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    Categories: 2021

Turkey’s Erdogan Stirs The Iran-Azerbaijan Pot

Iran International


By Maryam Sinaee
10/22/2021

Iran is in no position to "target Azerbaijan" for relations with
Israel for fear of its own Azari population, Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan has said.

Referring to a reporter’s question on whether recent Iranian military
maneuvers would “escalate into a hot crisis” in the Caucasus, Erdogan
said he had "no such expectation," according to a government
English-language news release.

Because of Baku’s relations with Israel, “Iran will not be hostile to
Azerbaijan or put Azerbaijan on the target list” because its own
Azaris were “noticeable,” the president said.

During the 2020 conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia, some among
Iran’s Azaris, around a quarter of the 80 million population,
expressed sympathy for Baku’s cause.

But Erdogan, speaking to reporters on a plane returning from an
African tour also played down tensions between Iran and Azerbaijan,
which relaxed this week with Thursday’s release of two Iranian truck
drivers arrested on a transit route to Armenia now under Azerbaijani
control.

"It is not that simple,” the president said. “What has been done thus
far [by Iran] is inappropriate, and I believe that Iran's new
administration will not repeat this misstep.”

The first to fall in

Iranian authorities have not commented on Erdogan’s remarks, the first
from a senior Turkish figure on Iran's military drills near the
Turkish border and the recent standoff between Tehran and Baku. Iran's
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei on October 3 highlighted a reported
Israeli military presence in Azerbaijan and appeared to refer to
Turkey's role in warning that "the person who digs a well [to trap]
for his brothers is the first one to fall into it."

Iran is also concerned at the reported presence of jihadist fighters
from Syria in Azerbaijani territory allegedly recruited by Turkey to
help Baku in its war against ethnic Armenians in and around
Nagorno-Karabakh during last year's conflict. Turkey and Azerbaijan
have denied the allegation.

The Turkish president's comments came as tensions between Tehran and
Baku appeared to ease since last week’s phone-call between the Iranian
and Azerbaijani foreign ministers. In a meeting with lawmakers from
East and West Azarbaijan provinces Thursday, President Ebrahim Raisi
(Raeesi) stressed that good relations with neighboring countries was a
government priority, and that Iran would not allow Israel to sabotage
them.

In a December 2020 speech to a victory parade in Baku after the
Azerbaijan-Armenia war,

Erdogan recited a folk poem, popular both in both Azerbaijan and the
Iranian Azari provinces, lamenting the division of the ethnic Azari by
the river Aras separating Azerbaijan and Armenia from Iran.

Sultan of illusion

Iran's foreign ministry summoned the Turkish ambassador, while foreign
minister Mohammad Javad Zarif reacted with uncharacteristic vigor.
Much of the Iranian media dubbed the Turkish president the 'Sultan of
illusion.'

Erdogan also in the speech referred to "one nation, two states,"
citing Turkey and Azerbaijan’s shared linguistic heritage. "One
nation" is often used by pan-Turks to express the unity of speakers of
all Turkic languages, across central Asia and including Azerbaijan and
Iran’s north-west Azari-populated northwest.

Pan-Turkism has been on the rise among Azari (Torki) speakers of Iran
in the past two decades. Separatist groups call Iran’s northwestern
regions ‘South Azerbaijan.’ The Turkic languages spoken in Iran's
northwest and some other parts of Iran have fed a movement advocating
unification of speakers in Iran and the Republic of Azerbaijan, whose
territory was part of Iran until the early nineteenth century when
ceded to the Russian empire.


 

Emil Lazarian: “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS