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Global Insights: Putin's Baku Visit Highlights Complex Russia-Azerba

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  • Global Insights: Putin's Baku Visit Highlights Complex Russia-Azerba

    GLOBAL INSIGHTS: PUTIN'S BAKU VISIT HIGHLIGHTS COMPLEX RUSSIA-AZERBAIJAN TIES

    World Politics Review
    Aug 20 2013

    By Richard Weitz, on 20 Aug 2013, Column

    On Aug. 13, Vladimir Putin made his first visit to Baku in seven years,
    marking only his third trip to Azerbaijan as president of Russia-a
    gap reflecting the complex and sometimes strained relationship between
    Moscow and Baku. The two have grown apart due to Russia's closer ties
    with Armenia as well as Azerbaijan's westward-oriented energy focus.

    Azerbaijan's leaders have been trying to leverage their country's
    pivotal location, energy resources and other assets to help manage
    their volatile neighborhood. Meanwhile, they are pursuing their own
    regional objectives, which focus on recovering territories occupied by
    Armenia, averting a war with Iran while countering Iranian subversion,
    minimizing foreign leverage over Azerbaijan's domestic policies
    and establishing Baku, the national capital and a major port city,
    as a center for regional commerce. A key element of this effort
    is Azerbaijan's pursuit of a balanced foreign policy toward other
    countries.

    The Azerbaijani government has sought to maintain good relations with
    Russia even while developing ties with Western governments. Russia
    is Azerbaijan's second-largest trading partner, after Italy, with
    Russian-Azerbaijani trade amounting to $3.4 billion last year. The
    corresponding figure for January-May of this year showed 50 percent
    growth over the same period in 2012. According to Putin, more than 70
    Russian regions have close business ties with Azerbaijan, and more
    than 500 Russian companies operate in automobiles, energy, finance,
    health care and other important sectors of the Azerbaijani economy.

    Since 2009, Azerbaijan has been a major natural gas exporter to Russia
    through an agreement between the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan
    Republic (SOCAR) and Gazprom, Russia's leading energy conglomerate.

    In his opening statement on the Baku trip, Putin singled out
    humanitarian ties as "the most important aspect" of Azerbaijani-Russian
    relations. He praised the Azerbaijani government for promoting Russian
    language instruction in schools and welcoming Russian universities to
    set up campuses in Azerbaijan. The two countries will continue these
    efforts through a new two-year Program for Humanitarian Cooperation
    that will run through 2015.

    Social ties between the two countries run deep. Many Azerbaijanis
    live in Russia and vice versa. Russia's Azerbaijanis have played a
    very active role in developing Russia's economy as well as supporting
    economic ties between Russia and Azerbaijan. According to Putin, more
    than 1 million Azerbaijani citizens work in Russia, while another
    million ethnic Azerbaijanis have Russian citizenship. The owner of
    Lukoil is an ethnic Azerbaijani, for instance, and another ethnic
    Azerbaijani who holds Russian citizenship, Rustam Ibrahimbegov, is
    contemplating running in Azerbaijan's upcoming presidential election.

    Several hundred thousand ethnic Russians work in Azerbaijan.

    Nonetheless, Russian-Azerbaijani economic relations would be even
    larger if bilateral energy ties had developed the way Russia planned.

    Western companies have a considerably larger role in Azerbaijan's
    energy sector than their Russian counterparts. The only Russian
    energy company that now has large presence on the ground is privately
    held Lukoil, which owns a network of gas stations in Azerbaijan
    and is developing the Shah Deniz Caspian Sea gas field. For a while
    it appeared that Russia's state gas monopoly, Gazprom, had secured
    almost all of Azerbaijan's gas exports, but the deal was only partially
    implemented. In 2012, Azerbaijan delivered 1.55 billion cubic meters of
    natural gas to Russia, half the desired amount. Meanwhile, Azerbaijan
    recently committed to send most of its 1 trillion cubic meters in
    gas reserves through a new pipeline to Europe from 2019.

    Russia's state-owned Rosneft oil company and SOCAR signed a cooperation
    agreement during Putin's visit, but concrete oil and gas deals were
    lacking other than an agreement for joint use of certain terminals
    and pipelines. In May, Russia ceased importing oil through the
    Baku-Novorossiysk pipeline due to Azerbaijan's steady reductions
    in oil deliveries, reflecting the country's declining overall oil
    production. Russia's state-run oil pipeline operator, Transneft, was
    losing money because the pipeline was operating at less than half
    its planned capacity. Rosneft has yet to acquire its desired stake
    in the Apsheron gas field in the Caspian Sea.

    Russia recently confirmed a large arms deal with Azerbaijan, whose
    military has many Russian and Soviet weapons systems. Nevertheless,
    the two countries recently declined to renew Russia's lease of
    Azerbaijan's early warning radar station at Gabala. Meanwhile, the
    Russian military has reinforced its main Armenian base in Gyumri,
    which is under a decades-long lease, and continues via the Collective
    Security Treaty Organization to sell weapons at discounted prices to
    Armenia, Azerbaijan's main adversary.

    Azerbaijan's location at the crossroads of Iran, Russia, the Middle
    East and Europe has constrained Baku's ability to pursue an independent
    foreign policy. Azerbaijan and the rest of the Caucasus region were
    an object of rivalry between the Persian, Ottoman and Russian empires
    for centuries. This competition has continued even after the demise
    of these empires as well as the rise and fall of the Soviet Union.

    Despite Azerbaijan's impressive economic performance and religious
    tolerance, the country is still relatively weak in comparison with its
    neighbors, primarily due to its relatively small size-33,000 square
    miles and 9 million inhabitants. Today, the interests of Iran, Russia,
    Europe and the United States in the South Caucasus and Caspian region
    can still clash, confronting the Azerbaijani government with the need
    to accommodate the parties as best they can while still advancing
    its own interests.

    Richard Weitz is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and a World
    Politics Review senior editor. His weekly WPR column, Global Insights,
    appears every Tuesday.

    http://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/articles/13175/global-insights-putin-s-baku-visit-highlights-complex-russia-azerbaijan-ties

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