Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Azerbaijan is stuck in geopolitical conundrum

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Azerbaijan is stuck in geopolitical conundrum

    The International Herald Tribune, France
    October 24, 2008 Friday



    Azerbaijan is stuck in geopolitical conundrum;
    It needs to co-exist with East and West

    by Sabrina Tavernise - The New York Times Media Group
    BAKU, Azerbaijan


    This country has always had tricky geography. To its north is
    Russia. To its south is Iran. And ever since the collapse of the
    Soviet Union it has looked west, inviting U.S. companies to develop
    its oil reserves and embracing NATO.

    But since Russia and Georgia fought a short war this summer, its path
    has narrowed.

    Azerbaijan, a small, oil-rich country on the Caspian Sea, has balanced
    the interests of Russia and the United States since it won its
    independence from the Soviet Union. It accepts NATO training but does
    not openly state an intention to join. U.S. planes can refuel on its
    territory, but U.S. soldiers cannot be based there.

    ''Azerbaijan is doing a dance between the West and Russia,'' said Isa
    Gambar, an Azerbaijani opposition figure. ''Until now, there was an
    unspoken consensus. Georgia was with the West, Armenia was an outpost
    of Russia, and Azerbaijan was in the middle.''

    But with the war in Georgia, Russia burst back into the region,
    humiliating Tbilisi and its sponsor, the United States, which issued
    angry statements but was powerless to stop the Russian advance. It was
    a sobering sight for former Soviet states, and one that is quite
    likely to cause countries like Azerbaijan to recalibrate their
    policies.

    ''The chess board has been tilted and the pieces are shifting into
    different places,'' said Paul Goble, a U.S. expert on the region who
    teaches at the Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy in Baku, the capital.

    ''What looked balanced before does not look balanced now,'' he added.

    A Western official, referring to Azerbaijan, said: ''Georgia was very
    much a wake-up call. This is what the Russians can do and are prepared
    to do. Georgia events underscored their vulnerability.''

    Azerbaijan will be under more pressure from Russia when undertaking
    energy contracts and pipeline routes that Russia opposes, said one
    Azerbaijani official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because
    of the sensitivity of the matter. Officials from the Russian gas
    monopoly, Gazprom, on a trip here in the spring, offered to buy
    Azerbaijani gas at European prices, rather than the former reduced
    rate. That offer, if the Azerbaijanis chose to accept it, could
    sabotage a Western-backed gas pipeline project called Nabucco.

    Rasim Musabayov, a political commentator in Baku, said that under the
    new conditions, many Azerbaijanis think that selling gas to Russia is
    not such a bad idea.

    New projects carry political risks, he said, and if Russia ''will pay
    us a price we agree on for our gas, why build something new?''

    ''You can't have a foreign policy that goes against your geography,''
    he added. ''We have to get along with the Russians and the Iranians.''

    After the fall of the Soviet Union, Russia was weak, with a collapsed
    economy and a scattered, inconsistent foreign policy.

    Azerbaijan used that to its advantage. Now Russia is stronger and
    speaks with one voice, and Azerbaijan has to be more careful in its
    relations with its big neighbor.

    Georgia is now so hostile to Russia that working with it as a partner
    in the region is increasingly difficult, said Borut Grgic, chairman of
    the Institute for Strategic Studies in Ljubljana, Slovenia, and an
    expert on Caspian energy infrastructure.

    ''Azerbaijan will never seek EU-NATO integration at the expense of
    functional and working relations with Russia,'' he said. The Georgian
    president, Mikheil Saakashvili, he said, ''is making this balance
    difficult to sustain.''

    At no point in the crisis did Azerbaijan take a position that would
    have made Moscow bristle. When the fighting began, Azerbaijan appealed
    to Russia, asking it to preserve its infrastructure in Georgia - a
    port, an oil terminal and a pipeline. Moscow agreed, according to the
    Azerbaijani foreign minister, Elmar Mammadyarov.

    Azerbaijan helped European diplomats enter Georgia while it was under
    attack, but when the leaders of Ukraine, the Baltics and Poland
    traveled to Tbilisi to express solidarity with the Georgians, the
    Azerbaijani president, Ilham Aliyev, did not make the trip. And after
    Vice President Dick Cheney visited Baku in September, Aliyev flew
    immediately to Moscow for talks with the Russians.

    But the issue closest to this country's heart is that of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, an area in its southwest where Armenian separatists
    formed an independent enclave in the 1990s. For years, Azerbaijan has
    tried, through international mediation, to reclaim the territory and
    allow Azerbaijani refugees who fled to return.

    Since the war this summer, the Russians seem to have grabbed the
    initiative. President Dmitri Medvedev, on a trip to Yerevan, Armenia,
    this week, said Russia was pushing for a meeting between the
    Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents.

    ''I hope such a meeting will take place in Russia,'' Medvedev said,
    Reuters reported.

    Russia has traditionally backed the Armenians, but times are changing.

    ''One of the positive effects of the Georgian crisis is that the
    Kremlin will try to show that they are not crazy guys,'' an
    Azerbaijani official said. ''That they can be good neighbors, too.''

    The Russian attitude toward Azerbaijan, one Azerbaijani official said,
    was that ''the U.S. has come to your country and is plundering your
    natural resources, but is not giving you any support. Why not go with
    us instead?''

    Cheney, on his visit to Baku, also pledged to redouble efforts,
    causing some Azerbaijanis to remark ruefully that it took him eight
    years to make the trip.

    Ali Hasanov, an official in the Azerbaijani presidential
    administration, said concrete progress would win many points in Baku.

    ''If a big country takes a position, stands on the side of unbroken
    territory, we will follow its interests,'' he said.
Working...
X