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  • BAKU: US analyst dismisses reports of Azerbaijan granting Israel acc

    Turan news agency, Azerbaijan
    April 5 2012


    US analyst dismisses reports of Azerbaijan granting Israel access to airfields


    Baku, 5 April: (TURAN's Washington DC correspondent's interview with
    John Sitilides, a government relations specialist and advisor to the
    State Department)

    [Correspondent] A recent "Foreign Policy" article which indicates that
    Azerbaijan granted Israel access to its airfields in a country
    bordering Iran brought to speculations among the military and
    political analysts both in the US and the region. If these news
    reports are correct, then what does this mean for Azerbaijan and
    Israel?

    [Sitilides] On any given day, anyone can find thousands, perhaps tens
    of thousands, of former military or intelligence officers. If someone
    selectively chooses a small number to offer a particular perspective,
    then it may sound very exciting in the context of one of the most
    serious foreign policy issues that anyone will have to deal with on
    the international level - the sustained aggression of Iran and its
    ambition to possess nuclear weapons.

    Much of what is alleged is non-credible. Azerbaijan's primary
    interests are to strengthen and develop its national economy, to
    consolidate its oil and gas links to major markets around the world,
    and to defend its national interests in the region and on a global
    scale. We have an article that essentially lays out an argument that
    Azerbaijan is willing to risk all of its strategic interests to bring
    about what would surely mean serious Iranian retaliation against
    Azerbaijan, against its oil and gas fields, against its military
    facilities and against its economic development plans, all to serve as
    a so-called "air base" for a third country.

    If one ascribes rational behaviour to the Azerbaijani government, we
    need to only look at the map to see that for fighter jets to reach
    Azerbaijan for a military assault on Iran, they need to traverse the
    airspaces of Turkey, Syria and Iraq without being shot down. The
    government of Turkey is broadly hostile towards Israel in the last two
    and a half years. The government of Syria has been at war with Israel
    since it's founding in 1948, and Iraq has made clear that it will not
    permit airspace access for air attacks on Iran.

    Again, this is a non-credible scenario played out by a handful of
    former military officers and intelligence officers without
    consideration for the risks Baku is willing to take on behalf of a
    third country, the geostrategic challenges of a joint assault on Iran,
    or the costs Azerbaijan would suffer as an essential partner in a
    military attack on Iran.

    [Correspondent] The US Administration didn't comment on the FP report
    in public. On the other hand, Israeli media, as well as some
    Washington DC analysts are claiming the Administration itself is
    leaking this classified information to dissuade Israel. How does the
    fact of this leak influence US-Israel, Israel-Azerbaijan and
    Azeri-Israel cooperation?

    [Sitilides] There is no evidence of an administration design here.
    What we have is an author who has found a select group of people who
    support a particular theory. The article itself has actually very
    little of what is called a rational argument, without any evidence of
    an "official U.S. government position" behind these theories. Israel
    and Azerbaijan are certainly forging closer relations, and it's a very
    positive development for both countries. But a scenario in which
    Israel might find it necessary to stop Iran's nuclear programme
    militarily, it's not credible to that Azerbaijan would offer air bases
    to be used in a way that would invite serious and painful Iranian
    retaliation.

    Few if any Azeri leaders would be willing to accept that risk,
    especially with any assurance from any ally to protect Azerbaijan from
    Iranian bombardment or short-range missiles attacks. In the aftermath
    of a possible Israeli offensive against Iranian nuclear facilities,
    one could conceive of later-stage Azerbaijani air base operations
    involving helicopter landings for search and rescue or reconnaissance
    missions.

    Azerbaijan is well-positioned to assist the US and Israel in
    intelligence gathering and reconnaissance missions in Iran. Azerbaijan
    is also an important military partner and hardware customer to Israel,
    which has historically sought security partners in its periphery
    regions. Azerbaijan also benefit from selling oil to Israel. So the
    relationship is a strong and important one for both countries. The
    roots of these scenarios aren't found in Israel's plans or
    Azerbaijan's plans, but in the nature of the Iranian regime. As long
    as the regime's behaviour doesn't change in Teheran, Iran will
    continue to be the single most dangerous agent of instability and
    tension in that region, as well as other areas in the Middle East,
    Persian Gulf, Caucasus and Southwest Asian regions. If the regime's
    behaviour does not change, the only realistic long-term option is
    regime change in Tehran. All these other scenarios about everyone's
    plans and ambitions but Iran's serve as distractions, intentionally or
    unwittingly, from the true nature of the Iranian regime. Articles such
    as this strengthen the position of the Iranian government by
    fabricating scenarios and effectively dividing Iran's adversaries.

    [Correspondent] Iran is very close toArmenia. Azerbaijan in its part,
    - it turns out that - gets extreme amounts of weapons from Israel. If
    the tension grows in the region, how would you describe its influence
    on NagornyyKarabakh?

    [Sitilides] Ideally,Armeniaand Azerbaijan would find a way to
    peacefully resolve the conflict. This isn't a war that any responsible
    party would like to see taking place. Unfortunately,Armeniahas
    developed very close diplomatic ties with Russia, and there is a
    pronounced Russian military presence inArmenia. Azerbaijan maintains
    strong ties to Turkey, and enjoys a long-standing relationship with
    the US and now Israel. Azerbaijan has also become a strong trading
    partner with Germany and with Greece, through which Azeri natural gas
    will delivered to Italy and onto European markets. Two competing blocs
    seem to have been established in the Caucasus withArmeniaseemingly
    in the Russian-Iranian camp and Azerbaijan, with all of its
    undemocratic practices - and that remains a major problem for US-Azeri
    relations - aligning it with essentially Western powers.

    The main objective here should be to prevent war between Azerbaijan
    andArmeniathat could be devastating for all sides in the Caspian
    basin, for the societies of the two countries, and for larger hopes
    and prospects for region-wide security and economic development.

    [Correspondent] Interesting, whether Azerbaijan-Israel arm cooperation
    as well as recent developments on Iran fit Turkey's regional interest,
    which has a very close relationship with Baku and is "at daggers
    drawn" with Israel?

    [Sitilides] Even as Iran continues to attack the Baku government's
    authority in Azerbaijan through its terrorist activities, espionage,
    and a broader range of activities of great concern, geography has
    condemned Azerbaijan to no choice but to exist as a neighbour to Iran.
    Baku needs to tread carefully and in a non-provocative manner until
    such time as behaviour change - or ultimately, regime change - occurs
    in Teheran. Other neighbours such as Turkey, which interesting among
    NATO members enjoys the warmest relations with Iran, can be supportive
    of Azerbaijan's regional balancing efforts against the backdrop of its
    precarious geopolitical situation.

    [Signed] Alakbar Raufoglu, Washington, DC, 04/04/2012

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