from Foreign Policy journal
 
 
 
 
_Israel’s Secret Staging Ground_ 
(http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/03/28/israel_s_secret_staging_ground)
 
U.S. officials believe that the Israelis have gained access to  airbases in 
Azerbaijan. Does this bring them one step closer to a war with Iran? 

BY MARK PERRY | MARCH 28, 2012 


 
In 2009, the deputy chief of mission of the U.S. embassy in Baku, Donald 
Lu,  sent _a  cable_ (http://wikileaks.org/cable/2009/01/09BAKU20.html)  to 
the State Department's headquarters in Foggy Bottom titled  "Azerbaijan's 
discreet symbiosis with Israel." The memo, later released by  WikiLeaks, quotes 
Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev as describing his  country's rel
ationship with the Jewish state as an iceberg: "nine-tenths of it  is below the 
surface."  
Why does it matter? Because Azerbaijan is strategically located on Iran's  
northern border and, according to several high-level sources I've spoken 
with  inside the U.S. government, Obama administration officials now believe 
that the  "submerged" aspect of the Israeli-Azerbaijani alliance -- the 
security  cooperation between the two countries -- is heightening the risks of 
an 
Israeli  strike on Iran. 
 
 
In particular, four senior diplomats and military intelligence officers say 
 that the United States has concluded that Israel has recently been granted 
 access to airbases on Iran's northern border. To do what, exactly, is not 
clear.  "The Israelis have bought an airfield," a senior administration 
official told me  in early February, "and the airfield is called Azerbaijan."  
Senior U.S. intelligence officials are increasingly concerned that Israel's 
 military expansion into Azerbaijan complicates U.S. efforts to dampen  
Israeli-Iranian tensions, according to the sources. Military planners, I was  
told, must now plan not only for a war scenario that includes the Persian 
Gulf  -- but one that could include the Caucasus. The burgeoning 
Israel-Azerbaijan  relationship has also become a flashpoint in both countries' 
relationship with  Turkey, a regional heavyweight that fears the economic and 
political fallout of  a war with Iran. Turkey's most senior government 
officials 
have raised their  concerns with their U.S. counterparts, as well as with the 
Azeris, the sources  said.  
The Israeli embassy in Washington, the Israel Defense Forces, and the 
Mossad,  Israel's national intelligence agency, were all contacted for comment 
on 
this  story but did not respond.  
The Azeri embassy to the United States also did not respond to requests for 
 information regarding Azerbaijan's security agreements with Israel. During 
a  recent visit to Tehran, however, Azerbaijan's defense minister publicly 
_ruled out_ (http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=9012152197)  the 
use of Azerbaijan for a strike on Iran. "The  Republic of Azerbaijan, like 
always in the past, will never permit any country  to take advantage of its 
land, or air, against the Islamic Republic of Iran,  which we consider our 
brother and friend country," he said.  
But even if his government makes good on that promise, it could still 
provide  Israel with essential support. A U.S. military intelligence officer 
noted that  Azeri defense minister did not explicitly bar Israeli bombers from 
landing in  the country after a strike. Nor did he rule out the basing of 
Israeli  search-and-rescue units in the country. Proffering such landing rights 
-- and  mounting search and rescue operations closer to Iran -- would make 
an Israeli  attack on Iran easier.  
"We're watching what Iran does closely," one of the U.S. sources, an  
intelligence officer engaged in assessing the ramifications of a prospective  
Israeli attack confirmed. "But we're now watching what Israel is doing in  
Azerbaijan. And we're not happy about it."  
Israel's deepening relationship with the Baku government was _cemented_ 
(http://news.yahoo.com/israel-inks-1-6-billion-arms-deal-azerbaijan-150647547.ht
ml)  in February by a $1.6 billion arms agreement that  provides Azerbaijan 
with sophisticated drones and missile-defense systems. At  the same time, 
Baku's ties with Tehran have frayed: Iran presented a note to  Azerbaijan's 
ambassador last month claiming that Baku has supported  Israeli-trained 
assassination squads targeting Iranian scientists, an accusation  the Azeri 
government _called_ (http://en.apa.az/news.php?id=165559)  "a slander." In 
February, a member of Yeni Azerbadzhan  -- the ruling party -- _called on_ 
(http://en.trend.az/news/politics/1986820.html)  the government to change the 
country's name to  "North Azerbaijan," implicitly suggesting that the 16 
million 
Azeris who live in  northern Iran ("South Azerbaijan") are in need of 
liberation.  
And this month, Baku _announced_ (http://www.
bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-17368576)  that 22 people had been arrested for 
spying on  behalf of Iran, 
charging they had been tasked by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard  Corps to 
"commit terrorist acts against the U.S., Israeli, and other Western  states' 
embassies." The allegations prompted _multiple angry denials_ 
(http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/PrintNews.aspx?PageID=383&NID=16301)  from 
the Iranian 
government.  
It's clear why the Israelis prize their ties to Azerbaijan -- and why the  
Iranians are infuriated by them. The Azeri military has four abandoned,  
Soviet-era airfields that would potentially be available to the Israelis, as  
well as four airbases for their own aircraft, according to the International  
Institute for Strategic Studies' _Military Balance 2011_ 
(http://www.iiss.org/publications/military-balance/the-military-balance-2011/press-statement/)
 
.  
The U.S. intelligence and diplomatic officials told me they believe that  
Israel has gained access to these airbases through a series of quiet 
political  and military understandings. "I doubt that there's actually anything 
in  
writing," added a senior retired American diplomat who spent his career in 
the  region. "But I don't think there's any doubt -- if Israeli jets want to 
land in  Azerbaijan after an attack, they'd probably be allowed to do so. 
Israel is  deeply embedded in Azerbaijan, and has been for the last two 
decades."  
The prospect of Israel using Azerbaijan's airfields for an Iranian attack  
first became public in December 2006, when retired Israeli Brig. Gen. Oded 
Tira  _angrily denounced_ 
(http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3346275,00.html)  the George W. Bush 
administration's lack of  action on the Iranian 
nuclear program. "For our part," he wrote in a widely  cited commentary, 
"we should also coordinate with Azerbaijan the use of airbases  in its 
territory and also enlist the support of the Azeri minority in Iran." The  
"coordination" that Tira spoke of is now a reality, the U.S. sources told me.  
Access to such airfields is important for Israel, because it would mean 
that  Israeli F-15I and F-16I fighter-bombers would not have to refuel 
midflight  during a strike on Iran's nuclear facilities, but could simply 
continue 
north  and land in Azerbaijan. Defense analyst David Isenberg describes the 
ability to  use Azeri airfields as "a significant asset" to any Israel 
strike, calculating  that the 2,200-mile trip from Israel to Iran and back 
again 
would stretch  Israel's warplanes to their limits. "Even if they added extra 
fuel tanks, they'd  be running on fumes," Isenberg told me, "so being 
allowed access to Azeri  airfields would be crucial."  
Former CENTCOM commander Gen. Joe Hoar simplified Israel's calculations:  
"They save themselves 800 miles of fuel," he told me in a recent telephone  
interview. "That doesn't guarantee that Israel will attack Iran, but it  
certainly makes it more doable."  
Using airbases in Azerbaijan would ensure that Israel would not have to 
rely  on its modest fleet of air refuelers or on its refueling expertise, which 
a  senior U.S. military intelligence officer described as "pretty minimal." 
 Military planners have monitored Israeli refueling exercises, he added, 
and are  not impressed. "They're just not very good at it."  
Retired Air Force Col. Sam Gardiner, who conducted _a  study_ 
(http://www.foi.se/FOI/Templates/NewsPage____9027.aspx)  for a think tank 
affiliated with 
the Swedish Ministry of Defense of likely Israeli attack scenarios in March 
2010, said that Israel is  capable of using its fleet of F-15I and F-16I 
warplanes in a strike on Iran  without refueling after the initial top-off 
over Israel. "It's not weight that's  a problem," he said, "but the numbers of 
weapons that are mounted on each  aircraft." Put simply, the more distance a 
fighter-bomber is required to travel,  the more fuel it will need and the 
fewer weapons it can carry. Shortening the  distance adds firepower, and 
enhances the chances for a successful strike.  
"The problem is the F-15s," Gardiner said, "who would go in as fighters to  
protect the F-16 bombers and stay over the target." In the likely event 
that  Iran scrambled its fighters to intercept the Israeli jets, he continued, 
the  F-15s would be used to engage them. "Those F-15s would burn up fuel 
over the  target, and would need to land."  
Could they land in Azerbaijan? "Well, it would have to be low profile,  
because of political sensitivities, so that means it would have to be outside 
of  Baku and it would have to be highly developed." Azerbaijan has such a 
place: the  _Sitalcay airstrip_ 
(http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&q=sital+chay+azerbaijan&um=1&ie=UTF-8&ei=F4twT_iaG4LV0QHP9KzdBg&sa=X&oi=mode_link&ct=mode
&cd=3&ved=0CAwQ_AUoAg) , which is located just over 40 miles  northwest of 
Baku and 340 miles from the Iranian border. Prior to the collapse  of the 
Soviet Union, Sitalcay's two tarmacs and the adjacent facilities were  used by 
a squadron of Soviet Sukhoi SU-25 jets -- perfect for Israeli fighters  and 
bombers.  "Well then," Gardiner said, after the site was described to  him, 
"that would be the place."  
Even if Israeli jets did not land in Azerbaijan, access to Azeri airfields  
holds a number of advantages for the Israel Defense Forces. The airfields 
not  only have facilities to service fighter-bombers, but a senior U.S. 
military  intelligence officer said that Israel would likely base helicopter 
rescue units  there in the days just prior to a strike for possible search and 
rescue  missions.  
This officer pointed to a July 2010 _joint Israeli-Romanian exercise_ 
(http://www.jpost.com/International/Article.aspx?id=182803)  that tested 
Israeli 
air  capabilities in mountainous areas -- like those the Israeli Air Force 
would face  during a bombing mission against Iranian nuclear facilities that 
the Iranians  have buried deep into mountainsides. U.S. military officers 
watched the  exercises closely, not least because they objected to the large 
number of  Israeli fighters operating from airbases of a NATO-member country, 
but also  because 100 Israeli fighters overflew Greece as a part of a 
simulation of an  attack on Iran. The Israelis eventually curtailed their 
Romanian military  activities when the United States expressed discomfort with 
practicing the  bombing of Iran from a NATO country, according to this senior 
military  intelligence officer.  
This same senior U.S. military intelligence officer speculated that the  
search and rescue component of those operations will be transferred to  
Azerbaijan -- "if they haven't been already." He added that Israel could also  
use 
Azerbaijan as a base for Israeli drones, either as part of a follow-on  
attack against Iran, or to mount aerial assessment missions in an attack's  
aftermath.  
Azerbaijan clearly profits from its deepening relationship with Israel. The 
 Jewish state is the second largest customer for Azeri oil - shipped 
through the  Baku-Tibilisi-Ceyhan pipeline -- and its military trade allows 
Azerbaijan to  upgrade its military after the Organization for Cooperation and 
Security in  Europe (OSCE) slapped it with an arms embargo after its six-year 
undeclared war  with Armenia over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. 
Finally, modernizing the  Azeri military sends a clear signal to Iran that 
interference in Azerbaijan  could be costly.  
"Azerbaijan has worries of its own," said Alexander Murinson, an  
Israeli-American scholar who wrote in _an  influential monograph_ 
(http://www.biu.ac.il/SOC/besa/perspectives110.html)  on Israeli-Azeri ties for 
Tel Aviv's 
Begin-Sadat  Center for Strategic Studies. "The Baku government has expelled 
Iranians  preaching in their mosques, broken up pro-Iranian terrorist groups, 
and  countered Iranian propaganda efforts among its population."  
The deepening Azeri-Israeli relationship has also escalated Israel's 
dispute  with Turkey, which began when Israeli commandos boarded a Turkish ship 
destined  for Gaza in May 2010, killing nine Turkish citizens. When Turkey 
demanded an  apology, Israel not only refused, it abruptly canceled a $150 
million contract  to develop and manufacture drones with the Turkish military 
-- 
then _entered negotiations_ 
(http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Azeris_get_Israel_UAVs_built_under_license_999.html)
  with Azerbaijan to jointly 
manufacture 60  Israeli drones of varying types. The $1.6 billion arms 
agreement 
between Israel  and Azerbaijan also left Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip 
Erdogan "sputtering  in rage," according to a retired U.S. diplomat.  
The centerpiece of the recent arms deal is Azerbaijan's acquisition of  
Israeli drones, which has only heightened Turkish anxieties further. In 
November  2011, the Turkish government retrieved the wreckage of an Israeli 
"Heron" 
drone  in the Mediterranean, south of the city of Adana -- well inside its 
maritime  borders. Erdogan's government believed the drone's flight had 
originated in the  Kurdish areas of northern Iraq and demanded that Israel 
provide an explanation,  but got none. "They lied; they told us the drone 
didn't 
belong to them," a  former Turkish official told me last month. "But it had 
their markings."  
Israel began cultivating strong relations with Baku in 1994, when Israeli  
telecommunications firm Bezeq bought a large share of the nationally 
controlled  telephone operating system. By 1995, Azerbaijan's marketplace was 
awash 
with  Israeli goods: "Strauss ice cream, cell phones produced by Motorola's 
Israeli  division, Maccabee beer, and other Israeli imports are 
ubiquitous," an Israeli  reporter _wrote_ 
(http://www.meforum.org/987/israel-and-azerbaijans-furtive-embrace)  in the 
Jerusalem Post.  
In March 1996, then-Health Minister Ephraim Sneh became the first senior  
Israeli official to visit Baku -- but not the last. Benjamin Netanyahu made 
the  trip in 1997, a high-level Knesset delegation in 1998, Deputy Prime 
Minister  Avigdor Lieberman and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni in 2007, Israeli 
President  Shimon Peres in 2009, and Lieberman again, as foreign minister, 
this last  February. Accompanying Peres on his visit to Baku was _Avi  Leumi_ 
(http://www.commonspace.eu/eng/blogs/15/author8/id85) , _the CEO_ 
(http://www.israeldefense.com/?CategoryID=474&ArticleID=449)  of Israel's 
Aeronautics 
Defense Systems and a former  Mossad official who paved the way for the drone 
agreement.  
U.S. intelligence officials began to take Israel's courtship of Azerbaijan  
seriously in 2001, one of the senior U.S. military intelligence officers 
said.  In 2001, Israeli arms manufacturer Elbit Systems contracted with 
Georgia's  Tbilisi Aerospace Manufacturing to upgrade the Soviet SU-25 
Scorpion, a 
close  air-support fighter, and one of its first customers was Azerbaijan. 
More  recently, Israel's Elta Systems has cooperated with Azerbaijan in 
building the  TecSar reconnaissance satellite system and, in 2009, the two 
countries began  negotiations over Azeri production of the Namer infantry 
fighting vehicle.  
Israeli firms "built and guard the fence around Baku's international 
airport,  monitor and help protect Azerbaijan's energy infrastructure, and even 
provide  security for Azerbaijan's president on foreign visits," according to 
_a study_ 
(http://www.meforum.org/987/israel-and-azerbaijans-furtive-embrace)  published 
by Ilya Bourtman in the Middle East  Journal. Bourtman noted 
that Azerbaijan shares intelligence data on Iran  with Israel, while Murinson 
_raised the possibility_ 
(http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/templateC05.php?CID=2287)  that Israelis 
have set up electronic  listening stations along 
Azerbaijan's Iranian border.  
Israeli officials downplay their military cooperation with Baku, pointing 
out  that Azerbaijan is one of the few Muslim nations that makes Israelis 
feel  welcome. "I think that in the Caucasian region, Azerbaijan is an icon of  
progress and modernity," Sneh told an Azeri magazine in July 2010.  
Many would beg to differ with that description. Sneh's claim "is 
laughable,"  the retired American diplomat said. "Azerbaijan is a thuggish 
family-run  
kleptocracy and one of the most corrupt regimes in the world." The U.S. 
embassy  in Baku has also been scathing: A 2009 State Department cable 
described Aliyev,  the son of the country's longtime ruler and former KGB 
general 
Heydar Aliyev, as  a "mafia-like" figure, comparable to "Godfather" characters 
Sonny and Michael  Corleone. On domestic issues in particular, the cable 
warned that Aliyev's  policies had become "increasingly authoritarian and 
hostile to diversity of  political views."  
But the U.S. military is less concerned with Israel's business interests in 
 Baku, which are well-known, than it is with how and if Israel will employ 
its  influence in Azerbaijan, should its leaders decide to strike Iran's 
nuclear  facilities. The cable goes on to confirm that Israel is focused on 
Azerbaijan as  a military ally -- "Israel's main goal is to preserve Azerbaijan 
as an ally  against Iran, a platform for reconnaissance of that country and 
as a market for  military hardware."  
It is precisely what is not known about the relationship that keeps U.S.  
military planners up at night. One former CIA analyst doubted that Israel 
will  launch an attack from Azerbaijan, describing it as "just too chancy,  
politically." However, he didn't rule out Israel's use of Azeri airfields to  
mount what he calls "follow-on or recovery operations." He then added: "Of  
course, if they do that, it widens the conflict, and complicates it. It's  
extremely dangerous."  
One of the senior U.S. military officers familiar with U.S. war plans is 
not  as circumspect. "We are studying every option, every variable, and every 
factor  in a possible Israeli strike," he told me. Does that include 
Israel's use of  Azerbaijan as a platform from which to launch a strike -- or 
to 
recover Israeli  aircraft following one? There was only a moment's hesitation. 
"I think I've  answered the question," he said.

-- 
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