From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Visit our website: HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------------------------

Turkish Daily News
August 28, 2001 

[T]he squadron of fighter jets that...flew over
Baku....carried the connotation of a show of
solidarity and force.
In words aimed primarily at Armenia, [Azerbaijan
President] Aliev said that military relations with
Turkey had turned into "strategic cooperation," adding
that Turkish forces were strong enough "to resist the
biggest forces of the world...."
[BBC] quoted an unnamed senior Azerbaijani official as
saying that the visit was "a show of force in
Azerbaijan's conflict with Iran."
[Azerbaijani newspaper Zerkalo] "This warning cannot
be regarded as purely 'Turkish.' In any case, NATO is
behind it."



Azerbaijan: Turkey Pursues Ambiguous Ties
By Michael Lelyveld

Turkish aircraft visiting Azerbaijan have been
portrayed alternately as an aerobatic group and a
squadron of warplanes. The two countries seem to be
willing to have it both ways following last month's
Caspian confrontation with Iran. RFE/RL correspondent
Michael Lelyveld reports.

Boston, 28 August 2001 (RFE/RL) -- Turkey's ambiguous
signal of support for Azerbaijan over the weekend has
stirred passions in both Baku and Tehran.

The two-day visit to Azerbaijan by the Turkish chief
of General Staff, General Huseyin Kivrikoglu, was
portrayed on the one hand as an event that had been
scheduled for a year to mark a military school
graduation.

According to this low-key interpretation, the squadron
of fighter jets that also flew over Baku on the
occasion was nothing more than a demonstration by the
"Turkish Stars," an aerobatics team that has performed
in many countries before.

But the event, coming one month after an Iranian
gunboat threatened two Azerbaijani survey ships in
disputed Caspian waters, also carried the connotation
of a show of solidarity and force. Whether it was
previously planned or not, the visit highlighted the
closeness between Baku and Ankara.

Both Turkey and Azerbaijan seemed content to have it
both ways.

Following an expression of "concern" by Iranian
Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi, Turkey's Embassy in
Tehran dismissed fears about the presence of the
aircraft as "baseless," saying the planes had no
military capability.

Novruz Mammadov, foreign relations adviser to
Azerbaijani President Heydar Aliev, was also quoted by
the "Turkish Daily News" as saying that the air show
had no political aim. Cooperation with Turkey "is not
against any third country," Mammadov stressed.

But in comments carried by Azerbaijan's Turan news
agency, Mammadov struck a more defiant note, saying,
"Azerbaijan is a sovereign country, and it has the
right to cooperate with any country of the world." The
position was underscored with ethnically linked
Turkey, with which Azerbaijan follows a "one
nation-two states' principle," Mammadov said.

In words aimed primarily at Armenia, Aliev said that
military relations with Turkey had turned into
"strategic cooperation," adding that Turkish forces
were strong enough "to resist the biggest forces of
the world," the Anatolia news agency reported.

While Turkish government officials were careful, the
BBC reported that the planes were on a mission to
"back up (the) Azeri position."

The British news network quoted an unnamed senior
Azerbaijani official as saying that the visit was "a
show of Turkish force in Azerbaijan's conflict with
Iran." It also cited a retired Turkish general, Veli
Kucuk, who said, "Azerbaijan's pain also affects us,
and therefore we should remove that pain."

Former Turkish Prime Minister Tansu Ciller, head of
the True Path Party, also praised her country's effort
to preserve Azerbaijan's "sovereignty and
independence."

The speeches reflected the sentiment that the Caspian
confrontation was not simply about the long-stalled
issue of how to divide the Caspian and Iran's claim to
what Azerbaijan calls its Alov oil field. The issue
now seems to have moved on to Azerbaijan's relative
strength to deal with Iran as a credible power.

On 26 August, the English-language "Tehran Times"
reacted angrily to the event in Baku. The paper said
that Turkey's ambassador had been summoned to the
Iranian Foreign Ministry to receive a protest against
"the adventurous interference of Turkey in
Iran-Azerbaijan relations" and "the political stunts
staged by Turkish generals." The report was not
carried by the official news agency IRNA, however.

The reaction may be in response to some of the more
sweeping conclusions drawn by Azerbaijani
commentators. The newspaper "Zerkalo" was especially
outspoken, calling the visit a "warning" to
Azerbaijan's enemies. "Zerkalo" said: "This warning
cannot be regarded as purely 'Turkish.' In any case,
NATO is behind it." The paper also quoted former Aliev
adviser Vafa Guluzade, a longtime advocate of a NATO
presence, saying, "A downpour starts with a drop."

While governments and diplomats may see the benefit of
making their points through ambiguity, the Caspian
situation remains sensitive and open to incitement on
all sides.

On 24 August, Iranian President Mohammad Khatami
declared his readiness to attend a Caspian summit in
Turkmenistan in October. But yesterday, Turkmen
President Saparmurat Niyazov announced that the
meeting would be postponed indefinitely due to the
country's 10th anniversary celebrations.

The cancellation may leave even more opportunities for
discord in the Caspian. Cool heads will be needed to
keep the situation under control.



_________________________________________________
 
KOMINFORM
P.O. Box 66
00841 Helsinki
Phone +358-40-7177941
Fax +358-9-7591081
http://www.kominf.pp.fi
 
General class struggle news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe mails to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Geopolitical news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
__________________________________________________


Reply via email to