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Israel under diplomatic fire over arms to Azerbaijan
By Guillaume LAVALL�E
Jerusalem (AFP) Oct 5, 2020

NATO chief tells Turkey to help calm Karabakh conflict
Ankara (AFP) Oct 5, 2020 - The head of NATO said Monday he expected Turkey -- a key ally of Azerbaijan -- to use its "considerable" influence to calm the conflict in the ethnic Armenian separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg's comments in Ankara came as fighting between Azerbaijani and Armenian separatist forces entered its second week with at least 260 people killed.

"We are deeply concerned by the escalation of hostilities. All sides should immediately cease fighting and find a way forward towards a peaceful resolution," Stoltenberg said after talks with Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.

"And I expect Turkey to use its considerable influence to calm tensions."

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has urged fellow Muslim Azerbaijan to press on with its campaign until it takes back lands it lost in a war in the early 1990s that killed 30,000 as Nagorno-Karabakh broke away.

He said moments before starting his own talks with the NATO commander that Azerbaijan was "responding to an attack and saving Karabakh from its occupation".

"We, Turkey, say that we are always on the Azerbaijan side," Erdogan said in a televised address.

"As long as the Karabakh issue is not resolved, it will not be possible to end the unrest and conflict in the region."

Nagorno-Karabakh is viewed as part of Azerbaijan by the United Nations and was never recognised as an independent state by Armenia.

But Yerevan fully supports the region and has historically hostile relations with Azerbaijan.

- Mediterranean dispute -

Stoltenberg's visit to Turkey came during a new spell of tensions with its strategically vital member state.

Turkey contributes one of the largest forces to the Western military alliance and plays a crucial role in Libya and the Middle East.

But Turkey's hunt for natural gas deposits in disputed eastern Mediterranean waters sparked a regional crisis in August that forced fellow NATO member Greece to stage war games with its top European allies in a show of force.

Those tensions began to ease when the two agreed last month to resume direct negotiations for the first time since 2016. No date for the Istanbul talks has been announced.

Turkey also pulled back a drilling ship from contested waters around Cyprus after the European Union on Friday threatened to sanction Ankara.

The European Union said the Yavuz vessel's return to a Turkish port on Monday "constitutes another welcome step towards de-escalation in the eastern Mediterranean".

The Turkish energy ministry said the ship was undergoing maintenance and refuelling in preparation for "drilling activities in a new location".

Stoltenberg meanwhile welcomed an agreement by Athens and Ankara last week to set up a military hotline to head off accidental clashes.

"The de-confliction mechanism can help create the space for diplomatic efforts," the NATO chief said.

Stoltenberg next travels to Athens on Tuesday for talks with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.

A major supplier of arms to Azerbaijan, Israel has come under diplomatic fire from Armenia over the struggle between the Caucasus neighbours in disputed Nagorno-Karabakh.

Armenia, a country long-seen as close to Israel's nemesis Iran, only opened an embassy in Tel Aviv on September 17, but Yerevan recalled its ambassador barely two weeks later, citing weapons sales to Azerbaijan.

While Israel's president on Monday spoke with his Armenian counterpart and attempted to smooth the waters, the Jewish state's weapons exports to Baku will be difficult to give up.

The diplomatic rift came shortly after press reports, based on data from flight tracing site Flightradar 24, cited the takeoff of an Azerbaijani cargo plane from southern Israel.

The site said the aircraft, operated by Azerbaijani carrier Silk Way, took off from Ramon Airport, located near the Ovda military base, on the eve of the outbreak of hostilities.

Beyond this single example, Azerbaijan has a long track record of buying Israeli arms -- to the extent that Iran in 2012 summoned the former's ambassador to voice its concerns.

And while the Israeli defence ministry does not publish details of sales by country, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in 2016 said his country had bought $4.85 billion in defence equipment from the Jewish state (4.1 billion euros at current prices).

Israeli media say that Israel's Elbit Systems sold Azerbaijan, a Shiite country, armed drones -- weaponry which has shifted the military balance in the decades-old dispute in which Armenian fighters long held the advantage of manning mountain outposts.

Azeri presidential advisor Hikmet Hajiyev told the Jewish state's Walla news website last week that Azerbaijan was using Israeli-made drones, including so-called "suicide" drones that can destroy a target on impact, in Nagorno-Karabakh.

- Smoothing troubled ties -

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin spoke on Monday with his Armenian counterpart Armen Sarkissian in a call that Rivlin's office said was at Sarkissian's request.

Rivlin "expressed his sorrow at the outbreak of violence... and at the loss of life on both sides" in Nagorno-Karabakh, his office said in a statement, adding that the Jewish state's long-standing relations with Azerbaijan are "not aimed against any side."

Rivlin said Israel was prepared to send Armenia humanitarian aid and expressed hope that the Armenian ambassador will return "soon".

In Jerusalem, Armenian flags appeared this week from windows in the Armenian quarter of the Old City.

According to data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri), over the past five years, Israel has been the top supplier of arms to Azerbaijan, with sales of more than $740 million, putting it ahead of Russia.

"Azerbaijan is an important country for us," Efraim Inbar, president of the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security, told AFP.

"We always try to be a good supplier even during times of tension... we have to make sure that we will honour the contracts we make with Azerbaijan," he added.

"It is not our responsibility what they are doing. They can fight with knives, they can fight with stones, people fight with many things."

The ties between Israel and Azerbaijan date back to the break-up of the USSR in the early 1990s.

The two countries forged diplomatic and trade relations, as Israel sought to build bridges with Muslim countries and Azerbaijan was working to build new relationships beyond its traditional ties with Moscow.

"Israel and Azerbaijan have strategic relations," said Gallia Lindenstrauss, analyst at the Tel Aviv Institute for Strategic Studies.

"Israel imports quite a large amount of its oil from Azerbaijan and Israel exports to Azerbaijan weapons," she said. "Azerbaijan is one of the largest clients of Israel's defence industry."

- Turkish drones -

Armenia also accuses Turkey, an ally of Azerbaijan, of supplying drones to Baku.

But that does not make Israel and Turkey allies.

The two are at odds over the Palestinian conflict, gas resources in the Mediterranean and the conflict in Libya.

Ankara has given military support to the UN-recognised Government of National Accord in Tripoli while Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Russia have favoured eastern Libyan strongman Khalifa Haftar.

"We have seen Turkey increase (its influence) in Libya and this seems to be the manifestation of a more assertive military policy aimed at demonstrating the capabilities of its defence industry," says Lindenstrauss.

She says Ankara could be seeking "political leverage to cause Azerbaijan to rethink its relations with Israel."

At a time when Israel has normalised relations with several oil-producing Gulf countries who are potential customers of its military technologies, could the Jewish state cool its links with Azerbaijan?

Inbar says Israel does not want to build new relations with one Muslim country by sacrificing existing links with another.

"We want to have more deals," he said. "We don't want to swap them."


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THE STANS
Macron demands Turkey explain 'jihadists' in Azerbaijan
Brussels (AFP) Oct 2, 2020
French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday demanded that Turkey explain what he said was the arrival of jihadist fighters in Azerbaijan - and urged NATO to face up to its ally's actions. "A red line has been crossed, which is unacceptable," Macron said. "I urge all NATO partners to face up to the behaviour of a NATO member. "France's response is to ask Turkey for an explanation on this point," he said. Macron was speaking after a summit in Brussels at which EU leaders agreed to threaten Tur ... read more

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