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Azerbaijan is transforming into a mini-Russia

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  • Azerbaijan is transforming into a mini-Russia

    Azerbaijan is transforming into a mini-Russia
    By Ronan Keenan
    Feb. 26, 2015


    The West's renewed difficulties with Russia have once again
    highlighted the importance of cutting resource-dependency on
    antagonistic states. No one can disagree that Europe surely must find
    alternative sources of natural gas. And it is vital that the US
    establish strong links with former Soviet republics. Accordingly, the
    US and Europe have turned to Azerbaijan as an ideal diversifier to
    Russia. The young nation has abundant energy resources and a highly
    strategic geographic location'wedged between Russia and Iran.

    But it turns out there are plenty of reasons to be uneasy about the
    West's blossoming relationship with Azerbaijan. Political repression
    and antagonism toward weaker neighbors make the nation seem like a
    miniature Russia. Yet aside from empty rhetoric, there is little
    evidence that the US or Europe will slow their courtship of president
    Ilham Aliyev and his authoritarian regime.

    Azerbaijan's aspirations for global prominence are abundantly clear.
    Three flame-shaped towers dominate the skyline of the capital, Baku,
    each outfitted in sparkling orange-and-blue-tinted glass. On the
    highway to the airport, foreign businessmen are transported by
    black-cab taxis imported from London. The nation's leadership want
    Baku to be a magnet for global investment, and over its short history,
    it has shown an ability to prosper in a world of decentralized global
    order.

    Yet, just a couple hundred miles west of the glittering capital,
    things are not so glamorous. For nearly 30 years, the mountainous
    terrain of the autonomous Nagorno-Karabakh Republic has been a scene
    of dire hostility. Legally part of Azerbaijan, the territory has been
    governed by ethnic Armenians since a war of secession, stoked by
    neighboring Armenia, broke out in the late 1980s. While a 1994
    ceasefire is technically still in place, skirmishes along the border
    with Azerbaijan proper are common, and tensions between the two
    nations have been steadily escalating of late. In July of 2014, border
    violence reached an all-time high since 1994, leaving eight
    Azerbaijani and two Armenian soldiers dead, according to Reuters; and
    both nations pointing fingers as to who violated the ceasefire first.

    In January, the mediating Organization for Security and Co-operation
    in Europe, or Minsk Group, headed by France, Russia and the United
    States, called for a bilateral de-escalation and ordered Azerbaijan to
    honor its commitments to a peaceful resolution of the conflict. Aliyev
    bit back, demanding that `measures must be taken' by the Minsk Group
    to push Armenia out of the territory'saber rattling that no doubt
    irritated the Russians, who maintain a mutual defense agreement with
    the Armenians.

    Nagorno-Karabakh has been just one of several cases in which an
    increasingly assertive Azerbaijan has upset both its neighbors and the
    West. The country's burgeoning confidence and geopolitically strategic
    importance means that such trends are likely to continue, with little
    retort from the US or Europe.

    Much of Azerbaijan's ascendance'both in concrete and self-proclaimed
    terms'can be attributed to an incredibly dynamic economy. Between 2006
    and 2008, it was the fastest growing in the world, expanding at an
    average annual rate of 28%'inspiring massive foreign investment,
    capped off by the launch of a Condé Nast glossy. Expansion has since
    remained relatively robust, helped by large oil and gas reserves in
    the Caspian Sea. However, with about half of the economy reliant on
    oil exports, the 50% fall in prices over the past seven months will
    inflict a significant drag on growth. Estimates generally indicate
    that the economy increased just 4% last year, and a similar figure is
    expected for 2015.

    Strengthening political and economic relations with China and
    increased focus on gas should help boost revenue in future years, but
    the near-term sharp deterioration in growth could could provoke
    disquiet in a population defined by starkly contrasting levels of
    income inequality.

    But Aliyev has a number of tools at his disposal for effectively
    neutralizing criticism. First, there's the State Oil Fund of the
    Republic of Azerbaijan (SOFAZ), which is a $40 billion
    sovereign-wealth fund that the government has been using to fill gaps
    in the annual budget, sometimes accounting for more than half of
    government revenue. Such use of the fund should help ease the impact
    of declining oil income over the short-term.

    The second tool, which has been more frequently employed since
    Aliyev's reelection in 2013, involves summary crackdowns on all signs
    of dissent. Azerbaijan's growing middle class has become increasingly
    attuned to the behavior of elected leadership, particularly signs of
    corruption, and repression of political opposition. Aliyev's response
    to criticism has involved arresting investigative journalists and
    civil-society activists, in addition to targeting NGOs that promote
    democracy, including the US-funded International Research and
    Exchanges Board (IREX). The most newsworthy recent instance was the
    Dec. 26 raid on the local bureau of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
    (RFE/RL), a US government-funded news service.

    Aliyev showed little regard for ensuing international criticism. In
    September, the European Parliament adopted a resolution condemning
    human-rights offenses in the country. Azerbaijan responded that, `if
    this attitude continues, Azerbaijan will be forced to once again
    discuss cooperation with the European Parliament.' Perhaps most
    egregious, the raid on RFE/RL came several days after John Kerry spoke
    with Aliyev by telephone, beseeching the leader to ease his
    suppressive tactics. Clearly, Kerry's words went unheeded.

    In recent weeks, there have been more calls from within the EU and US
    for sanctions against Aliyev and his regime. But the likelihood of any
    actual reprisals is remote.

    This is because condemnation from the US and Europe carries little
    weight in Baku. Azerbaijani leadership knows it has something
    Europeans need. Gas imports from Azerbaijan took on new significance
    in 2014 as Europe sought to dampen reliance on Russia. A $45 billion
    Shah Deniz II gas field project will allow Azerbaijan to at least
    double gas exports by 2020, and correspondingly increase its role in
    European markets by a substantial margin. While Azerbaijani gas will
    probably meet only 2% of European demand over the next several years,
    a further deterioration in relations with the Kremlin could see a
    swift escalation in dependence on Azerbaijan's resources. Moreover,
    the US will be reliant on Azerbaijan as a key transit point when it
    transports troops out of Afghanistan.

    Notably, Azerbaijan has been unafraid of rankling its more powerful
    neighbors'Russia and Iran; a trend that has proven attractive to
    Western interests for obvious reasons. The country has angered Iran by
    allegedly allowing Israel access to bases near the Iranian border.
    Additionally, along with Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, it has been in
    dispute with Russia and Iran for more than 20 years over maritime
    boundaries in the Caspian Sea. And when it came to a 2012 United
    Nations resolution condemning the actions of the Assad regime against
    Syrian revolutionaries, Azerbaijan sided with the US, and against a
    vocally pro-Assad Russia and Iran.

    But a special affinity for taking jabs at Putin or the Ayatollah does
    not make Azerbaijan an unquestioning doormat to Western interest. In a
    short letter to The Wall Street Journal published in early January,
    the Azerbaijani ambassador to the US, Elin Suleymanov, claimed that
    criticism of the country's handling of the RFE/RL case was an
    `ideological misinformation campaign.' He added that `financial
    mismanagement' spurred an investigation into RFE/RL, but did not say
    why that somehow warranted a raid. The letter also denied that
    world-renowned Azerbaijani human-rights activist, Leyla Yunus, was
    suffering from ill health while governmental detention, and did not
    explain why she was arrested in the first place.

    Other methods to deflect negative attention have been more subtle, but
    nonetheless disreputable. Last September, The New York Times revealed
    that, in 2012, Azerbaijan's government hired a Washington, DC-based
    public relations and lobbying firm with the purpose of expanding its
    relationships with US thinktanks'an effort to bolster public opinion
    of the republic and highlight its important role as a security partner
    in a notoriously fraught region. Former British prime minister Tony
    Blair has led a highly criticized public-relations campaign on behalf
    of the country.

    Such audacity has so far been tacitly encouraged. On January 20,
    Germany welcomed Aliyev for a two-day visit that concluded with a
    meeting with chancellor Angela Merkel. Issues of human rights and
    Nagorno-Karabakh were treated with benign, almost sympathetic
    language, and the German leader instead focused on the practicalities
    of energy security. Merkel noted the growing role that Azerbaijan
    plays in Europe's energy-sourcing, and added that Germany intends to
    further develop relations between the two nations. Merkel cannot be
    blamed for focusing on the German national interest. In a world where
    Western influence is in decline, domestic issues take precedence.

    Azerbaijan's ability to profit from a growing uncertainty of global
    order looks set to continue for now. However, relying
    disproportionately on the energy sector for economic growth, stifling
    the middle class, and behaving like an indiscriminate gadfly toward
    large powers are not viable strategies for long-term stability. It
    seems that Aliyev is modeling himself on Vladimir Putin, despite
    frequently butting heads with the Russian leader. One would think
    that, should it continue to mirror the repressive policies of its
    bearish neighbor, Baku would be subject to the same level of
    international pushback as Moscow. But, for the time being, Mr. Aliyev
    will get away with what he can.


    http://qz.com/348771/azerbaijan-is-transforming-into-a-mini-russia/

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