Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Azerbaijan may pay too much for opposing Iran

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

  • Azerbaijan may pay too much for opposing Iran

    Azerbaijan may pay too much for opposing Iran
    Azerbaijan made the first move by sidelining the Iranian NIco company,
    participant of Shah Deniz consortium from the planned pipeline
    projects.

    Baku is playing with fire, in the firm belief that the West will back
    Ilham Aliyev if the latter openly confronts Iran, and may even turn a
    blind eye to the lawlessness prevailing in Azerbaijan ` `the most
    tolerant and democratic country of the region'. Azerbaijan has
    recently declared itself the strategic partner of the U.S., with
    certain encouragement by the newly appointed U.S. ambassador to Baku
    Richard Morningstar who mostly engages in advocating U.S. interests in
    the Caspian region.

    August 11, 2012


    PanARMENIAN.Net - Azerbaijan made the first move by sidelining the
    Iranian Naftiran Intertrade Co (NIco) company, participant of Shah
    Deniz consortium from the planned pipeline projects, including the
    Trans-Anatolia pipeline project. In its `U.S. Ally Azerbaijan to
    Exclude Iran From Gas Pipeline to Europe' article, businesweek.com
    quotes Vaqif Aliyev, head of State Oil Co. of Azerbaijan's investments
    department as saying that Nico's participation in the Trans-Anatolia
    pipeline or other pipelines is not being considered. Meanwhile,
    Naftiran Intertrade holds 10 percent of Shah Deniz.

    Azerbaijan is known to have supported U.S. forces in Iraq and
    Afghanistan. In June 2012, Azerbaijan and Turkey signed an agreement
    to build the 2,000 kilometer (1,240 mile) Trans-Anatolia pipeline, or
    Tanap, which will deliver at least 10 billion cubic meters of Azeri
    gas a year to the EU border through Turkey. The project is estimated
    to cost $7 billion.

    SOCAR plans to share its 80 percent of Tanap with Shah Deniz partners.
    `In independent projects like this, the selection of shareholders and
    their stakes are agreed upon mutually by the partners in accordance
    with their strategies and interests,' Vaqif Aliyev said, without
    elaborating on the reason for sidelining Iran.

    Shah Deniz is estimated to contain 1.2 trillion cubic meters of gas,
    enough to supply demand in the European Union for about 20 years. BP
    (operator - 25,5%), Statoil (25,5%), SOCAR (10%), LUKOIL (10%), NICO
    (10%), Total (10%) и Turkiye Petrolleri AO (9%) are Shah Deniz
    partners.

    According to the "Country reports on Terrorism 2011" of the U.S.
    Department of State, through the Weapons of Mass Destruction
    Proliferation Prevention Program, the Azerbaijan government assumed
    responsibility for the sustainment of seven radar stations along the
    Caspian coast used by the Navy, Coast Guard, and State Border Service
    to conduct maritime surveillance and detect smuggling threats. In
    addition, the government of Azerbaijan completed the modernization of
    its Central Reference Laboratory, a state-of-the-art biosafety
    facility that will make joint research on potential bioterrorism
    threats possible, the report says.

    The paper also mentions that Azerbaijan actively opposed terrorist
    organizations seeking to move people, money, and material through the
    Caucasus. However, the thing is that deployment of U.S. radar stations
    along the Caspian coast should be linked with the upcoming military
    intervention against Iran. Therefore, build-up of control over Iran
    from Azerbaijan's territory is a key factor of this military strategy.

    For his part, Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei summoned
    top Iranian military chiefs for what he called `their last war
    council', debka.com reports.

    `We'll be at war within weeks,' he told the gathering, Debkafile's
    exclusive Iranian and intelligence sources disclose.

    Khamenei put before his war council a timeline of weeks for the coming
    conflict ` September or October.

    Azerbaijan goes for much risk by supporting the U.S. and opposing
    Iran. Meanwhile, even Turkey, a far more serious political player with
    larger military potential does not make similar moves against Iran;
    yet it does not pull up Baku either. Maybe this shows Ankara's
    decision to allow Azerbaijan independently get out of the mess it will
    soon appear in, namely, respond to Iran's military attack. Baku is
    Washington's ally, yet a temporary ally, indeed. Since U.S. went to
    abandon Mubarak and its other faithful allies, Aliyev will certainly
    share their fate.

    Karine Ter-Sahakian

Working...
X