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Stephen Blank: Azerbaijan Strongly Resembles Arab Regimes

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  • Stephen Blank: Azerbaijan Strongly Resembles Arab Regimes

    Stephen Blank: Azerbaijan Strongly Resembles Arab Regimes

    Azeri Report
    March 4, 2013

    WASHINGTON, DC. March 4, 2013: Stephen Blank, Professor at Strategic
    Studies Institute of US Army War College, articulated his concerns at
    the US Congress over a variety of threats in Azerbaijan `raised by the
    combination of misrule and foreign or state sponsorship.'

    `Azerbaijan's security, by virtue of its geography and energy
    capabilities, is a vital US interest..

    Nevertheless its political system resembles most of those in
    post-Soviet times in its authoritarianism and ideological
    justification of such a regime by virtue of a strong president
    centralizing power and authority in his hands,' he stated during the
    testimony on `Islamist Militant Threats to Eurasia' hosted by the
    House Foreign Affairs subcommittees later last week, with
    participation of State Department assistant secretary and other top
    analysts, TURAN's US correspondent Alakbar Raufoglu reports.

    In other words, he emphasized, `like Middle Eastern and Central Asian
    autocracies, Azerbaijan also contains a strong element of familial and
    even dynastic aspiration.'

    President Aliyev, has astutely expanded and transformed the elite from
    regional clan groupings into bureaucratic factional ones, linked by
    patronage in typical patron-client relationships. Despite its current
    apparent stability, Azerbaijan `is vulnerable,' according to the
    analyst.

    Among the stability factors, the US expert listed the self-confidence
    of the ruling elite, the prevalence of strong informal institutions
    and a government based on `understandings' rather than formal
    institutional and legal accountability and rules among that
    elite. Furthermore, if the energy price and demand for Azeri
    hydrocarbons stay high the regime can buy time to buy off potential
    threats to itself from within.

    As a political system, Stephen Blank says, Azerbaijan =80=9Cstrongly
    resembles other post-Soviet and even Arab regimes in its basic
    structures' such as the ones he listed below:

    - Overwhelming domination by and even many manifestations of the cult
    of personality of the ruler, President Ilham Aliyev;

    - Strong signs of an attempt to make the ruling family permanently
    dynastic and dynamic element of the regime that could last even after
    the current president;

    - The absence of guaranteed human rights and increasing signs of
    repression.

    `Indeed, there are more political prisoners in Azerbaijan than in
    Belarus - hardly an enviable record. This could become dangerous,
    especially as more signs of opposition make themselves felt, e.g. the
    rise of Salafi Islam preachers and congregations. But that is not the
    only potential source of Islamist opposition', he said.

    Some of the characteristics that he listed are below.

    - Despite the economic growth signs of regional and other forms of
    widespread inequality in the distribution of economic wealth.

    - A form of politics heavily weighted to familial connections or to
    strong patron-client ties making the entire system a vast patronage
    network;

    - Anti-liberal and anti-democratic political culture buttressed by
    repression, and manifested in the prevalence of `understandings' or
    informal institutions and ties over formal-legal rule;

    - A low-trust society and a weak, disorganized civil society and
    divided opposition;

    - Excessive domination of the economy by the hydrocarbon industry
    leading to the well-known resource curse that features prominently in
    energy-dominated economies;

    - Signs of the oppression or repression of ethnic or religious
    minorities leading to ever more recurrent protests;

    - Ongoing efforts by the state to formulate and disseminate a state
    nationalist ideology to create a legitimacy narrative and an image of
    a united state. In Azerbaijan's case, this effort is buttressed by the
    threats connected with the unresolved conflict with Armenia in
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    `This is an Achilles heel of all such regimes and the prospect of a
    succession crisis interacting with other crises generated by
    authoritarian misrule could lead to a partial or even more complete
    disintegration of the system as we have seen in the Arab world,' the
    US expert argued.

    As a result, he added, apart from the pressure of the unresolved
    conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia, both Moscow and Tehran have
    sought to undermine Azerbaijan and incite unrest, and in Iran's case,
    violence. Both Russia and Iran have sought to exploit fissures arising
    out of the Azeri government's domestic policies.

    As for the topic of the testimony, all participants agreed that there
    are no imminent threats from the Arab region's Islamist radical groups
    to Caucasus and Central Asia, but there is concern that the groups
    could become a threat after the US withdraws from the region after the
    2014 troop withdrawal from Afghanistan.

    Contributions to radical groups emanate from the Persian Gulf in legal
    forms like zakat, according to Ariel Cohen, senior research fellow for
    Russian and Eurasian Studies at the Heritage Foundation.

    Drug trafficking is the other major source of money for radical
    Islamist groups, he said. Afghan poppy products, both heroin and
    opium, provide major fiscal support to these groups, he said.

    Adding to the dilemma is that `we have no reliable way of measuring
    the incidence or likelihood of terrorism in the region', said Blank.

    The problem is, he argued, virtually every form of dissent and
    opposition has been labeled by local governments as Islamic
    fundamentalism or worse and then harshly repressed. As a result there
    is neither a political vocabulary or movement or space available to
    dissenters other than the religious one of Islam and that is driven
    underground.

    `Indeed I know of no published research that accurately tracks the
    likelihood or incidence of genuinely militant or terrorist (not
    necessarily the same thing) movements in Central Asia. A further
    problem here and in Azerbaijan is the fact that in all these places
    the religious authority is an arm of the state and thus inherently
    politicized,' he concluded (Turan).

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