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Azerbaijan-Iran Tensions Resurrect Long-Term Disputes

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  • Azerbaijan-Iran Tensions Resurrect Long-Term Disputes

    World Politics Review
    March 9 2012


    Azerbaijan-Iran Tensions Resurrect Long-Term Disputes
    By Greg Caramenico | 09 Mar 2012

    Iran and Azerbaijan have had a volatile diplomatic relationship ever
    since Azerbaijan gained its independence 20 years ago. But even
    against the backdrop of their bumpy history, the deterioration in
    relations over the past few months has been swift. Azerbaijan's recent
    moves to strengthen its alliance with Israel have certainly
    exacerbated tensions with Iran, but they are not the only cause of
    conflict. In addition to the two sides' history of mutual suspicion,
    violent disagreement over sovereignty and each other's choice of
    regional diplomatic partners are also prominent causes of strife.

    A central source of long-term tension between the two neighbors is the
    legal status of Iran's ethnic Azeris, who comprise 16 percent of
    Iran's population. Although some ethnic Azeris in Iran have dual
    citizenship, Azerbaijan sometimes claims sovereignty over all ethnic
    Azeris and has at times commented on legal issues affecting Iran's
    Azeri minority population. Recently published school textbooks in
    Azerbaijan even relabeled Iran's northern border province `Southern
    Azerbaijan.' When Azerbaijan's president, Ilham Aliyev, gave a
    domestically uncontroversial 2011 speech describing himself as leader
    of all the world's Azeris, the Iranian government took offense. The
    chairman of the Iranian Parliament's National Security and Foreign
    Policy Committee, Alaeddin Borujerdi, dismissed the declaration as
    reflecting the `innate sense of inferiority' that Azeris feel toward
    Iran. The Iranian press portrayed Aliyev's comments as irresponsible,
    accusing him of soliciting dual loyalties among Iran's Azeri
    population.

    Since its 1979 revolution, Iran has sporadically but unofficially
    suppressed Azeri-language publications and cultural organizations.
    More recently, Iranian officials have accused some Azeris who
    routinely travel between Azerbaijan and Iran of being spies for the
    Azeri government. As justification, officials point to Baku's
    increased cooperation with Israel, Aliyev's claim of sovereignty over
    Iranian Azeris and alleged recruiting by Western intelligence agencies
    in Azerbaijan, which Tehran says is widespread. Iran recently detained
    several Iranian Azeris suspected of cooperating with Israel in the
    killings of several nuclear scientists, part of what Iranian officials
    believe to be a wide-ranging espionage campaign.

    Meanwhile, fear of Iranian espionage is rising in Azerbaijan as well.
    The Azeri Defense Ministry claims to have discovered many Iranian
    agents engaged in planning violent counterespionage operations in
    Azerbaijan. The most publicized incident involved attempted
    assassinations of Israeli diplomats in Baku, which led the Azeri
    Embassy to formally complain to Tehran and resulted in increased
    Azeri-Israeli joint surveillance of possible Iranian terror threats.
    Last week, the Azeris detained several Iranian citizens as well as an
    Azerbaijani journalist working for Iran's state-run Fars News Agency
    on drug charges. Azeri police are also investigating the December
    stabbing death of Azerbaijani journalist Rafiq Tagi in Baku. Many
    Azeris believe that Iran killed Tagi, a critic of radical Islam and of
    Iran, in reprisal for his recently published criticisms of the
    country.

    Azerbaijan and Iran also diverge over their choices of strategic
    regional partners. For Iran, the major concern is Azerbaijan's close
    working relationship with Israel and its growing friendship with the
    United States. While Azerbaijan's economic and technological
    cooperation with Israel stretches back more than a decade, the two
    have recently accelerated security exchanges and military training. As
    a result, the Iranian Foreign Ministry now claims that Israel has
    turned Azerbaijan into a proxy state for espionage and military
    operations. The ministry also points to arrangements such as the
    Northern Distribution Network, NATO's supply route to Afghanistan, as
    a sign that Azerbaijan has become a dangerous source of logistical
    support for Iran's enemies. Last month's announcement of a $1.5
    billion arms sale by Israel to Azerbaijan greatly angered the Iranian
    government and prompted demands that Azerbaijan account for its choice
    of weapons supplier.

    For Azerbaijan's part, the longest-standing source of diplomatic
    friction with Iran is the latter's close economic relationship with
    Armenia. Much of Azerbaijan's foreign policy is colored by its
    conflict with Armenia over the contested region of Nagorno-Karabakh
    and Baku's contention that Armenia is a belligerent neighbor. As a
    result, Azerbaijan's relationships with other neighboring states are
    cultivated with an eye to Armenia. Linguistic and cultural ties
    between Turkey and Azerbaijan have been strengthened by both
    countries' opposition to Armenian foreign policy goals. In fact,
    Azerbaijan's friendship with Israel was bolstered in the 1990s by the
    support Israel offered to Azerbaijan during its war with Armenia.
    Unsurprisingly, Iran's trade and energy accords with Armenia are a
    source of widespread anger in Azerbaijan. And Azeri officials maintain
    that if Iran has a right to trade with Armenia, then Azerbaijan can
    certainly buy weapons from Israel to protect itself against aggression
    in the disputed border regions occupied by Armenia. Pressed about the
    arms deal last week, Azeri Ambassador to Iran Cavansir Ahundzade
    assured Tehran that Israeli weapons would only be used to protect
    Azeri territory from Armenian occupation.

    Efforts at addressing the sources of bilateral tensions are underway
    in both countries. Iranian Defense Minister Ahmad Vahidi spoke of
    outside -- read: Western -- interests undermining Iran's `good
    relations' with its northern neighbor, while the Iranian Foreign
    Ministry still refers to the Azeris as good neighbors. Just this week,
    on March 7, the foreign ministers of Iran, Turkey and Azerbaijan began
    a series of trilateral meetings in Azerbaijan's Nakichevan border
    province. Among the topics they were expected to address were
    peacekeeping in the Caucasus and regional border-security concerns due
    to smuggling and terrorism, although Iran probably also pressed
    Azerbaijan to account for its dealings with Israel.

    Though useful, such conferences are unlikely to result in major
    changes in either side's position in the short term. Nor would they
    contain the potential fallout were Azerbaijan even passively to aid
    U.S. or Israeli military strikes against Iran's nuclear program, which
    would be viewed by Tehran as an act of war. Azerbaijan has many
    important energy and infrastructure investments that will require
    additional security if tensions with Iran escalate, and it will be
    painfully close to the action should military conflict with Iran
    occur.

    Greg Caramenico is a journalist and analyst covering finance, science
    and energy policy, as well as Italy, Iran and the Levant. He has a
    master's degree in history from Vanderbilt University.

    http://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/articles/11710/azerbaijan-iran-tensions-resurrect-long-term-disputes

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