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Azerbaijan official again defends decision on US upgrade for radars

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  • Azerbaijan official again defends decision on US upgrade for radars

    Top Azerbaijan official again defends decision on U.S. upgrade for radars

    By AIDA SULTANOVA
    .c The Associated Press


    BAKU, Azerbaijan (AP) - Azerbaijan on Friday defended its decision to
    accept U.S. help in upgrading two Soviet-era radar installations,
    saying the country had the right to guarantee its own security.

    Deputy Foreign Minister Khalaf Khalafov's comments, given during a
    news conference with a top Iranian diplomat, appear to be the latest
    effort by Azerbaijani officials to assuage suspicions by Iran and
    Russia over the upgrade of the two radars - one near the Russian
    border and the other near the border with Iran.

    Khalafov said that Azerbaijan, like any country, has the right to
    cooperate with any nation it wants to cooperate with.

    ``Every country has the right to choose how it guarantees its own
    security and cooperation with other countries. And Azerbaijan will not
    base its cooperation on the positions of other countries,'' Khalafov
    said.

    ``Azerbaijan's cooperation with third countries in any sphere is not
    directed against its neighbors and does not encroach on their
    interests,'' he said.

    The U.S. ambassador to Azerbaijan said earlier that the radars would
    help Azerbaijan fight contraband goods smuggling and criminal
    activity, but Azerbaijani defense analysts say the U.S. will likely
    use them to listen in on Iranian military activity.

    Also speaking at the news conference was Mohsn Baharvand, a top
    official with Iran's Foreign Ministry.

    ``Iran does not object to other countries fighting terrorism, illegal
    narcotics business and other types of crimes,'' Baharvand said. ``This
    is one of those questions for which ... the sides have a common
    position.''

    Baharvand was in Baku representing Iran at talks among the five
    Caspian littoral states trying to reach final agreement on the inland
    sea's legal status.

    The Caspian, which is believed to contain the world's third largest
    reserves of oil and gas, was governed by treaties between the Soviet
    Union and Iran. Since the 1991 Soviet collapse, Russia, Iran,
    Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan have repeatedly failed to
    reach a new agreement.

    Azerbaijan has stepped up its military cooperation with the United
    States in recent years. It is the only predominantly Muslim country
    that has contributed troops to the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq, where
    about 150 Azerbaijani soldiers are serving.

    The former Soviet republic, which also has contributed troops in
    Afghanistan, is seeking U.S. support in modernizing its military and
    resolving a territorial dispute with neighboring Armenia.



    10/07/05 13:04 EDT

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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