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Ankara: Iranian-Armenian Ties Being Boosted To Counter Turkey

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  • Ankara: Iranian-Armenian Ties Being Boosted To Counter Turkey

    IRANIAN-ARMENIAN TIES BEING BOOSTED TO COUNTER TURKEY

    Today's Zaman
    March 31 2013

    Crippled by sanctions and making desperate moves to match 'threats'
    posed by Turkey and Azerbaijan, Iran has stepped up its long
    cooperation with Armenia and is determined to improve ties with the
    landlocked country.

    'The Iranian relationship with Armenia is driven by a shared sense of
    isolation,' says Richard Giragosian, director of the Yerevan-based
    Regional Studies Center, adding, 'For Armenia, Iran offers an
    important alternative to closed borders [with Turkey and Azerbaijan]
    and unresolved conflict [of Nagorno-Karabakh with Azerbaijan]
    and tension with its other neighbors, and offers an opportunity to
    overcome Armenia's geographic isolation as a small landlocked state.'

    'Armenia [also] stands out as Iran's most reliable neighbor, offering
    Iran a much-welcome respite from the friction and tension within the
    broader region,' Giragosian said.

    Due to the isolation both sides are suffering in the region - Iran
    because of international sanctions and Armenia due to the blockade
    imposed by Azerbaijan and Turkey - Iran and Armenia are strengthening
    their partnership by increasing their commercial relations. In 2007,
    the Iranian-Armenian gas pipeline was completed, which officially
    ended the blockade.

    'Armenia's developing relationship with Iran is primarily driven by
    strategic energy concerns,' Giragosian said, calling the Armenia-Iran
    rail link a strategic priority for Armenia as an alternative to the
    possible opening of the Armenian-Turkish border.

    Turkey and Armenia have not had good diplomatic relations for the
    past two decades; in 1993 Turkey closed its border with Armenia
    in an effort to show its solidarity with Azerbaijan after Armenian
    armed forces occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan in 1992, including
    the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    However, Giragosian believes Armenia's relationship with Iran has
    resulted in marginal gains. 'Although the trade volume between the
    two countries has been steadily growing, from a meager $72 million in
    2001 to about $285 million in annual turnover last year, Iran remains
    a marginal import and export partner, despite Iran's proximity to
    Armenian markets and its shared border,' he said.

    In 2011, Armenian exports to Iran accounted for a mere 8.1 percent
    of total Armenian exports, and Armenian imports from Iran were only
    5.3 percent of total imports.

    Nagorno-Karabakh key in driving Iran's Caucasus policy

    Nagorno-Karabakh, a territorial conflict that has remained unsettled
    between Azerbaijan and Armenia for more than two decades, is also
    considered an important test for Iran's foreign policy in the region
    with Armenia in its axis.

    Iran has long benefited from the perennial conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh
    and has expanded its influence in the region by boosting ties with
    Christian Armenia. Despite being a country with predominantly Shiite
    population, Azerbaijan was sidelined by the regime in Tehran in a
    bid to counter what it sees as Turkey's 'threatening posture' in
    the region.

    'The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is important in this case - although
    Iran explicitly denies that it sides with Armenia and fully supports
    Yerevan,' said Fikret Ertan, an expert on Turkish foreign policy in
    South Caucasus, adding, 'If not for Iran, Armenia is going to falter
    in the region.'

    The same remark came from Baku when Ali Hasanov, Azerbaijan's deputy
    prime minister, said in an exclusive interview with Today's Zaman
    (March 1) that Tehran is easing the blockade of Armenia by lending
    a helping hand to Yerevan.

    'If Tehran breaks ties with Armenia, Yerevan will starve,' Hasanov told
    Today's Zaman. Former president of Armenia, Levon Ter-Petrosyan, also
    admitted that without Iran, Armenia 'would suffocate in a few days.'

    Tehran's support for Yerevan is 'in sight and ample enough,' even
    though it is not as much as Russia - Armenia's ally - is giving;
    Azerbaijan, its neighbor to the north, is the number one threat for
    Tehran in the South Caucasus because of irredentism. Iran is home to
    more than 30 million Shia Muslim Azerbaijani minorities, who live in
    the northwestern part of Iran, also called Azerbaijan and referred
    by some in the Republic of Azerbaijan as 'Southern Azerbaijan.'

    Iran getting Armenia as a partner to gain a foothold in the region
    does not please Azerbaijan or Turkey, whose regional policies are
    to establish an economic blockade against Armenia by keeping Armenia
    out of regional projects, in a bid to push its adversary to abandon
    its intransigent position over the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

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