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Experts: Azerbaijan Military Build-Up For Diplomatic, Domestic Advan

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  • Experts: Azerbaijan Military Build-Up For Diplomatic, Domestic Advan

    EXPERTS: AZERBAIJAN MILITARY BUILD-UP FOR DIPLOMATIC, DOMESTIC ADVANTAGE
    Rovshan Ismayilov

    EurasiaNet, NY
    July 3 2007

    As Azerbaijan's military spending reaches $1 billion, the country's
    leadership has revived rhetoric about using force to resolve the
    19-year Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Armenia. But for all the war
    worries sparked by bellicose statements, experts in Baku stress that
    they have more to do with diplomatic maneuvering and domestic politics
    than an actual desire to trade talks for tanks.

    Over the past month, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has
    repeatedly indicated that Baku's patience with years of start-and-stop
    negotiations is running thin. The last such encounter, a June 10 tete -
    a - tete with Armenian President Robert Kocharian in St. Petersburg,
    did nothing to move peace talks forward. [For details, see the Eurasia
    Insight archive]. News agencies have reported Aliyev as attributing
    the failure of the talks to "Armenia's unconstructive and insincere
    position."

    Instead, a new tact is being taken - at least in words. "We are close
    to the liberation of Karabakh. We are powerful enough to liberate our
    lands," Aliyev said during a July 2 police academy graduation ceremony
    in Baku. "Azerbaijan is the [most] powerful country in the region,"
    he went on to say, APA news agency reported. "No one wants a new war
    again, [but] Azerbaijan is prepared [for] any military operations
    any time. It would be better if Armenia understands it and pull[s]
    out the troops from our territories."

    Speaking at a Baku reception on June 25, Army Day, Defense Minister
    Safar Abiyev warned that if Armenia failed to do so, "[the] Azerbaijani
    Army will do it itself."

    In Armenia, many interpret these statements as a sign that Azerbaijan
    is ready to use force to regain control of the disputed region and
    seven bordering territories occupied by ethnic Armenian troops.

    Azerbaijan's first National Security Concept, signed by Aliyev on May
    24, emphasizes a need to improve the country's defensive capabilities
    in order to better respond to separatism and regional conflicts.

    In Azerbaijan, however, some local observers contend that Aliyev's
    remarks have less to do with a rumbling toward war, and more to do
    with a strategic game plan.

    The ability to outspend Armenia in an arms race is one of the few
    instruments that Baku could use to pressure Yerevan into making
    diplomatic concessions, specifically concerning Azerbaijan's
    territorial integrity, commented independent political analyst Rasim
    Musabekov. "And Aliyev is using this trump card vocally," he said.

    [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Much of Baku's current military spending, made possible by booming
    energy revenues, is related to reforms to align the Azerbaijani
    military more closely with North Atlantic Treaty Organization standards
    by the end of 2007. Speaking on June 25, Defense Minister Abiyev
    detailed programs ranging from the modernization of naval vessels to
    the creation of a training school for army sergeants.

    Azerbaijan also plans to start manufacturing its own military materiel,
    with trial samples expected by the end of 2007.

    "[H]is statements mean that if somebody hopes that Azerbaijan will
    agree with the status quo that was imposed by force, they have to
    take into consideration current realities, too," said Musabekov,
    referring to Azerbaijan's de facto loss of Nagorno-Karabakh to
    separatists and Armenian forces in 1994. "Azerbaijan has many more
    resources to build-up its military than does Armenia."

    One military expert, however, notes that the Azerbaijani build-up
    still does not give it a clear-cut superiority over Armenian forces.

    Hints about use of force have more to do with politics, commented
    Uzeir Jafarov. As occurred during the 2005 parliamentary election
    campaign, "[w]e will hear a lot of similar statements closer to the
    2008 presidential elections," said Jafarov. No definitive signs exist
    that "would prove Azerbaijan is really preparing for war."

    Meanwhile, a "good cop-bad cop" scenario appears to be emerging. A
    so-called "coordinated" difference on Karabakh has long existed between
    Azerbaijan's defense and foreign ministries. As the Defense Ministry
    talks about the military's willingness to resolve the 19-year conflict
    by force, the Foreign Ministry insists on the need to continue talks
    with Armenia.

    A recent surprise mission to Armenia and Karabakh underlines that
    difference. Three days before Aliyev's speech to police graduates,
    Azerbaijani Ambassador to Russia Polad Bulbuloglu co-headed a cultural
    delegation that traveled to Karabakh to meet with de facto President
    Arkady Ghukassian and to visit the town of Shushi, which holds strong
    cultural symbolism for ethnic Azeris. The one-day trip also included a
    meeting with Armenian President Robert Kocharian in Yerevan. Armenia's
    ambassador to Russia, Armen Smbatian, was the other co-leader of
    the delegation.

    According to Ambassador Bulbuloglu, "more productive and long-lasting
    mutual visits between the two countries" are intended, the Azerbaijani
    news agency APA reported.

    Aliyev also met the delegation in Baku. Media outlets, however, have
    said little about his comments. The pro-government Trend news agency
    quoted Aliyev as telling the delegation that the Karabakh conflict
    "could only be solved on the basis of the principles of territorial
    integrity of Azerbaijan and inviolability of borders, with granting
    a high level of self-governance to Nagorno-Karabakh."

    For now, at least officially, that language of diplomacy is the only
    one Yerevan maintains it can hear. According to local media reports,
    Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian said at a July 2 press
    conference in Yerevan that "Ilham Aliyev rattles the saber for
    internal use."

    Editor's Note: Rovshan Ismayilov is a freelance journalist based
    in Baku.
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