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Obama To Tackle "Serious Issues" With Azerbaijan

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  • Obama To Tackle "Serious Issues" With Azerbaijan

    OBAMA TO TACKLE "SERIOUS ISSUES" WITH AZERBAIJAN

    Reuters
    June 7 2010

    BAKU (Reuters) - President Barack Obama promised in a letter
    released on Monday to tackle "serious issues" straining relations
    with Azerbaijan, an important link in Afghan supply lines and energy
    export routes to the West.

    Politics | Barack Obama

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates handed Obama's letter to President
    Ilham Aliyev during a visit meant to ease tensions with the oil-rich
    Caspian Sea country, strategically located between Russia and Iran.

    A U.S.-backed push for a historic rapprochement between Azerbaijan's
    foe Armenia and its historic ally Turkey has damaged ties between
    Washington and Azerbaijan, which worries its interests will be damaged
    by the reconciliation efforts.

    Baku in April accused the United States of siding with Armenia over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory that has been under ethnic Armenian
    control since a 1994 ceasefire in a war, and threatened to "reconsider"
    its relationship with Washington.

    "I am aware of the fact that there are serious issues in our
    relationship, but I am confident that we can address them," Obama
    wrote in the letter delivered on Sunday by Gates, the most senior U.S.

    official to visit Azerbaijan since Obama took office in January 2009.

    On the plane leaving Azerbaijan on Monday, Gates said his visit
    "set the stage for further expansion of the relationship."

    In the letter, Obama praised Azerbaijan for sending military personnel
    to serve in Afghanistan and opening its land and air space to help
    resupply U.S. and NATO forces there.

    Since 2001, tens of thousands of military aircraft and supply trucks
    have crossed the country carrying U.S. and NATO forces and equipment
    to Afghanistan. The Pentagon wants to avoid problems that could slow
    Obama's 30,000-troop surge.

    "These guys clearly live in a rough neighborhood and I told them ...

    how much the international community appreciated what they were doing
    to help everybody in Afghanistan," Gates said.

    He told reporters on his plane that he and Azerbaijan's leadership
    had discussed ways to expand military-to-military relations, including
    exercises and intelligence sharing.

    Azerbaijan is also a significant oil producer and hub on a route for
    Central Asia and Caspian Sea energy to Europe, bypassing Russia to
    the north and Iran to the south.

    "Azerbaijan's leadership in the development for a Southern Corridor
    for energy has also increased regional prosperity and enhanced global
    energy security," Obama wrote.

    "It is my hope that we will be able to broaden and deepen our
    relationship in the months and years ahead."

    Obama praised Azerbaijan's commitment to a continuing effort to
    resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, mediated by the United States,
    Russia and France, and warned against using force.

    "I ... believe that a peaceful resolution to the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict is essential for the long-term stability of the South Caucasus
    region, and support for this outcome will remain a priority for the
    United States."

    Azerbaijan has built up its military and repeatedly warned it would
    have to resort to force to reclaim control over Nagorno-Karabakh if
    the dispute is not resolved.

    The United States has expressed concern over Azerbaijan's human rights
    record in the past. Obama did not mention human rights in the letter,
    which called for closer cooperation "in the interest of regional
    security, democracy and prosperity."

    (Additional reporting by Steve Gutterman in Moscow; Editing by Mark
    Heinrich)




    From: A. Papazian
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