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Azerbaijan Blackmails Region Again

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  • Azerbaijan Blackmails Region Again

    AZERBAIJAN BLACKMAILS REGION AGAIN

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/
    21.05.2009 23:51 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Over the past few weeks, energy-rich Azerbaijan has
    turned up the flame under this geographic cauldron. It was furious
    with Turkey for agreeing in April to a "road map" to normal relations
    with Armenia, which backs Nagorno Karabakh, the site of a bloody war
    in the early 1990s after the Soviet empire broke up, and has since
    become the oldest "frozen conflict" in the south Caucasus, Christian
    Science Monitor reports.

    So Azerbaijan has used the only leverage it has - oil and gas - to
    influence Turkey. It's an influence that extends even to European
    energy goals.

    Unless the Turks make resolving Nagorno Karabakh part of normalizing
    ties with Armenia (and Armenia objects to this), the longer gas
    pipeline will end as a pipe dream - or so the Azeris hinted. They
    threatened to withdraw Turkey's status as "most favored customer"
    and as the main Azeri export route for oil and gas. There's Russia
    as an alternative, the Azeris warned.

    Azerbaijan has a self-interest in a diversified export energy
    market, but its overture to Russia is more than bluff. The Azeris and
    Russians recently signed a memo of understanding about gas sales. The
    concern is that this could go further and that Azerbaijan, fed up
    with delays over a gas pipeline to Europe, would make Russia its gas
    patron. Because supplies are not enough to support two gas pipelines,
    European governments are now pushing to realize their dream of a gas
    line that reaches them.

    If Russia eventually gets the gas deal, it not only locks in energy
    supplies, it also solidifies its leverage over the Caucasus.

    Multiple fears are at work in the Caucasus: at the local level about
    the preservation of ethnic culture, at the national level about
    territorial integrity, and at the international level about regional
    influence and access to energy markets.

    This calls for a sophisticated approach that seeks to build trust
    in all these areas. Earlier this month, international mediators
    for Nagorno Karabakh quietly brought the presidents of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan together to talk on the sidelines of a conference in
    Prague. In June, the two presidents are expected to meet again in
    Russia. These are positive steps.

    Last week, Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited
    Azerbaijan and Russia to try to reduce the simmering ethnic and energy
    tensions in the region. He made progress with Russian Prime Minister
    Vladimir Putin on a new north-south Russian-Turkish gas pipeline
    that would supply Israel and other countries. That, plus renewing
    a contract for Russian gas supplies to Turkey, should help reassure
    Moscow of its continued energy influence.

    But when Mr. Erdogan, on his visit to Azerbaijan, gave in to the
    demand that Turkey not reopen its borders with Armenia until Nagorno
    Karabakh is resolved, he reignited flames in Armenia. Some speculate
    that the normalization process is now at risk.

    This region is too small, the stakes too high, to separate politics
    from energy. Both will have to be handled at the same time, if perhaps
    on different tracks, the article says.
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