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Azerbaijan: Aliyev Keeps Baku's Options Open During Meeting With Med

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  • Azerbaijan: Aliyev Keeps Baku's Options Open During Meeting With Med

    AZERBAIJAN: ALIYEV KEEPS BAKU'S OPTIONS OPEN DURING MEETING WITH MEDVEDEV
    Shahin Abbasov

    EurasiaNet
    Sept 16 2008
    NY

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's visit to Moscow on September
    16 was notable mostly for what he did not say. Russia has
    pressed Azerbaijan to sell a large volume of natural gas to the
    Kremlin-controlled conglomerate Gazprom. But Aliyev and his Russian
    hosts did not announce a gas purchase deal following their talks.

    Aliyev met with President Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir
    Putin during his daylong stay in Moscow. Medvedev indicated that the
    discussions were merely informational. Azerbaijan has been a Western
    ally so far in the Caspian Basin energy game. [For background see
    the Eurasia Insight archive]. The Kremlin is trying hard to woo Baku
    away from the West. "We had to check positions taking into account
    problems which appeared in the Caucasus after Georgian aggression. I
    informed the Azerbaijani president about steps that Russia undertook
    to provide security in South Caucasus," Medvedev said. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Aliyev, like other regional leaders, is trying to avoid being backed
    into a situation where he would have to declare his preference for
    one side or the other. In Moscow, he was careful not to say anything
    that might offend Moscow. "There is necessity to consolidate efforts
    in order to provide peace and predictability," he said. "We need to
    diminish tension. All problems have to be solved peacefully."

    Aliyev avoided commenting generally on Georgian-Russian tension,
    and specifically refrained from any comments concerning Russia's
    decision to recognize the separatist territories of Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Baku's sensitivities are heightened by concern over its own separatist
    enclave, Nagorno-Karabakh. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive]. Some Azerbaijani officials are evidently concerned that if
    Baku expressed support for Georgia, then Azerbaijan's own efforts to
    regain control of Karabakh would suffer.

    During the Moscow visit, Russian officials reassured Aliyev that he
    need not be concerned about Karabakh - yet. Medvedev stressed that
    the Kremlin did not see a connection between Karabakh and Georgia's
    separatist entities. "Russia's position has not changed," Medvedev
    said, referring to the Karabakh peace process. "We also support
    continuation of direct talks between Azerbaijani and Armenian
    presidents."

    Neither Aliyev nor Medvedev touched on the possible Russian large-scale
    purchase of Azerbaijani gas. Experts in Baku believe that Aliyev's
    administration has yet to reach a decision on the matter, and is
    playing for time.

    On September 12, Elshad Nasirov, the vice president of Azerbaijan's
    State Oil Company (SOCAR), said that "Azerbaijan tries to fully
    depoliticize the issue of export destinations for "large gas"
    which is expected after 2013." According to Nasirov, Azerbaijan's
    choice will mostly depend on commercial factors. "All destinations
    [of gas export] are equally possible and we will mostly consider
    the net-profit for SOCAR and its partners," he said. Gazprom's is
    reportedly willing to pay Baku $300 per 1.000 cubic meters. Nasirov
    added that Western Europe, Russia and Iran all remain possible export
    destinations. He added that exports to Asia via Turkmenistan could
    become a fourth option.

    Aliyev and Medvedev also had no comment on a Turkish initiative to
    establish a "Caucasus platform for security and cooperation." That
    concept was raised by Turkish President Abdullah Gul during his
    recent visits to Yerevan and Baku. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    Reflecting on the visit, some Baku experts said they did not expect
    Baku to make up its mind on the gas-purchase question until after
    presidential elections in the fall. "Aliyev is hardly ready to answer
    these questions," said Rauf Mirgadirov, a political columnist for
    the Zerkalo newspaper, referring to the issues of gas purchases and
    Azerbaijan's security cooperation with the West.

    Indeed, to try to maintain room for maneuver, Baku continues to explore
    ties with NATO. Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov went
    to Brussels on September 16 to take part in discussions over NATO
    representatives. After that, he was scheduled to travel to London to
    meet with the British Foreign Minister David Miliband.

    Editor's Note: Shahin Abbasov is a freelance correspondent based
    in Baku.
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