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ANKARA: Azeri-Iranian relations: A sibling rivalry in the global fam

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  • ANKARA: Azeri-Iranian relations: A sibling rivalry in the global fam

    Journal of Turkish Weekly
    June 15 2013


    Azeri-Iranian relations: A sibling rivalry in the global family

    15 June 2013
    JTW

    Despite visa free travel for Azeri citizens and dynamic trade, long
    mutual borders and some shared interests, Iran and Azerbaijan do not
    seem to be able to get along. Good Azeri-Israeli relations, political
    and criminal intrigue, Azerbaijan's cooperation with the West, and the
    fact that Azerbaijan, due to its Soviet legacy is more secular than
    the Islamic Republic of Iran are often cited as the roots of the two
    countries issues with each other. But perhaps the true root of trouble
    lies in geography; whether it be physical, cultural or political which
    has allowed for these other problems to ferment.

    In many cases, a common religion, shared history and a like language
    can help two states build diplomatic relations; even Azerbaijan and
    Iran have used such cultural links to build closer ties with other
    states. But when it comes to Azeri-Iranian ties, shared heritage
    (something usually cherished between states), becomes the problem.

    Being a small, landlocked and very new country that had never before
    existed, Azerbaijan wants to assure that it is given due legitimacy by
    all. The fact that modern Azerbaijan was once part of its much older
    and larger Iranian neighbor only complicates this task for the
    developing state wedged in a no man's land of sorts between the back
    ends of three world powers who see it as in their sphere of influence.
    Just under a third of Iran's population is of Azeri descent and along
    with Persian, speaks the Turkic Azerbaijani language. Iran's
    Azerbaijanis live in the `Batis Azerbaijan' province, or `West
    Azerbaijan' which the Republic of Azerbaijan's entire Southern border
    is shared with, leaving room for the question `why isn't Azerbaijan
    just part of Iran' to be asked.

    Iran, an Islamic republic which because of its fundamentalist nature
    views itself as morally superior, has both the 18th largest land area
    and population in the world. This, combined with the fact that
    economically challenged Iran's largest minority is Azerbaijanis leaves
    Iran in a strange position where it both feels threatened by little
    Azerbaijan and like it has a rightful sphere of influence that
    includes Azerbaijan and therefore more of a right to secure its
    interests there than elsewhere. At a late 2012 hearing in front of the
    U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs, expert
    witnesses testified that in order to preserve its territorial
    integrity, Iran had been taking actions aimed at destabilizing the
    titular states of its minorities in hopes that such actions will
    prevent emigration or the formation of separatist groups. It is
    believed that Iran supports Armenia in its attempts to maintain
    control over Azerbaijan's Nagorno-Karabakh in hopes of achieving this
    supremacy over Azerbaijan, a foreign policy choice that is most
    certainly not appreciated by Baku. Iran's hulking size and population
    make Azerbaijan extra uneasy about Iran's intentions and what it can
    potentially do.

    Geography is not the only thing laying strain on Azerbaijan and Iran's
    relations. Western sanctions against Iran have encouraged Tehran to
    turn to the international criminal underworld for revenue. In recent
    years, domestic Azerbaijani law enforcement have caught Iranians
    engaged in drug trafficking and collusion with terrorist
    organizations, according to the experts that spoke in front of the US
    House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs, Afghan Heroin
    now not only flows through Central Asia and Russia to Europe, but also
    through Iran and the Caucasus.

    Western sanctions against Iran have made Azerbaijan somewhat reluctant
    to open up to its southern neighbor and have made Iran more likely to
    be `insistent' in pursuing bilateral opportunities, even if they are
    not something that Azerbaijan is interested in. Azerbaijan was
    recently in talks with Turkey on a visa free regime. Having caught
    wind of the negotiations, Iran then threatened to cut off critical
    supply routes to the Azerbaijani exclave of Naxchivan if Azerbaijan
    did not consider a like visa regime with Tehran. Much to its
    frustration and dismay, Azerbaijan canceled visa negotiations with
    Turkey as a result of the Iranian threats, leaving all three neighbors
    in a losing situation.

    Geographic conditions, a cultural divide and economic despair have
    done great harm to Azerbaijani-Iranian relations, and through analysis
    of recent Iranian actions towards Azerbaijan, one could deduce that
    Iran may see the relationship as beyond repair. In 2012, three men
    accused of planning to attack a Jewish school in Baku were found to
    have received the arms to do so from Iranian intelligence officers. In
    recent months, the Azerbaijani Communications Ministry blamed recent
    cyber-attacks against the country on Iran and also arrested 22 people
    who had received extensive intelligence training in Iran who were
    conspiring to attack the US and Israeli embassies. The fact that the
    diplomatically `rude' Iranian disruption of Azeri-Turkish visa
    negotiations, two attempted Iranian backed physical attacks and
    Iranian cyber-attacks against Azerbaijan all occurred within such a
    short period of time shows that Iran no longer feels that the effort
    it takes to foster fruitful relations with Azerbaijan is worth what is
    being returned and perhaps a point of no return has been crossed with
    Ilham Aliyev's Azerbaijani government.
    However, harsh treatment towards Baku could be Tehran's way of showing
    Azerbaijan that a good relationship with Iran is something that
    Azerbaijan does not want to throw away or take for granted. After all,
    while Iran was behaving in a somewhat civil manner towards Azerbaijan,
    Azerbaijan buddied up to the West, did not follow suit when Tehran
    waived the visa regime for Azerbaijani citizens, was found to be
    discussing the possibility of hosting Israeli warplanes capable of
    striking Iran with Jerusalem and continued to fall deeper into
    `Jahalliyah'. It could be argued that Tehran has always been somewhat
    `anti-Azerbaijan' and it is therefore factually incorrect to say that
    Iran's harsh actions towards Azerbaijan is a way of showing
    dissatisfaction with Azerbaijan's choice of allies and a
    recommendation that it should work to get on Iran's good side.

    Although there is dialogue on the issue, and more states (that get
    along with each other) than just Iran and Azerbaijan are involved in
    the issue, questions surrounding the demarcation of the hydrocarbon
    rich Caspian Sea strain relations between the two nations. As boundary
    negotiations flounder, Caspian littoral states fish for maritime
    defense solutions in case politics bring the water in the world's
    largest lake (the Caspian) to a boil. Iran's general approach is to
    militarize its share of the sea, while Russia's is to seek out
    cooperation with other Caspian littorals such as Kazakhstan who is
    preparing for an Iranian strike on Western oil rigs in its waters in
    the event of armed conflict between the West and Iran. Azerbaijan and
    Turkmenistan have been very open to negotiations and have both
    accepted American aid and advising services on military maritime
    matters.

    It does not look like Azeri-Iranian relations are going to change.
    Poor bilateral relations aren't producing any red hot conflict that
    needs immediate addressing, the West is only strengthening sanctions,
    the two governments have very solidified ways of doing things and
    tensions have geographical and historical roots which give them a
    chronic nature. However, there are presidential elections in Iran
    today. Perhaps the results will bring change to how Baku and Tehran do
    business. Even if no great change is to come, Baku is watching the
    polls as closely as Tehran and the new government will have a chance
    to write the future of Azerbaijani-Iranian relations.

    By John Storey
    15 June 2013
    Journal of Turkish Weekly

    http://www.turkishweekly.net/news/151811/azeri-iranian-relations-a-sibling-rivalry-in-the-global-family.html

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