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Azerbaijan hedges its bets amid Armenian tensions

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  • Azerbaijan hedges its bets amid Armenian tensions

    Blouin News , NY
    Jan 29 2015

    Azerbaijan hedges its bets amid Armenian tensions

    January 29, 2015 by Natalie Shure


    Azerbaijani officials claimed Thursday to have shot down an Armenian
    drone in their territory, Reuters reports. Although Armenia brushed
    off the charge as "absurd," the episode is the latest in a series of
    escalating tensions between the uneasy neighbors of the South-Caucasus
    region.

    The two nations' dispute centers on the autonomous region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian-majority area inside Azerbaijan. Mutual
    resentment between the two groups built up in the late-Ottoman era
    partially due to Armenia's disastrous relationship with Turkey, with
    whom Azerbaijan shares close cultural ties. The conflict lay
    relatively dormant under Soviet rule, until violence broke out in 1988
    over control of Nagorno-Karabakh. The 1994 ceasefire left this a
    relatively open question, prompting regional analyst Svante E. Cornell
    to dub the territory "the mother of all unresolved conflicts" in the
    post-Soviet world.

    Since the Soviet collapse, Armenia has remained a staunch Russian
    ally, while Azerbaijan has developed significant ties to the U.S. and
    the E.U. Officials in the West consider Azerbaijani friendship
    important in light of its many strategic advantages: it borders both
    Russia and Iran, is rich in oil, and is a secular Muslim supporter of
    Israel.

    The contested Armenian drone tails over a year of nearby skirmishes
    between the two states, leaving many observers puzzled about the root
    cause of the increased unrest. There is plenty of evidence that the
    hot button of Nagorno-Karabakh is being pressed for reasons that have
    less to do with Armenia than they do with Azerbaijan's ties to the
    West. Throughout 2014, Azerbaijan's dismal human rights record began
    to attract international attention, including a New York Times op-ed
    condemning the U.S. for ignoring the anti-democratic measures taken by
    our ally. The Azerbaijani ambassador's response to the piece sheds
    light on what is perhaps the underlying motive for sounding the alarm
    on Nagorno-Karabakh: human rights abuses of the Azerbaijani government
    are not the problem, he argued, Armenian abuses are. In other words,
    the heightened drama surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh could be a tool to
    attract international support and deflect attention from the domestic
    crackdown.

    Despite its pro-Western strategy, Azerbaijan does seem to be hedging
    its bets with Russia as well: many observers have argued this is
    likely a self-preservation response to the conflict in Ukraine.
    Because Russia has publicly attested its support for Armenia in the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, Baku appears to be stoking a preemptive
    friendship. Russia has been supplying more military supplies to
    Azerbaijan as of late, and the countries recently made a deal for a
    railway running through Azerbaijani territory to connect Russia and
    Iran. At the same time, Baku appears to be chilling relations with
    Washington: in December, a government raid forcibly shut down
    U.S.-backed RFERL's Baku bureau, and jailed one of their journalists
    focusing on corruption in Baku.

    Wedged strategically and philosophically between the Russian and
    Western spheres, it's clear that Azerbaijan conceives Nagorno-Karabakh
    in broad geopolitical terms. For now, it seems intent on forcing the
    global community to see its domestic crackdown and dispute with
    Armenia as completely separate issues. Given Baku's tricky set of
    interests, this hardly seems to be a savvy analysis.

    http://blogs.blouinnews.com/blouinbeatworld/2015/01/29/azerbaijan-hedges-its-bets-amid-armenian-tensions/

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