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  • Iran suggests military alliance established

    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    February 20, 2008 Wednesday


    IRAN SUGGESTS MILITARY ALLIANCE ESTABLISHED;
    Azerbaijani experts do not think that Baku should swallow it

    by Safarov, Aliyev

    IRAN SUGGESTS A REGIONAL MILITARY ALLIANCE; Iran suggests a broad
    military alliance of 25 countries.




    IRNA reports that Iranian Prosecutor General Gurban Ali Dorri
    Najafabadi suggested establishment of a regional military alliance
    for the purpose of collective defense from foreign aggression. The
    idea is to unite 25 countries - Kazakhstan, Islamic Republic of Iran,
    Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Turkey, Afghanistan, Yemen, Turkmenistan,
    Uzbekistan, Iraq, Oman, Kyrgyzstan, Syria, Tajikistan, Jordan,
    Azerbaijan, United Arab Emirates, Georgia, Armenia, Palestine,
    Kuwait, Qatar, Lebanon, Cyprus, and Bahrain.

    "A powerful military alliance in the region will discourage
    foreigners from ever trying to meddle in the domestic affairs of
    these countries," Najafabadi said. He added that the special
    geopolitical status of the region made these efforts on external
    forces' part inevitable. The Iranian executive also suggested
    establishment of the regional parliament and non-governmental
    organizations. For some reason, the idea was broached by prosecutor
    general, an official who is supposed to see to law and order in his
    respective country and not to the existence of regional parliaments
    much less military alliances.

    Press Secretary of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry, Hazar Ibragim,
    denied the existence of any formal proposals from Iran. "No comments
    before official documents are received," he said. Rauf Rajabov of 3rd
    View agency in the meantime warns Baku against joining any such
    alliances. "Moreover, Azerbaijan has already chosen its immediate
    future, and that means an integration into Europe," Rajabov said.
    "Integration into European structures will undoubtedly involve
    integration into NATO."

    "As for this particular suggestion, and particularly one made by
    Iranian prosecutor general, it is only a feeler, an attempt to gauge
    the reaction, analyze comments, and so on. Along with the nuclear
    umbrella, Iran also aspires for a military-political shield in the
    form of membership in a military alliance. Tehran once hoped that the
    Shanghai Cooperation Organization could be it, but China wouldn't
    have the structure transformed into a military-political alliance.
    Iran was forced to explore other avenues... All in all, what it
    suggests comes down to establishment of an alliance against the
    United States, Great Britain, France, and Germany that admit nowadays
    that chances of a peaceful solution to the Iranian nuclear program
    diminish fast. The situation being what it is, Iran wants an alliance
    with its neighbors that will spare it whatever the United States and
    its allies may undertake," the expert continued. Rajabov does not
    even expect Persian Gulf countries to take Tehran's offer seriously.
    "Not one of them will go for it," he said. "This offer stems from
    Iran's imperial ambitions. It is how Iran is trying to avert a
    military operation possible this May."

    Fikret Sadykhov, the head of the Center for Analysis and
    International Contacts, was surprised to hear what Iran suggests.
    "What is surprising about it all is that we are urged to join an
    alliance in order to protect ourselves and our territorial integrity
    >From nobody knows whom. Say, Armenia, who still has some Azerbaijani
    territories, is an ally of Iran, a country whose official invites us
    into an alliance," Sadykhov said. "Moreover, it is impossible for
    Azerbaijan to go for it because we've been integrate into European
    and international structures for years, because we've been embracing
    European values in the spheres of education, culture, and so on. I do
    not think that any such proposal will attract Azerbaijan."

    Neither does Sadykhov expect countries of the Persian Gulf and
    Central Asia to accept or act on the idea. "Kuwait is thoroughly
    pro-American and pro-Western. And so is Oman which is the West's
    ally. Ditto the Central Asian region. President of Uzbekistan, Islam
    Karimov, has set him certain priorities and they will certainly
    prevent him joining the project... Or Kazakhstan, by the way, a
    country that has numerous contracts with Western and American oil
    corporations. It will never join a military alliance established as a
    means of defense from the American threat. I'm convinced that this is
    exactly what the Iranian offer comes down to," Sadykhov said.

    Source: Ekho (Baku), February 15, 2008, EV

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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