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Azerbaijan: Moscow Brings Pressure To Bear On Baku

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  • Azerbaijan: Moscow Brings Pressure To Bear On Baku

    AZERBAIJAN: MOSCOW BRINGS PRESSURE TO BEAR ON BAKU
    Stephen Blank

    EurasiaNet
    Nov 4 2008
    NY

    Aiming to build on its military success in Georgia, Russia is bringing
    pressure to bear on Azerbaijan. Moscow's intent is to coerce Baku
    into going along with the Kremlin's grand plan to remake the Caucasus'
    security and energy framework.

    Moscow's chief desire is to keep US and NATO influence in the region to
    a minimum, and even eliminate it altogether. With Georgia corralled and
    Armenia effectively in Moscow's pocket, it would seem that Azerbaijan
    now holds the key to the realization of the Kremlin's ambitions. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Baku's most sensitive pressure point is clearly the Nagorno-Karabakh
    issue, and, not surprisingly, that is where Russia is exerting the
    most force. As the November 2 talks in Moscow on the Karabakh issue
    underscored, the Kremlin has made it known that it will not tolerate
    any effort to settle the territorial dispute by force. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Russia's mediation efforts are
    clearly designed to be seen in Baku as an offer that Azerbaijani
    leaders cannot refuse.

    Moscow's insistence on the renunciation of possible use of force --
    a concept endorsed in a declaration signed by both Armenian President
    Serzh Sargsyan and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev on November
    2 -- has the effect of severely limiting Baku's options. Of course,
    Moscow's opposition to the use of force can be justified for many
    reasons, but it also is probably the only way Baku could ever stand
    a realistic chance of recovering its lost lands. All of this means
    that Russia has imposed limits on Azerbaijan's negotiating position,
    leaving Baku in an extremely disadvantageous position.

    Since key issues in the Karabakh peace process have yet to be resolved
    -- namely the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, possession of the Lachin
    corridor and the deployment of peacekeeping forces -- the results
    of the Moscow summit could cause other issues that were agreed upon
    earlier to be reopened. Ultimately, it probably does not matter much
    to Russia how the outstanding issues are decided, as an open-ended
    peace process serves Moscow's purpose, giving the Kremlin a lever
    with which it can exert influence on both Yerevan and Baku.

    Moscow's pressure on Baku does not end with the Karabakh issue. Reports
    have circulated that Moscow wants a military base in Azerbaijan
    -- i.e. an expanded presence for a longer duration at the Qabala
    air defense base -- and also a stronger position in Azerbaijan's
    economy. In particular, Russia is eager to integrate Azerbaijan into
    the Kremlin's Caspian energy framework. This objective has taken
    on an added sense of urgency because Russia, Iran, and Qatar are
    now seriously exploring the creation of a natural gas cartel, and
    because Turkmenistan's gas fields have been shown to be of world-class
    size. Azerbaijan, another major gas producer in the Caspian Basin,
    is the only holdout that is preventing Russia from monopolizing
    trans-Caspian energy flows to Europe.

    Moscow apparently will not be satisfied unless it can achieve a
    controlling interest over Baku's security orientation. This would
    involve arms sales, the training of officers, close participation
    in the drafting of Azerbaijan's national security concept, and the
    reformulation of military doctrine all in a way that would promote
    Baku's closer cooperation with the Moscow-dominated Collective
    Security Treaty Organization, as well as with the newly proposed
    Caspian Economic Cooperation. Obviously, the key prize here is
    the redirecting of Azeri energy flows through Russian pipelines to
    effectively render the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline strategically
    meaningless. During the Russian-Georgian war, Baku, acting prudently,
    redirected some of its energy flows from the BTC route to Russian
    installations. Moscow now wants to make this shift permanent.

    It is clear that the sum total of all these Russian initiatives
    is to circumscribe Azerbaijan's sovereignty and bring Baku fully
    under Moscow's sphere of influence, as envisioned by President
    Dmitry Medvedev on August 31. Such policies fit well with Moscow's
    long-standing efforts to integrate CIS states into the various
    organizations that the Kremlin controls, and which seek to exclude
    Westerns states from the Caucasus and Central Asia.

    What should be of particular concern to policymakers in Washington
    and in European capitals, especially Berlin, is the Kremlin's naked
    desire to undermine the foundations of Azerbaijan's sovereignty and,
    indeed, the sovereignty of every other government in the CIS. Russian
    pressure will undoubtedly continue, and likely grow more intense, in
    the absence of a coherent Western response. It is imperative in the
    coming weeks and months for the United States and the European Union
    to adopt a united position that shows leaders in Baku and elsewhere
    in the Caspian Basin that when it comes to relations with Russia,
    they are not on their own.

    Editor's Note: Stephen Blank is a professor at the US Army War
    College. The views expressed this article do not in any way represent
    the views of the US Army, Defense Department or the US Government.
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