Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: 'Turkish-Azeri military relationship is unique'

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

  • ANKARA: 'Turkish-Azeri military relationship is unique'

    'Turkish-Azeri military relationship is unique'

    Wednesday, May 18, 2005
    ANKARA - Turkish Daiy News

    DIPLOMACY

    'Azerbaijan is the number-one country for us from all points of view,'
    says deputy chief of staff of the Turkish General Staff Gen. Ilker
    Basbug


    Relations with Azerbaijan have major importance for Turkey, Gen.

    Ilker Basbug, the second in command at the Turkish General Staff,
    yesterday said upon his arrival in Baku.

    "Azerbaijan is the number-one country for us from all points of view,"
    Basbug said while expressing pleasure at being in Baku for the first
    time. He said military relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan have
    included a broad range of activities and that training is of particular
    importance in this regard.

    Turkey has been trying assist in the reconstruction of the Azerbaijani
    military, and Basbug said his visit would offer an opportunity for
    a discussion of ways to improve the current relationship between the
    two countries.

    "It is not possible to offer another example of our type of military
    relationship," the top Turkish commander said, emphasizing the
    uniqueness of Turkish-Azerbaijani military relations.

    He later met with Azerbaijan's defense minister, Safar Abiyev.

    During a March visit to Baku by the commander of Turkey's naval
    forces, Adm. Ozden Ornek, Turkey and Azerbaijan agreed to cooperate
    in protecting strategic oil and gas pipelines, including the major
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, which is set to begin operations
    this year.

    Abiyev then said in a statement that he hoped Turkey would remain
    on Azerbaijan's side in its long-standing conflict with Armenia
    over Nagorno-Karabakh. The disputed enclave has been under ethnic
    Armenian control since a war that ended in 1994 without a political
    settlement. He also called on Turkish officials to keep its border
    with Armenia closed, upon which Ornek vowed that Turkey would not
    open its border to Armenia.
Working...
X