaijan as a true strategic
    partner in the region-rather than a supply outpost for Afghanistan
    or an alternative "gas station" beyond the Persian Gulf.

    Azerbaijan will play a significant role in how the West deals with
    Iran in the future. It provides a unique and tolerant secular Shia
    Turkic model which should be a guiding light to other majority-Muslim
    countries. It is a major oil and gas supplier. No matter what happens
    in Iran, it is and should remain a long-term partner and friend of
    the United States.


    From: Baghdasarian
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