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U.S. Jewish Groups Back Azerbaijan Despite Rights Concerns

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  • U.S. Jewish Groups Back Azerbaijan Despite Rights Concerns

    U.S. JEWISH GROUPS BACK AZERBAIJAN DESPITE RIGHTS CONCERNS

    RFE

    WASHINGTON -- Azerbaijan has long lauded its relations with pro-Israeli
    groups that advocate on its behalf in Washington, a bond rooted in
    Tel Aviv's rapport with the former Soviet republic that touts itself
    as a haven for the Jewish people in the Muslim world.

    And amid mounting international criticism of Azerbaijan's human
    rights record, U.S.-based Jewish organizations are standing firm in
    their support of Baku, which they see as a linchpin of stability in
    a region replete with governments hostile to Israel.

    "Our message is clear and consistent: Azerbaijan is an important
    strategic partner for the United States and the West, as well as
    a valued friend of Israel and the Jewish people," American Jewish
    Committee (AJC) executive director David Harris last week following
    a meeting in Baku with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

    "In an increasingly turbulent world, Azerbaijan's contributions to
    regional stability, energy security, counterterrorism operations,
    and religious tolerance are all things to be valued," Harris added.

    The 75-minute private meeting on February 2 followed a flurry of
    recent public relations activities in Washington to highlight Baku's
    public embrace of its Jewish population and strategic ties with Israel.

    These efforts are part a broader lobbying campaign by oil-rich
    Azerbaijan to bolster its credibility as an important strategic partner
    with the United States on issues such as energy, counterterrorism,
    and Russia's annexation of Ukraine's Crimea territory in March 2014.

    At the same time, Western officials say the human rights situation
    has deteriorated precipitously in Azerbaijan, where numerous rights
    activists, journalists, and government critics have been arrested in
    the past year.

    Speaking at a January 30 panel discussion in Washington, Samad
    Seyidov, chairman of the international and interparliamentary
    relations committee in the Azerbaijani parliament, swiftly pivoted
    to his country's friendly record toward Judaism and other religions
    in response to a question about alleged human rights abuses committed
    by the government.

    "I wanted to remind you that in Azerbaijan today, Jewish people and
    Azerbaijani people, Muslim people and Christians, they are living
    in peace," Seyidov said, adding that Azerbaijan has a Jewish member
    of parliament.

    Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov lays a wreath during
    a ceremony in the Hall of Remembrance at the Yad Vashem Holocaust
    memorial in Jerusalem in 2013.

    Kenneth Bandler, a spokesman for the AJC, said in e-mailed comments
    that the issue of human rights "did come up" at the organization's
    recent meetings in Baku, but he declined to provide further details,
    citing the "private" nature of the conversations.

    Azerbaijan's Jewish population totals more than 9,000, according to
    the country's most recent census in 2009, though other estimates have
    put that figure as high as 30,000. The nation of around 9 million
    people is also home to several synagogues.

    Azerbaijan has made no secret that it values U.S.-based Jewish
    organizations as a key lobbying lever in Washington ever since Baku
    and Tel Aviv began cultivating ties the 1990s -- a rapprochement
    widely seen as aimed at countering Iran's influence in the region.

    In 2000, then-Azerbaijani President Heydar Aliyev "for acting in our
    favor" by trying to persuade U.S. lawmakers to repeal a 1992 ban on
    direct aid to Baku due to its conflict with Armenia over the disputed
    region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    A 2006 quoted an Azerbaijani Embassy official in Washington as saying
    that "Jewish organizations made a certain contribution" to a U.S.

    waiver on the embargo enacted after the September 11, 2001, terrorist
    attacks as Washington sought Baku's help for counterterrorism
    operations in Afghanistan.

    Azerbaijan's outreach to Jewish groups in the United States continues
    as part of a lobbying campaign that it has ramped up in Washington
    in recent years.

    U.S. Foreign Agent Registration Act filings show that the Podesta
    Group, a lobbying firm that Azerbaijan pays $60,000 per month,
    contacted pro-Israel advocacy groups such as the America Israel
    Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and the Jewish Institute for National
    Security Affairs in the second half of 2014.

    The Podesta Group declined to comment when contacted by RFE/RL.

    Meanwhile, Azerbaijan's partnership with Israel -- which includes
    energy and arms trade greatly valued by both sides -- was highlighted
    in several op-eds in Washington newspapers in recent months.

    In November, the Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call published co-authored
    by Mark Levin, executive director of the Washington-based National
    Coalition Supporting Eurasian Jewry, titled Muslim Azerbaijan:
    Bucking The Anti-Semitic Trend In Europe.

    "With a new Congress taking shape, now is the time for Congress' many
    friends of Israel to learn more about Azerbaijan.... Once they do,
    they will see that Azerbaijan is an example for other countries to
    follow with respect to supporting Israel," wrote Levin.

    The Washington Times ran a sponsored article on January 28 titled
    Azerbaijan's Rich History With Jewish Settlers Opened Door To Israel
    Alliance."

    The same day, it published by former U.S. Congressman Dan Burton,
    who serves as chairman of the Azerbaijan America Alliance. In the
    piece, Burton calls Azerbaijan a "strong defense and economic partner
    to Israel" and quotes Israel's ambassador in Baku as saying that
    "tolerance in Azerbaijan is an example to the entire world."

    Media reporter that Burton's position with the Azerbaijan America
    Alliance was omitted from the original piece. The Washington Times
    later updated the op-ed to include the affiliation.

    While senior U.S. officials and lawmakers have criticized Azerbaijan
    for what they call a crackdown on critics, including the jailing of
    independent investigative journalist and RFE/RL contributor Khadija
    Ismayilova, leading American Jewish groups have portrayed Baku's
    rights record as a symptom of democratic growing pains.

    "Full democracy and transparency can take decades to develop," Harris
    of the AJC was as saying in December. "And if these were the sole
    litmus tests for foreign relations, then both the U.S. and Israel
    would have far fewer partners."

    Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice chairman of the Conference of
    Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, that continued
    rapprochement between Baku and Jewish communities could be an effective
    approach to improving human rights in Azerbaijan.

    "Countries that have demonstrated friendship to their Jewish
    communities -- even though their records on human rights issues and
    other things are not perfect, and we know that -- we have to try
    to encourage them to change, but at the same time to recognize the
    progress that has been made and the importance of the relationship
    with them," Hoenlein told the news agency.

    Richard Kauzlarich, a former U.S. ambassador to Baku, said Azerbaijan's
    tolerance toward Jewish communities is indeed a positive and a "good
    example" to the rest of the Muslim world.

    At the same time, Azerbaijan's official message "has gotten more
    developed in terms of trying to deflect some of the questions that are
    obviously difficult to answer," such as human rights, added Kauzlarich.

    "Pointing to this, religious tolerance for them is another plus in
    the dialogue on things like human rights, which aren't as pleasant,"
    he said.

    http://www.bignewsnetwork.com/index.php/sid/230247267

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