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Budapest: Cunning Politician

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  • Budapest: Cunning Politician

    CUNNING POLITICIAN
    by Attila Seres

    Nepszabadsag
    6 September 2012
    Hungary

    "Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev is a well-prepared, resolute,
    clever and strategically-thinking negotiating partner with a
    well-developed vision of the world," Karoly Banai, Ferenc Gyurcsany's
    former foreign and security policy adviser, who during the previous
    Socialist governments attended high-level Hungarian-Azeri talks,
    has told Nepszabadsag.

    He said that during the meetings President Aliyev became increasingly
    open; it was apparent that he spoke good English, and appeared to
    be a politician with good reasoning and negotiating skills, with
    expertise in strategy and security policy issues. Not many current
    heads of state can be described as able to think in terms of broad
    security policy concepts. Aliyev is one of them. For example, he
    painted a very surprising, and probably accurate, picture of the major
    powers' presence in the Caucasus, their conflicts of interest, and the
    inter-relations of the countries of the region. He has a vision. he
    sees security policy in spatial terms, and he does not conceal his
    future goals. He did not share all of this with us, our source said,
    and it was apparent that he keeps a tight hold on the reins.

    Responding to a question on Aliyev's impact on his negotiating
    partners, whether he is able to influence the other side, and whether
    at the official talks, the transfer of Ramil Safarov was raised as a
    secondary issue, Karoly Banai said that Aliyev never raised this issue,
    but the Azeri ambassador in Budapest, for whom this probably was his
    sole task at his posting in Hungary, contacted him at least twice and
    tried to intervene informally for the purpose of the transfer of the
    "axe murderer". He described Safarov as a poor halfwit, and referred
    to this when requesting his return home, so that his relatives at
    home could visit him as they were unable to travel to Budapest. The
    transfer naturally did not happen because the Ministry of Justice
    was of the view that all possibilities of legal remedy in the case
    of Safarov had been exhausted. Experts believed there was a fear that
    after being transferred, Baku would release Safarov, who had brutally
    killed an Armenian military officer.

    According to our source, although we can assume that the Orban
    government was very amateurish, the scale of this was not enough for
    them to be so vulgarly dumped on by the Azeris. It is more likely
    that the decision on the transfer was reached on the basis of some
    consideration in return, which could not necessarily be expressed
    in figures (a preferential decision in a business matter). President
    Aliyev's immediate pardon, the spectacular nature of the release (a
    separate aircraft, promotion) reveal that the measure was thought
    through, the consequences had been assessed, and that it had been
    planned in advance. [passage omitted]

    [Translated from Hungarian]

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