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BAKU: "Inconsistent" foreign policy damages Azeri-Turkish ties - Opp

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  • BAKU: "Inconsistent" foreign policy damages Azeri-Turkish ties - Opp

    "Inconsistent" foreign policy damages Azeri-Turkish ties - opposition daily

    Azadliq, Baku
    13 Jan 05


    Text of Xayal Sahinoglu report by Azerbaijani newspaper Azadliq on 13
    January headlined "Relations between Baku and Ankara have become cool"
    and subheaded "Fuad Mustafayev: 'Relations between Turkey and
    Azerbaijan have cooled because the foreign policy priorities have not
    been set correctly'"

    As a result of the foreign policy conducted by the incumbent regime,
    Azerbaijan is about to lose Turkey as its strategic ally. To recap,
    relations between the two sides began to deteriorate in the wake of
    [Azerbaijani President] Ilham Aliyev's certain irresponsible statement
    on the Cyprus problem. This trend was confirmed once again when
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan did not discuss the
    Karabakh issue with Vladimir Putin on his visit to Russia.

    It is a manifestation of the cooling of Azerbaijani-Turkish relations
    that Erdogan did not discuss the Karabakh conflict when he visited
    Russia, Fuad Mustafayev, deputy chairman of the People's Front of
    Azerbaijan Party [PFAP], said. The authorities are to blame for the
    current state of affairs in bilateral relations, Mustafayev said. The
    wrong foreign policy of the incumbent regime creates additional
    problems for Azerbaijan, he said.

    "Relations with Turkey, Azerbaijan's strategic ally, have cooled
    because the foreign policy priorities have not been set
    correctly. Over the past few years, Azerbaijan's foreign policy course
    has been uncertain. The authorities suddenly declare Arab countries a
    foreign policy priority, but then turn to Central Asia and
    Russia. Such a foreign policy is bound to create problems for
    Azerbaijan. It is the result of this policy that the Turkish prime
    minister did not discuss with Russia, which is an interested party, a
    very important issue for the region," he said.

    Mustafayev also linked the inconsistency of the authorities' foreign
    policy with the emergence of the issue of reopening the
    Turkish-Armenian border on the agenda of the Moscow talks. "If the
    authorities take populist steps trying to take advantage of the
    problem instead of steadily defending our interests in settling the
    Karabakh conflict, we have no right to hope that some country would
    defend our interests. Although the Azerbaijani people may want Turkey
    to demonstrate that it is Azerbaijan's friend in the Karabakh
    conflict, the authorities' foreign policy does not allow this to
    happen."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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