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Talking Donkeys, Ramadan With Barack, And Our "One True Friend"

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  • Talking Donkeys, Ramadan With Barack, And Our "One True Friend"

    TALKING DONKEYS, RAMADAN WITH BARACK, AND OUR "ONE TRUE FRIEND"

    Atlantic Online
    http://correspondents.theatlantic.com/lisa_margon elli/2009/09/talking_donkeys_ramadan_with_barack_a nd_our_one_true_friend.php
    Sept 2 2009

    This morning, Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry whined that its U.S
    .ambassador was invited to Hilary Clinton's post-Ramadan feast but
    NOT Barack Obama's. Azerbaijan has been described as America's "one
    true friend" on the Caspian, a key ally in the thing formerly known
    as the "war on terror," a major player in the U.S.-backed Baku Ceyhan
    Tiblisi oil pipeline and BTE gas line, as well as the most important
    "undecided" in the potential Nabucco pipeline, which is supposed to
    break Russia's ability to control European gas supplies at whim. Is
    there trouble in the friendship? The experiences of a talking donkey
    suggest that there is.

    For the U.S., Azerbaijan--with its Russian, Georgian, Turkish, and
    Iranian borders--has been too small and too strategic to fail. One
    member of the country's beleaguered opposition told me that from the
    Azeri perspective the fall of the Soviet Union just moved the Politburo
    from Moscow to Washington, which stepped in to provide security
    guarantees, asking for pipelines and influence in return. One cost of
    that friendship was that Azerbaijan wasn't much of a democracy. In its
    short modern history of the country, the State Department runs out of
    euphemisms for lousy elections before mentioning that the country's
    parliament abolished presidential term limits in March of this year.

    Despite that, President Aliyev (son of the previous President
    Aliyev. Ahem.) appears to feel awfully insecure and is now engaging
    in a crackdown on trivialities. Security forces recently arrested
    two so-called "donkey bloggers" for posting on Youtube a donkey
    answering questions at a fake press conference and praising the
    government for its treatment of donkeys. Last month, state security
    services detained the 43 Azerbaijanis who dared vote by text message
    for an Armenian singing group in a Eurovision song contest. "When
    I was called to the MNS, I thought they were arresting me for the
    strong criticism of President Ilham Aliyev I'd written on Facebook. I
    had even forgotten that I'd voted for Armenia. When in the MNS they
    started to interrogate me about this, I almost burst out laughing,"
    said Rovshan Nasirli, who was called to the ministry on August
    12. "After they kept me for two hours in an empty room, two men came
    to me, saying they worked for the main department of the MNS. One
    had a list in his hand of all the people who voted for the Armenian
    entry, and their addresses. They said that people like me should be
    sent to prison. They said, 'Today you vote for an Armenian, tomorrow
    you will go to blow up the metro for them.'" Crackdowns can appear
    to reaffirm the power of an angry paranoid state in the short term,
    but in the long run they breed revolutions.

    There are other, less seemingly trivial, issues afoot in
    Azerbaijan. Recently, the country struck a deal to put some gas in
    Russia's pipeline. And after years of being the posterchild for
    the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative by publishing
    its national oil contracts, it made two deals without revealing
    the details.

    Beyond doling out Ramadan invites, I'm not sure that the U.S. has the
    attention, the strategic leeway, or the policy tools to ask more of
    Azerbaijan now. But as the relationships between Europe, the Caucuses,
    the Middle East, and Russia evolve, the U.S. is going to need more of
    all three. More importantly, we're going to need a more sophisticated
    sense of our own role in the world, and a more nuanced sense of just
    how important those pipelines are to us.
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