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Azeri presidential official dismisses U.S. criticism of presidential

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  • Azeri presidential official dismisses U.S. criticism of presidential

    Interfax, Armenia
    Oct 26 2013


    Azeri presidential official dismisses U.S. criticism of presidential elections

    BAKU. Oct 26


    The U.S. Department of State's and the U.S. mission to the OSCE's
    position on the recent presidential elections in Azerbaijan causes
    perplexity and harms relations between Baku and Washington, Azeri
    presidential chief of staff Ramiz Mehdiyev said.

    "We understand all complexity of the situation in which European
    policymakers have found themselves under pressure from certain circles
    in Washington. However, this can't justify the double standards being
    applied to Azerbaijan," Mehdiyev said in commenting to Interfax on the
    fact that the U.S. is continuing to urge international institutions to
    accept a critical report on the elections by the OSCE Office for
    Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), and the Department
    of State has expressed its disagreement with PACE's positive opinion
    on the elections.

    "I believe that, by taking such nearsighted steps, particularly the
    attempts to put pressure on PACE's and the European Parliament's
    positions regarding the elections in Azerbaijan, some Department of
    State officials harm partnership existing between the U.S. and
    Azerbaijan," he said.

    While OSCE PA observer mission's head and OSCE Chairperson-in-Office
    Leonid Kozhara, head of the European Parliament mission Pino Arlacchi,
    the European Union mission and members of other international
    organizations have positively judged the elections, "the U.S. is
    promoting and lobbying knowingly false positions compromising such an
    important stage in Azerbaijan's democratic development as presidential
    elections."

    "The forced changing of positions by European institutions dictated
    from the outside causes our deep regret. It turns out that the level
    of Azerbaijan's partnership and cooperation with the European Union
    countries should depend on whims and preferences of certain circles in
    the U.S. Department of State. This is also obvious from the way some
    officials in Washington are not ceasing attempts to impose the opinion
    of a minority (the OSCE/ODIHR and the U.S. Department of State) on a
    majority (the OSCE, the European Parliament and PACE), even though the
    majority has unanimously noted positive progress, freedom, and
    transparency of the election process in Azerbaijan," Mehdiyev said.

    There can be no ideal elections anywhere, including in the West, "but
    exaggeration or deliberate distortion of facts based on someone's
    groundless and partial positions is absolutely unacceptable," he said.

    Mehdiyev pointed out that biased statements by some U.S. officials
    also go against the position of U.S. monitoring missions. He pointed
    out that the U.S. alone had 123 authoritative observers monitoring the
    elections in Azerbaijan, and a lot of representatives and senators
    welcomed progress that Azerbaijan made in the October 2013 elections.

    "Despite this, the U.S. Department of State's and the U.S. mission to
    the OSCE's position on the elections in Azerbaijan is perplexing, to
    put it mildly. Some political circles in the U.S. have still not given
    up the idea of isolating Azerbaijan. But they have been isolated
    themselves. And in order to somehow vindicate their plans, they are
    putting pressure on the European Parliament, the Council of Europe and
    other international organizations by forcing them to revise their
    positive opinion on the results of the elections in Azerbaijan. But
    they can't understand that even if they revise their previous
    judgments, this cannot change anything," he said.

    "The international community represented by an overwhelming majority
    of heads of state and government have congratulated President Ilham
    Aliyev on his decisive victory in the presidential elections in
    October 2013," Mehdiyev said. "And this is a serious political fiasco
    of the forces that have developed the habit of using international
    organizations as a tool to put pressure on individual states in
    pursuing their own interests," he said.

    "These forces should understand that the double standard policy as a
    method of pressure is no longer bringing them political dividends. On
    the contrary, this policy is working to the detriment of those who are
    continuing to revel in their primary role in world politics," he
    added.

    Mehdiyev quoted veteran U.S. diplomat Zbigniew Brzezinski as saying in
    his speech at the Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced
    International Studies on October 22, which was attended, in
    particular, by such prominent U.S. policymakers as Madeleine Albright,
    Stephen Hadley, Robert Gates, Brent Scowcroft, and others, that the
    U.S. should pursue a consistent policy and be utterly careful as
    concerns intervention in other countries' affairs, as consequences of
    excessive intervention may be disastrous. "I believe you can't
    formulate it better," Mehdiyev said.

    In analyzing recent events in European policy, Mehdiyev mentioned what
    he sees as the key ones.

    "First of all, it is necessary to recall positive things, namely the
    European Parliament's resolution, which says that the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict must be resolved in compliance with the
    UN Security Council resolutions demanding that the Armenian occupation
    forces be immediately, unconditionally and fully withdrawn from the
    occupied Azerbaijani territory and that Azerbaijan's territorial
    integrity, sovereignty, and border inviolability be ensured," he said.

    "This resolution signals a serious approach by a number of European
    structures toward the occupation of Azeri lands. This is just another
    indication of a failure of Armenian foreign policy based on an attempt
    to misinterpret the causes of the conflict and justify the occupation
    of another state," he said.

    Mehdiyev also quoted President Ilham Aliyev as saying in his inaugural
    speech that "the position of an absolute majority of the international
    community is unambiguous."

    "Azerbaijan's territorial integrity is beyond any doubt, and this
    conflict must be settled only within the framework of territorial
    integrity," he said.

    "However, along with this generally impartial step, we are witnessing
    disagreements in European politics on the principles for the triumph
    of which the numerous international political institutions were set up
    in Europe's political environment," Mehdiyev said.

    "It is easy to see that the financial and economic crisis in Europe
    has grown into a social and democratic crisis. This is exactly what
    can explain the growing crisis of confidence in the EU on the whole,
    inadequacy of its approach to political events, the loss of its own
    orientation, and so on. The common political prejudice in the
    OSCE/ODIHR's and U.S. Department of State's statements on the
    elections in Azerbaijan is among the factors demonstrating all
    complexity of the situation," he said.

    "We had known even before the elections that the OSCE PA, under
    pressure from the outside, had to reverse its decision to send
    observers to Azerbaijan on an absolutely farfetched pretext. Later on,
    after numerous appeals from Azerbaijan, OSCE PA observers took part in
    the elections and highly praised the organization of the voting
    process. In the European parliamentarians' view, the elections were
    transparent and free, which indicated just another step on the way of
    the country's democratization," Mehdiyev said.

    "I would like to point out in conclusion that we are interested in
    further developing cooperation with our European partners. We will
    continue to strictly adhere to principles of neighborliness and
    equitable partnership," he said.

    va




    From: A. Papazian
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