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  • Turkey and Azerbaijan Focus on Friendships and Feuds

    EurasiaNet.org
    Sept 4 2014



    Turkey and Azerbaijan Focus on Friendships and Feuds

    September 4, 2014 - 10:22am, by Giorgi Lomsadze


    As president, Turkish leader Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an on September 2-3
    paid his first foreign visit (not counting a trip to
    Turkish-controlled Cyprus) to Azerbaijan to talk about things the two
    countries share: a friendship, a feud with Armenia and pipelines.

    "We are very glad that you came home to Azerbaijan, your homeland, in
    less than a week after your inauguration," declared Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliyev by way of greeting to his new counterpart,
    though old ally. ErdoÄ?an, for his part, wanted to emphasise that the
    mi-casa-es-su-casa relationship that characterized his nine-year run
    as prime minister will continue strong. "We are two countries, one
    nation," he underlined.

    And what keeps an alliance together better than a mutual enemy? Both
    presidents condemned Armenia's occupation of breakaway
    Nagorno-Karabakh and adjacent Azerbaijani lands. Aliyev vowed to spare
    no effort to counter the "lies about the Armenian genocide," the
    Ottoman-era massacre of ethnic Armenians that Turkey claims was
    collateral damage of World War I.

    Some observers believe that the Karabakh conflict is an even bigger
    obstacle to the normalization of ties between Turkey and Armenia than
    the genocide row. Baku carries enough cultural and financial influence
    over Ankara to thwart any attempts at reconciliation. The
    Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey energy corridor is too important to Ankara
    to let anything threaten the route.

    Just like Armenia, energy transit projects were a must-mention at the
    meeting. ErdoÄ?an said he is looking forward to launching the
    construction of the Trans-Anatolian Gas Pipeline, abbreviated as
    TANAP, which is set to bring Azerbaijani gas across Georgia and Turkey
    to Europe. "Inshallah, the groundwork will be laid on September 20,"
    he pinpointed.

    On Armenia, ErdoÄ?an put it pretty plainly, saying that the
    Armenian-Turkish problem will resolve itself if the
    Armenian-Azerbaijan conflict is resolved. The way things stand now on
    Karabakh, this means that neither of the region's two biggest problems
    are going anywhere in the foreseeable future.

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