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In Muslim Azerbaijan, Self-Interest Prompts Support For Israel On Ga

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  • In Muslim Azerbaijan, Self-Interest Prompts Support For Israel On Ga

    IN MUSLIM AZERBAIJAN, SELF-INTEREST PROMPTS SUPPORT FOR ISRAEL ON GAZA

    Value Walk
    Aug 7 2014

    by EurasiaNet
    August 07, 2014, 3:52 pm

    In Muslim Azerbaijan, Self-Interest Prompts Support for Israel on Gaza
    by Eurasianet.org

    The Facebook photo showing a hand holding an Azerbaijani passport
    came with a simple message: "I stand with Israel." For a majority
    Shi'a Muslim country, that may not be an expected position to take
    on the conflict in Gaza between Israel and Palestinians; a struggle
    that has left hundreds of civilians dead or displaced since July. But
    for many Azerbaijanis, the matter is a question of pragmatism.

    "Israel supports Azerbaijan internationally and it is our strategic
    partner," elaborated Araz Behbudov, a 25-year-old accountant from
    the Azerbaijani capital, Baku. "A strategic partnership comes before
    everything, and we should give it priority."

    Proof of that partnership lies in the numbers. Israel gets well
    over a third of its oil supplies from energy-rich Azerbaijan, and
    ranks as a top trade partner. Israel itself has become a critical
    arms supplier for the South-Caucasus country. In 2012, it agreed to
    sell $1.6-billion-worth of anti-aircraft and missile defense systems
    to Azerbaijan.

    The unlikely duo's ties date back to the early 1990s, when Azerbaijan,
    having regained its independence after the collapse of the Soviet
    Union, was struggling bitterly with Armenia and ethnic Armenian
    separatists over breakaway Nagorno Karabakh. In 1992, Israel was
    among the first countries to recognize Azerbaijan's independence.

    Officially, Baku has expressed support for a peaceful resolution
    of the Gaza conflict and for the peaceful creation of a "sovereign
    Palestinian state..."

    But maintaining friendly ties with Israel, whose main ally is the
    United States, is seen by many Azerbaijanis as a surer way to gain
    access in Washington.

    Politicians, for instance, tend to credit American Jewish organizations
    for the lobbying that resulted in a 2002 executive waiver of Section
    907 of the 1992 Freedom Support Act, a measure that had banned US
    aid to Azerbaijan because of the war in Karabakh.

    For all these reasons, Azerbaijan cannot afford not to support Israel
    now, reasoned Erkin Gadirli, a board member of the opposition movement
    Republican Alternative.

    "The American Jewish lobby is necessary to neutralize the Armenian
    lobby in the US," Gadirli claimed, in reference to the ongoing fight
    with Armenia over Karabakh. "Azerbaijanis also need Israel to stay
    strong against threats coming from Iran and the Middle East," he
    said, speaking of Islamic terrorism. "Unfortunately, we cannot act
    now based on universal human-rights values."

    But at the same time, Baku has domestic reasons for its support of
    Israel as well. Azerbaijan is home to roughly 10,000 ethnic Jews,
    according to official data; most live in the district of Krasnaya
    Sloboda (Red Settlement) in the northern region of Guba. In general,
    their ties with their Muslim neighbors are strong, with no reported
    clashes or cases of discrimination.

    Despite that background, however, some observers believe that, amidst
    a revival in Azerbaijan's Islamic heritage, disapproval of Israel
    has started to increase since its attacks on Gaza began in July.

    "It was the first time I observed serious solidarity in public
    opinion about attacks on Gaza, both in traditional and social media,"
    commented Haci Ilqar Ibrahimoglu, an imam and the chairperson of the
    Centre for the Protection of Freedom of Conscience and Religion.

    But other public displays of that disapproval have fallen short. On
    July 25, the banned Islamic Party of Azerbaijan attempted to organize
    a protest in front of the Israeli embassy in Baku, but was prevented
    by police.

    Last month, some Baku supermarkets also decided to stop selling
    Coca-Cola products from a mistaken belief that the American company
    is Israeli-owned. One popular newspaper columnist, Zamin Haji, put a
    dent in this notion, though, by pointing out that Coca-Cola Company
    Chief Executive Officer Muhtar Kent is of Turkish descent. The boycott,
    heavily ridiculed on social media, eventually was dropped.

    But the online support for Israel also reflects a relatively grim
    side of Azerbaijani society - the government's heavy influence on
    news outlets, both online and offline.

    "Because of the government's close relationship with Israel, the
    media covers only positive stuff and ignores anything that can
    damage the image of Israel," noted Orkhan Gafarli, an Azerbaijani
    analyst on Eurasia at the Istanbul think tank Bilge Adamlar Stratejik
    Ara?t?rmalar Merkezi. "Most Azerbaijanis do not have a chance to get
    [other] news about Gaza."

    While opposition and independent news outlets exist, television,
    the most powerful medium in Azerbaijan, is under state influence or
    control. Eighty-eight percent of 1,988 Azerbaijani respondents in
    a 2013 survey by the Caucasus Research Resource Centers stated that
    they believe TV news coverage is reliable.

    Even those who turn to online foreign media for alternative news
    about Gaza still have a tendency to back Israel, continued Gafarli.

    "They strongly believe that supporting Israel is part of Western
    identity, no matter whether Israel acts fairly or not," he said.

    Laying claim to that identity, however imperfectly understood,
    appears ever more desirable for many Azerbaijanis.

    Over the past few years, scores of male Azerbaijanis are reported to
    have headed to Syria to wage jihad against Syrian President Bashar
    al-Assad. Supporting Gaza, ruled by Hamas, internationally seen as
    a terrorist organization, only would encourage that trend, argued
    43-year-old Surkhan Latifov.

    "It is all about serious terrorism in the region ... It can transfer
    to Azerbaijan at any time."

    "Azerbaijan is a secular state based on democratic principles,"
    concluded 25-year-old Anar Masimli, an Azerbaijani student at the
    University of Flensburg in Germany. "In the Middle East, only Turkey
    and Israel share the same values. That is why I support Israel."

    Editor's note:

    Shahla Sultanova is a freelance journalist focusing on Azerbaijan.

    https://www.valuewalk.com/2014/08/azerbaijan-israel-gaza/

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