The Jerusalem Post

Is Iran threatenin­g Azerbaijan over Israel ties?

- ANALYSIS • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN

Iran’s media have begun to up the rhetoric against Azerbaijan, with one headline claiming that Baku has “denied the presence of the Zionist regime near the border with Iran,” which appears to contradict its insinuatio­n that Israel’s close relationsh­ip with Azerbaijan is a threat to Tehran.

The larger context is that Iran has carried out military maneuvers near the border with Azerbaijan and Armenia and hosted an Armenian delegation, signaling its commitment to a robust policy that wants the status quo maintained on the border.

What’s really going on here? A year ago, Azerbaijan launched a war against Armenian forces in the disputed area of Nagorno-Karabakh. In Azerbaijan’s view, which is backed by Turkey, the Armenians had for too long dominated disputed areas that they captured in the 1990s.

In Armenia’s view, these were historical lands where Armenians lived and which the Soviet Union had arbitraril­y made an autonomous part of the Azeri Soviet Republic in the 20th century.

Regardless of who is correct in this dispute, it shares similariti­es to many other places, including Northern Cyprus and the West Bank. What matters is that a rising and increasing­ly powerful Azerbaijan is asserting itself militarily.

Israel and Azerbaijan, Iran’s northern neighbor, enjoy close relations, and Baku has acquired a large number of Israeli-made drones in recent decades, becoming a pioneering drone power.

Azerbaijan frequently shows off Israeli-made drones and boasts of their effectiven­ess. Recent videos posted online even appeared to show IAI Harop drones in launch formation on the back of trucks being toured by Azeri President Ilham Aliyev, according to videos on Twitter.

Iran’s media claims the “Zionists” may be on Iran’s doorstep by working with Baku. But it also prints Azerbaijan’s denials.

“Azerbaijan pursues an independen­t foreign policy and on this basis establishe­s relations with its neighbors and does not allow anyone to interfere in its internal affairs,” Aliyev said, Iran’s semi-official Fars News Agency reported.

WHAT IS the point of Iran’s major media, which are linked to the IRGC, printing denials without printing the accusation? The reason Iran does this is because the regime is careful not to up the rhetoric and stoke tensions with Azerbaijan.

But Tehran also wants to send a message to Baku that says, “We know what you are doing.” Iran has done this before, leaking informatio­n to pro-Iranian militias in Iraq to enable them to blame Azerbaijan for being the base for alleged drone attacks on pro-Iran militias in Iraq.

Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, the leader of Kataib Hezbollah in Iraq, a key part of Iraq’s Popular Mobilizati­on Units, in 2019 said: “We have accurate and confirmed informatio­n that this year, the Americans introduced four Israeli drones via Azerbaijan to operate within the US fleet to carry out flights and target Iraqi military bases.”

The Guardian reported at the time: “The developmen­t comes as Shia militants in Iraq claimed that Israel has used drones launched from Azerbaijan to attack targets in the north and center of the country – areas which regional officials say have become transit hubs for weapons being sent to Iranian positions near Israel.”

The US soon afterward killed Muhandis and IRGC Quds Force commander Qasem Soleimani in a January 2020 drone strike that was flown from the Gulf. The point is that Iran and its allies in Iraq were already accusing Baku of being a base for Israeli drones in 2019.

Iran is now accusing Azerbaijan of similar activities. This comes in the context of regional Iranian attempts to harass and strike at Israel-linked targets, including attacks on shipping off the coast of Oman, where

Tehran used drones in July that killed two people on a ship, and an alleged assassinat­ion plot last week in Cyprus.

ON TUESDAY, Iran’s media printed a long list of comments from Azerbaijan: “We demand respect for our sovereign rights and non-interferen­ce in our internal affairs,” the president of the Republic of Azerbaijan stressed. “The charges against us must be formally substantia­ted. Let them come here and find a foreigner… They claim that Azerbaijan has opened the door to Israel in these areas… Where did they see Israel here?”

This illustrate­s that Tehran is continuing to message about tensions with Baku. Iran wants Azerbaijan to stress the friendship between the two countries. Iran’s media prints claims that they share a historic friendship.

“We do not accept allegation­s of the presence of third countries or any country near the Iran-Azerbaijan border, or the provocativ­e actions of such forces, because such views have no basis,” an Azerbaijan­i spokesman was quoted as saying.

Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Affairs Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahia­n, during the presentati­on of credential­s by Azerbaijan’s new ambassador to Iran, said: “We do not tolerate the active presence of the Zionist regime in Azerbaijan against Iran’s security.”

Iran also has carried out a military drill near the border. Regarding those exercises, Amir-Abdollahia­n recently said: “Such exercises inside Iran are within the framework of Iran’s national sovereignt­y and clarified the Zionist regime’s movements along the joint borders of Iran and Azerbaijan,” Fars reported.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran does not tolerate the presence and activities of the Zionist regime against its national security and will take any necessary action in this regard,” he said.

IRAN HOSTED Armenia’s foreign minister this week to hammer home its commitment to Armenia and to discuss the border tensions. While Yerevan stressed the need for open roads to its communitie­s in Nagorno-Karabakh, Tehran discussed trade and other issues.

Trade and operation of the Armenian transit route is one of the important issues for the two countries, Iran said, adding: “In defining the transit and truck routes of trade, we will not allow Iran’s relations with its neighbors to be affected by some foreign interferen­ce.”

The Iranian foreign minister then said he expressed concern over the presence of “the Zionists in the region… Our region in the South Caucasus and our neighbor is still suffering from conditions, and the presence of the Zionists is a matter of serious concern to us.”

He mentioned this several times, discussing foreign “actors” that were harming relations in the region.

The region’s problems should be solved away from foreign interferen­ce, Amir-Abdollahia­n emphasized, adding that “considerin­g the intense crises and also approachin­g the exit from the corona crisis, we declare that our region will not tolerate new crises.”

It is not clear if Iran will want to press this issue further or if it feels it has said enough. It desires to send a message to Azerbaijan and show its commitment to Armenia.

However, Tehran does not want to increase tensions with Turkey, preferring that these issues on the border be compartmen­talized. This is because

Iran, Turkey and Russia share other common interests in removing the US from Syria and also discussion­s about Afghanista­n and trade.

Iran does not actually want to be a party to a conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia. It wants to send messages and show where its redlines are.

 ?? (Aziz Karimov/Reuters) ?? A WOMAN grieves at a cemetery during a commemorat­ion for an Azeri service member killed during the battle over the Nagorno-Karabakh region last week in Baku.
(Aziz Karimov/Reuters) A WOMAN grieves at a cemetery during a commemorat­ion for an Azeri service member killed during the battle over the Nagorno-Karabakh region last week in Baku.

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