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Azerbaijan: President Aliyev Walks Tightrope Between Russia, West

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  • Azerbaijan: President Aliyev Walks Tightrope Between Russia, West

    AZERBAIJAN: PRESIDENT ALIYEV WALKS TIGHTROPE BETWEEN RUSSIA, WEST
    By Valentinas Mite

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep.
    Nov 9 2006

    PRAGUE, November 9, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev
    visited Moscow today on the heels of a trip to Brussels during which he
    signed a memorandum on cooperation in energy with the European Union.

    Ahead of the visit, President Vladimir Putin officially gave his stamp
    of approval to his Azerbaijani counterpart's visit to EU headquarters
    and NATO.

    "I would like to congratulate you on your successful visit to
    Brussels," Putin said. "I know, indeed, the visit was very practical,
    concrete. Important agreements have been made regarding Azerbaijan's
    participation in European efforts in the energy field."

    Behind The Scene

    But some observers believe that away from the microphone, Putin cannot
    have much good to say about Azerbaijan's efforts to curry favor in
    the West.

    Ali Kerimli, who heads leading Azerbaijani opposition party Popular
    Front, says the issue was sure to be a hot topic during today's talks.

    "Every year it is becoming more and more difficult for Aliyev to stay
    in two places at the same time," Kerimli said. "To be at a friend,
    a satellite, a supporter of the authoritarian Russia, and at the same
    time to participate in all the NATO and EU integration programs."

    A commentary in the Russian daily "Kommersant" on November 9 suggested
    that, as compensation for this policy, Russia might ask Azerbaijan to
    participate in an energy blockade of Georgia. The daily wrote that
    the Kremlin is prepared to offer Russian investment in Azerbaijan's
    energy sector and also to supply Russian armaments at a discount.

    Relations between Russia and Azerbaijan, branded as a "strategic
    partnership," are complicated.

    The Karabakh Card

    Shain Abbasov, an independent analyst based in Baku, says many in
    Azerbaijan believe that the resolution of Azerbaijan's conflict
    with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh is in the hands of Moscow, not in
    the West.

    Nagorno-Karabakh has been under the control of Armenia since a 1994
    cease-fire ended a six-year war. Russia plays a key mediating role
    as the sides try to come to an agreement on the region's final status.

    However, Kerimli has said the conflict serves Moscow by helping Russia
    to preserve its influence in both Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    Analyst Abbasov says the Kremlin's policy toward Armenia, a Russian
    ally, remains more benign than toward Azerbaijan.

    "Armenia is a traditional Russian ally in the southern Caucasus,"
    Abbasov said. "You know that Azerbaijan is a member of GUAM, which
    in principle is considered to be an anti-Russian political grouping
    and nobody tries to hide it very much. So there is no doubt that
    Azerbaijan is trying differently from Armenia to balance its foreign
    policy between the West and Russia."

    Analysts have also suggested that some practices in Azerbaijan --
    antidemocratic ones -- serve to bring it closer to Russia than
    the West.

    Everything Under Control

    Abbasov, for example, says Aliyev is clearly following Russia's model
    of "controlled democracy."

    Azerbaijani police breaking up an opposition demonstration in November
    2005 (AFP)"In fact, Azerbaijan is clearly following the Russian way,
    the way of Putin's democracy," he said. "It is under way already
    now. There is no question which way Azerbaijan might choose.

    Aliyev's administration has already made a choice, and we are already
    heading down this road. You can see all this pressure on the press,
    a very strict authoritarian way of rule and so on. In fact, we have
    a very similar situation as in Russia."

    As for other topics, economic issues were likely on today's agenda --
    including natural-gas prices. .

    Moscow could threaten, as it has done to other neighboring states
    of late, to raise considerably the price of its gas exports to
    Azerbaijan. But the move might not provide much leverage in getting
    Baku to avoid making overtures to the West. Azerbaijan uses only an
    estimated 10.5 billion cubic meters of natural gas per year, and only
    1.5 billion of that is imported from Russia.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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