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Russian, Azerbaijani Presidents To Meet For Fourth Time This Year

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  • Russian, Azerbaijani Presidents To Meet For Fourth Time This Year

    RUSSIAN, AZERBAIJANI PRESIDENTS TO MEET FOR FOURTH TIME THIS YEAR
    By Judith Ingram, Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press Worldstream
    November 9, 2006 Thursday 2:05 PM GMT

    Russian President Vladimir Putin and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev
    on Thursday hailed their countries' burgeoning economic ties, amid
    signs of concern from Moscow about its southern neighbor's improving
    relations with the West.

    "Our bilateral relationship has reached the highest level since we
    got independence," Aliev said at the start of the two leaders' fourth
    meeting this year. "It is necessary to continue cooperation ... It
    will help not only to strengthen ties between Russia and Azerbaijan,
    but also stabilize the situation in the region as a whole."

    Azerbaijan, a former Soviet republic, is the starting-point for a
    newly-completed U.S.-backed pipeline that transports Caspian oil to
    Western markets bypassing Russia. It also sent troops to serve in
    the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq.

    Aliev arrived in Moscow after a trip to Brussels, where he and NATO
    leaders discussed energy security. Earlier this year, he got a warm
    White House welcome from U.S. President George W. Bush.

    Russia's Kommersant daily said Moscow was worried that Azerbaijan would
    be making more military purchases in NATO countries as it builds up
    its armed forces and ultimately building a "strategic relationship"
    with the Western alliance and even allowing NATO and the United States
    to use its military bases.

    Kommersant, citing unnamed sources close to the Kremlin, said Putin
    would offer Aliev a deeper strategic relationship with Russia by
    allowing it to purchase cheaper Russian weapons something that had
    been blocked earlier by Moscow's desire to keep Azerbaijan from
    strengthening its military at the expense of Russia's main ally in
    the Caucasus, Armenia.

    "Evidently the creation of a united front ... against Georgia is more
    important for Russia: The main topic of negotiations is supposed to
    be Azerbaijan's participation in an energy blockade against Georgia
    in winter 2006-2007," Kommersant wrote.

    Russia's Gazprom natural gas monopoly said last week that it was
    seeking to double the price Georgia pays for gas; Georgia accused
    Moscow of "political blackmail" and said it would look for alternate
    suppliers, including Azerbaijan.

    Kommersant said Putin would also offer investments in Azerbaijan by
    the Russian aluminum giant OAO Rusal and RAO Unified Energy Systems.

    Putin said that Russian-Azerbaijani trade had grown by half already
    this year over the same period in 2005, and he predicted it would
    double within a year or two.

    "We have very extensive bilateral relationships (with Azerbaijan)
    in the political field, international affairs and the economy,"
    Putin said.

    Putin and Aliev were expected to discuss developments in the
    Caucasus Mountains region, including the prolonged dispute over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, the Kremlin said ahead of the meeting.

    The disputed territory in Azerbaijan has been under the control of
    Armenian and ethnic Armenian Karabakh forces since a 1994 cease-fire
    ended a six-year separatist war that killed about 30,000 people and
    drove about 1 million from their homes. The region's final status
    has not been worked out, and years of talks under the auspices of
    international mediators have brought few visible results.
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