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LEAKED - Confidential Report, U/S Burns interview Aliyev

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  • #11
    Re: LEAKED - Confidential Report, U/S Burns interview Aliyev

    Originally posted by Tigranakert View Post

    Azerbaboon: 9.000 Google hits and counting!

    Comment


    • #12
      Re: LEAKED - Confidential Report, U/S Burns interview Aliyev

      I've heard a story that Saakashvili tried to hit on Aliyev's wife and Aliyev found out and was really mad at Saakashvili and went on to punch him...
      Մեկ Ազգ, Մեկ Մշակույթ
      ---
      "Western Assimilation is the greatest threat to the Armenian nation since the Armenian Genocide."

      Comment


      • #13
        Re: LEAKED - Confidential Report, U/S Burns interview Aliyev

        It was at the opening ceremony of the BTC pipeline. At the xxxxtail party, Saakashvili got drunk and hit on Aliyev's wife. A high-level staff member from of the US Embassy in Georgia who attended the event had to diffuse the situation. Saakashvili loves to tie one on and then hit on every woman he sees. Saakashvilis wife was also there and very embarrassed. This story is well-known in diplomatic circles.
        General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

        Comment


        • #14
          Re: LEAKED - Confidential Report, U/S Burns interview Aliyev

          Originally posted by Federate View Post

          As the saying goes, "good from afar...far from good"
          General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

          Comment


          • #15
            Re: LEAKED - Confidential Report, U/S Burns interview Aliyev

            The Caucasus Gets WikiLeaked
            November 29, 2010 - 3:35pm, by Giorgi Lomsadze
            Tamada Tales Armenia Foreign Policy Azerbaijan Foreign Policy Georgia Foreign Policy Russia-Georgia War
            Armenia's WikiLeak sensation came in the form of allegations about arms transfers to Iran. Azerbaijan took a knock on relations with Iran, Turkey and Russia. Never one to be left behind, Georgia has also jumped on the WikiLeaks bandwagon with alleged US embassy cables that blame the 2008 war with Russia on breakaway South Ossetia.

            Georgian media have cited WikiLeaks for the documents, but there's just one catch -- the cables cannot be found on WikiLeaks, nor have any of the site's partner media organizations yet published them.

            Georgian blogs which have re-posted the alleged cables do not provide a
            link to a WikiLeaks source or otherwise identify how they found the
            information.

            Georgian news outlets, though, do not seem to have any qualms about this contradiction. Nor do local analysts appear to doubt the documents' authenticity.

            WikiLeaks could not be reached to verify that the information came from its own site. The website, reportedly the target of cyber attacks, was not fully functional on November 29.



            A case of leaking before WikiLeaking? We do not know.

            Greater clarity about the WikiLeaks connection appears to exist in the case of Georgia’s neighbors, Azerbaijan and Armenia.

            The Armenian presidential administration and foreign ministry declined to comment to RFE/RL about a 2008 letter in which US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte allegedly had warned about the possibility of sanctions if alleged arms re-exports to Iran did not stop.

            The Azerbaijani government, though, has already moved to nip in the bud a WikiLeak cable that reports President Ilham Aliyev as describing Russian President Dmitry Medvedev as a “new-generation intellectual” engaged in an ongoing turf war with Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

            “The two heads [Medvedev's and Putin’s -- ed] cannot be boiled in one pot,” the cable reports Aliyev as saying.

            Aliyev supposedly went on to criticize Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan for being naďve and promoting moderate Islam, and to complain about security provocations from Iran.

            In an interview with the Azerbaijani news agency APA, Novruz Mammadov, head of the administration's international relations department, claimed to have no recollection of the cited comments from Aliyev's February 2010 meeting with Burns. With an eye on the December 1-2 OSCE summit in Kazakhstan, he instead put the cable down to an attempt by unidentified "forces" at stirring up trouble.

            "This is a dangerous trend," he concluded.

            is there any doubt they will claim Armenia is responsible?

            Comment


            • #16
              Re: LEAKED - Confidential Report, U/S Burns interview Aliyev

              Originally posted by Joseph View Post
              It was at the opening ceremony of the BTC pipeline. At the xxxxtail party, Saakashvili got drunk and hit on Aliyev's wife. A high-level staff member from of the US Embassy in Georgia who attended the event had to diffuse the situation. Saakashvili loves to tie one on and then hit on every woman he sees. Saakashvilis wife was also there and very embarrassed. This story is well-known in diplomatic circles.
              I find that hilarious, do you have a link by any chance?
              Մեկ Ազգ, Մեկ Մշակույթ
              ---
              "Western Assimilation is the greatest threat to the Armenian nation since the Armenian Genocide."

              Comment


              • #17
                Re: LEAKED - Confidential Report, U/S Burns interview Aliyev

                Originally posted by Mos View Post
                I find that hilarious, do you have a link by any chance?
                I do not. As far as I know the incident was never written about but was a major cause for concern. I have heard the stories from a source who attended with a colleague. You can take it for what its worth but word of the incident spread in the diplomatic community like wildfire. It is one of the the myriad of reasons why Saakashvilli is considered a loose canon.
                General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

                Comment


                • #18
                  Re: LEAKED - Confidential Report, U/S Burns interview Aliyev

                  WikiLeaks: Aliyev is Michael (Corleone) on Outside, Sonny on Inside

                  The most recent confidential cables released from the U.S. Embassy of Baku describe Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev as a cross between fictional mafia bosses Michael Corleone and Sonny Corleone, from the
                  quintessential mob film “The GodFather.”

                  U.S. Embassy of Baku Charge Donal Lu, in a December 2009 cable to Deputy Assistant Secretary Tina Kaidenow, describes Aliyev as a “pragmatist” when it comes to foreign policy but “increasingly authoritarian” on domestic policy. “This Michael/Sonny dichotomy complicates our approach to Baku and has the unfortunate effect of framing what should be a strategically valuable relationship as a choice between U.S. interests and U.S. values.”

                  The complete cable is provided below.

                  ***

                  Date 2009-09-18 11:17:00

                  Source Embassy Baku

                  Classification SECRET//NOFORN

                  S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 04 BAKU 000749

                  SIPDIS
                  NOFORN

                  DEPT FOR EUR/CARC, DAS KAIDANOW

                  E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/18/2034
                  TAGS: PGOV, PREL, AJ, RU, TU, AM
                  SUBJECT: PRESIDENT ILHAM ALIYEV – MICHAEL (CORLEONE) ON THE
                  OUTSIDE, SONNY ON THE INSIDE

                  REF: A. BAKU 724 AND PREVIOUS
                  B. BAKU 534
                  C. 08 BAKU 1136
                  D. BAKU 526 AND PREVIOUS
                  E. BAKU 696 AND PREVIOUS
                  F. BAKU 287

                  Classified By: Charge Donald Lu, Reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

                  1. (S/NF) Summary: Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev
                  utilizes distinctly different approaches to foreign and
                  domestic policies. He typically devises the former with
                  pragmatism, restraint and a helpful bias toward integration
                  with the West, yet at home his policies have become
                  increasingly authoritarian and hostile to diversity of
                  political views. This divergence of approaches, combined
                  with his father’s continuing omnipresence, has led some
                  observers to compare the Aliyevs with the fictional
                  “Corleones” of Godfather fame, with the current president
                  described alternately as a mix of “Michael” and “Sonny.”
                  Either way, this Michael/Sonny dichotomy complicates our
                  approach to Baku and has the unfortunate effect of framing
                  what should be a strategically valuable relationship as a
                  choice between U.S. interests and U.S. values. End Summary.

                  2. (S/NF) This striking aspect of President Ilham Aliyev’s
                  governing style was very neatly summed up recently by the
                  witty, but somewhat past-his-prime –––– ––––
                  –––– –––– –––– –––– –––– (protect). Commenting
                  on the GOAJ’s harsh reaction to the YouTube “donkey video”
                  (Reftel A), –––– quipped to the Charge that what one must
                  understand about Aliyev, “He’s not Michael Corleone, he’s
                  Sonny.” To some in Baku, ––––’–––– Godfather analogy seems
                  apt – capturing essential truths not only about Ilham Aliyev,
                  but his father Heydar, who becomes by implication the “Vito
                  Corleone” of Azerbaijan. With that in mind, this cable
                  attempts to explain who Ilham Aliyev is and why he does what
                  h does. Aside from ––––’–––– analogy, it also owe much to
                  the appraisals of Michael and Sonny from “The Godfather
                  Doctrine (2008),” by John Hulsman and A. Wess Mitchell.

                  “That’s my family, Kay. It’s not me.”
                  —————————————

                  3. (C) Ilham Aliyev inherited a newly independent,
                  resource-rich state, brought to order in the post-Soviet era
                  by this father, Heydar Aliyev, scarred by a catastrophic war
                  with Armenia that resulted in occupation of the
                  Nagorno-Karabakh enclave and seven surrounding Azerbaijani
                  regions. He assumed the presidency in 2003, concurrent with
                  his father’s death, in an election marked by a lack of
                  competition and debate, at a time when Azerbaijan’s
                  re-developed oil and gas resources were being brought on line
                  for export. Dogged by widespread doubts about his
                  suitability for leadership based on his age (then 41), lack
                  of achievements and a “playboy” image, he oversaw the launch
                  of a one million-barrels-per-day oil pipeline, which has
                  flooded official and unofficial coffers in Baku and serves as
                  the financial backbone of the country.

                  4. (C) The President and his cohorts, who largely were
                  carried over from his father’s administration, now seek
                  predictability, stability and continuity to preserve and
                  protect public and private fortunes. Ilham Aliyev’s
                  landslide 2008 re-election was followed by a hastily-called
                  March 2009 referendum, which among other things removed term
                  limits for the President. Aliyev’s cabinet has changed very
                  little over the years, with few “reformers” brought in or
                  remaining in power. The Prime Minister position is largely
                  ceremonial and weak. Because of family connections, dynastic
                  succession, the strong arming of the opposition and the
                  creation of an elaborate patronage/protection network, the
                  Aliyev Administration has developed an “organized crime”
                  image in some quarters, leading some analysts to see Ilham
                  Aliyev at times in a mafia-like role.

                  “Never hate your enemies. It affects your judgment.”

                  BAKU 00000749 002 OF 004

                  ——————————————— ——–

                  5. (C) In their short study “The Godfather Doctrine,”
                  Hulsman and Mitchell present brothers Sonny and Michael
                  Corleone from “The Godfather” as exemplars of two out of
                  three schools of U.S. foreign policy thought (with
                  consigliere Tom Hagen representing the third.) However,
                  there are important points they raise about the two that
                  apply well to Aliyev and his policies abroad and at home.
                  Michael, they write, is a talented balancer of alliances,
                  aware of limitations on his own power who, importantly, knows
                  when something isn’t personal, but only business. Sonny, by
                  contrast, is brash, impulsive, and puts blind faith in force
                  to address affronts to the Corleone family. For him,
                  business is personal. Finally, Sonny refuses to contemplate
                  a present or a future in which the Corleone family does not
                  dominate New York, despite obvious and growing portents to
                  the contrary.

                  “This is business, not personal” – Balanced Foreign Policy
                  ——————————————— ————-

                  6. (S) President Aliyev inherited from his father a clever,
                  realistic foreign policy that he has largely maintained.
                  With the overarching goal of maintaining and increasing
                  Azerbaijan’s independence and sovereignty, he encourages
                  involvement with NATO and Euro-Atlantic security and
                  political structures and supports a policy of westward
                  transit of Azerbaijani oil and gas through non-Russian
                  channels. Otherwise, though, he alternates between
                  assertiveness and appeasement where his powerful neighbors
                  Russia and Iran are concerned. For example, Azerbaijan
                  routinely accuses Russia of supplying Armenia with weapons
                  and pointedly absents itself from the Collective Security
                  Treaty Organization (CSTO), while participating in GUAM. At
                  the same time, Aliyev constantly plays up his relations with
                  President Medvedev with frequent visits and has kept open the
                  channels of negotiation on energy issues, concluding a small
                  but symbolically important agreement with Gazprom to supply
                  gas to Dagestan (Reftel B). He is assertive enough to defend
                  Azerbaijan’s prerogative for an independent policy, but
                  discreet enough that he is in no danger of joining
                  Saakashvili on Moscow’s hit list.

                  7. (S) In foreign policy, Aliyev has also been able to
                  maintain generally the distinction between “business and
                  personal.” For all his bluster about Azerbaijan’s legal
                  right to liberate the Armenian-occupied territories by force,
                  Aliyev has worked constructively on the Minsk Group-proposed
                  Basic Principles and developed a reportedly good rapport with
                  Armenian President Sargsian – in contrast to the much more
                  confrontational relationship between the countries’ foreign
                  ministers. Similarly, even as Aliyev regards with horror the
                  prospect of Turkey-Armenia rapprochement ahead of
                  Nagorno-Karabakh resolution, the President has instructed
                  SOCAR to continue gas transit and supply talks with Turkey,
                  and no one in Baku has dared to consider a cut in oil exports
                  through the BTC pipeline. The gas transit talks are a
                  hardball affair to be sure, but Aliyev surely recognizes that
                  Azerbaijan cannot really afford a total rupture with Turkey
                  and certainly is not going to go so far as to foreclose on
                  options out of pique while the Turkey-Armenia question
                  remains open.

                  “You touch my sister again and I’ll kill you.” – The Hardliner
                  ——————————————— —————–

                  8. (S) For all of the cool-headed calculation that generally
                  influences Aliyev’s foreign policy, his domestic policies are
                  another matter. As Aliyev perceives a challenge to his
                  authority or affronts to his family dignity, even minor ones,
                  he and his inner circle are apt to react (or overreact), much
                  to the detriment of the country’s democratic development and
                  movement toward Western alliances. The example of the crude
                  retaliation against the young bloggers Emin Milli and Adnan
                  Hajizade is the most recent and public example (Reftel A).
                  Earlier, defending his decision to rescind licenses for
                  foreign broadcasters, Aliyev expressed his anger that Radio

                  BAKU 00000749 003 OF 004

                  Liberty had mocked his plan to build the world’s tallest
                  flagpole in the Baku port area, demonstrating exceedingly
                  thin skin (Reftel C).

                  9. (S/NF) It is examples like these that inspired ––––’––––
                  quip to the Charge about Sonny and Michael. ––––
                  elaborated on the point in that conversation, recalling times
                  when he was an –––– –––– –––– –––– and similar
                  situations arose. Heydar would never have allowed himself to
                  be goaded into ridiculous reactions, he said. (Note:
                  ––––’–––– memory on this might be a little selective, but he
                  has a point that the space for opinion was wider under the
                  last President, a view often echoed by journalists who look
                  back to the 1990s nostalgically. End Note.) Ilham Aliyev,
                  in ––––’–––– view, is not inclined to subtlety or
                  deliberation in his response to these kinds of issues.

                  “I don’t feel I have to wipe everybody out. Just my enemies.”

                  Q———————————– ————————–

                  10. (S) Aliyev takes the actions he does in order to
                  eliminate even the semblance of risk to his political
                  prominence. His goal appears to be a political environment
                  in which the Aliyev dynasty is unchallenged, which was
                  demonstrated by the hastily organized March 2009
                  constitutional referendum removing presidential term limits.
                  This strangled the hopes of any and all pretenders to
                  succession, including his wife (who in Azeri politics is
                  thought of as a rival Pashayev, not an Aliyev).

                  11. (S) The dissonance between Aliyev’s sensible approach to
                  foreign affairs, manifested by the cosmopolitan image he
                  presents to Western visitors, with his tailored suits and
                  flawless English, and the unpleasant reality of his approach
                  to domestic issues raises the obvious question of how these
                  two realities coexist. One explanation is that Aliyev is
                  insecure in domestic politics and relies heavily on the
                  advice of old-line Soviet-style political figures carried
                  forward from his father’s administration, such as
                  Presidential Chief of Staff Ramiz Mehdiyev. Alternatively,
                  Aliyev’s domestic actions are free choices made in accordance
                  with his instincts, with Mehdiyev and others playing the
                  “heavy.”.

                  12. (S) Occasionally, Aliyev’s confident tough-guy image
                  gives way to an impression that he is yielding on domestic
                  issues. Outside pressure does not always fail. A recent
                  positive example was the outcome of the parliament’s
                  initiative to ram through a Russian-style law on NGOs. In
                  the face of a domestic outcry – including from
                  government-supported NGOs, the Presidential Administration
                  intervened to prevent the law as drafted from passing (Reftel
                  D). Likewise, the President recently rejected a bill from
                  parliament that would have required foreign-based entities to
                  hire vetted Azerbaijanis citizens as deputy directors. The
                  business community strongly opposed this bill (Reftel E).
                  Also, the government earlier this year released one of the
                  prominent journalists whose imprisonment was widely believed
                  to have been politically motivated (Reftel F).

                  “Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.”
                  ——————————————— —–

                  13. (S) Comment: It is clear that Azerbaijan’s future
                  development would better suit United States policy goals if
                  Aliyev pursued his domestic policies in a manner that
                  resembled his foreign policy methods, however imperfect they
                  may be. A full-scale democratic conversion, however, is an
                  unlikely outcome, and the record of presidents in this region
                  leaving office voluntarily is rather thin. What is desirable
                  and perhaps achievable, however, is that Aliyev would govern
                  as a manager of alliances, viewing the political space
                  occupied by dissents as a source of ideas and a warning
                  system for when policies are hurting the national interest;
                  and ceasing to feel that he should strike hard at every
                  criticism that arises, or that he can do so without
                  consequences. At least this type of evolution would better
                  prepare Azerbaijan for the post-Ilham Aliyev era, whenever

                  BAKU 00000749 004 OF 004

                  that begins.

                  14. (S) Comment Continued: Here is where the Godfather
                  analogy begins to break down. In Azerbaijan the role of
                  loyal consigliere to the father and the son is played by the
                  long-time head of Presidential Administration Ramiz Mehdiyev.
                  Mehdiyev is no calm, conciliating Tom Hagen. We do not know
                  if President Aliyev personally ordered the many iron-fisted
                  domestic initiatives, although he almost certainly approved
                  them, even if after-the-fact. We do see Mehdiyev’s
                  fingerprints all over the arrests of journalists, the
                  stifling of opposition leaders, the closure of mosques, the
                  restrictions on the media and the general law-and-order
                  approach to governance. Is he the puppet or the
                  puppet-master? At age 71 and often seen in frail health,
                  this is an increasingly important question. While the rule
                  of 47-year old Ilham Aliyev could continue for decades, it
                  would be most likely without the benefit of his consigliere.
                  Without Mehdiyev, it is not clear whom Aliyev will turn to
                  for help in maintaining the same firm grip on the instruments
                  of power.

                  15. (U) “Don Corleone, I need a man with powerful friends .
                  . . I need all of those policians you carry around in your
                  pocket, like so many nickels and dimes.”
                  LU

                  Destination

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                  DE RUEHKB #0749/01 2611117
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                  The most recent confidential cables released from the U.S. Embassy of Baku describe Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev as a cross between fictional mafia bosses Michael Corleone and Sonny Corleone, from the quintessential mob film “The GodFather.” [...]
                  Azerbaboon: 9.000 Google hits and counting!

                  Comment


                  • #19
                    Re: LEAKED - Confidential Report, U/S Burns interview Aliyev

                    Originally posted by Federate View Post
                    WikiLeaks: Aliyev is Michael (Corleone) on Outside, Sonny on Inside

                    The most recent confidential cables released from the U.S. Embassy of Baku describe Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev as a cross between fictional mafia bosses Michael Corleone and Sonny Corleone, from the
                    quintessential mob film “The GodFather.”

                    U.S. Embassy of Baku Charge Donal Lu, in a December 2009 cable to Deputy Assistant Secretary Tina Kaidenow, describes Aliyev as a “pragmatist” when it comes to foreign policy but “increasingly authoritarian” on domestic policy. “This Michael/Sonny dichotomy complicates our approach to Baku and has the unfortunate effect of framing what should be a strategically valuable relationship as a choice between U.S. interests and U.S. values.”

                    The complete cable is provided below.

                    ***

                    Date 2009-09-18 11:17:00

                    Source Embassy Baku

                    Classification SECRET//NOFORN

                    S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 04 BAKU 000749

                    SIPDIS
                    NOFORN

                    DEPT FOR EUR/CARC, DAS KAIDANOW

                    E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/18/2034
                    TAGS: PGOV, PREL, AJ, RU, TU, AM
                    SUBJECT: PRESIDENT ILHAM ALIYEV – MICHAEL (CORLEONE) ON THE
                    OUTSIDE, SONNY ON THE INSIDE

                    REF: A. BAKU 724 AND PREVIOUS
                    B. BAKU 534
                    C. 08 BAKU 1136
                    D. BAKU 526 AND PREVIOUS
                    E. BAKU 696 AND PREVIOUS
                    F. BAKU 287

                    Classified By: Charge Donald Lu, Reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

                    1. (S/NF) Summary: Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev
                    utilizes distinctly different approaches to foreign and
                    domestic policies. He typically devises the former with
                    pragmatism, restraint and a helpful bias toward integration
                    with the West, yet at home his policies have become
                    increasingly authoritarian and hostile to diversity of
                    political views. This divergence of approaches, combined
                    with his father’s continuing omnipresence, has led some
                    observers to compare the Aliyevs with the fictional
                    “Corleones” of Godfather fame, with the current president
                    described alternately as a mix of “Michael” and “Sonny.”
                    Either way, this Michael/Sonny dichotomy complicates our
                    approach to Baku and has the unfortunate effect of framing
                    what should be a strategically valuable relationship as a
                    choice between U.S. interests and U.S. values. End Summary.

                    2. (S/NF) This striking aspect of President Ilham Aliyev’s
                    governing style was very neatly summed up recently by the
                    witty, but somewhat past-his-prime –––– ––––
                    –––– –––– –––– –––– –––– (protect). Commenting
                    on the GOAJ’s harsh reaction to the YouTube “donkey video”
                    (Reftel A), –––– quipped to the Charge that what one must
                    understand about Aliyev, “He’s not Michael Corleone, he’s
                    Sonny.” To some in Baku, ––––’–––– Godfather analogy seems
                    apt – capturing essential truths not only about Ilham Aliyev,
                    but his father Heydar, who becomes by implication the “Vito
                    Corleone” of Azerbaijan. With that in mind, this cable
                    attempts to explain who Ilham Aliyev is and why he does what
                    h does. Aside from ––––’–––– analogy, it also owe much to
                    the appraisals of Michael and Sonny from “The Godfather
                    Doctrine (2008),” by John Hulsman and A. Wess Mitchell.

                    “That’s my family, Kay. It’s not me.”
                    —————————————

                    3. (C) Ilham Aliyev inherited a newly independent,
                    resource-rich state, brought to order in the post-Soviet era
                    by this father, Heydar Aliyev, scarred by a catastrophic war
                    with Armenia that resulted in occupation of the
                    Nagorno-Karabakh enclave and seven surrounding Azerbaijani
                    regions. He assumed the presidency in 2003, concurrent with
                    his father’s death, in an election marked by a lack of
                    competition and debate, at a time when Azerbaijan’s
                    re-developed oil and gas resources were being brought on line
                    for export. Dogged by widespread doubts about his
                    suitability for leadership based on his age (then 41), lack
                    of achievements and a “playboy” image, he oversaw the launch
                    of a one million-barrels-per-day oil pipeline, which has
                    flooded official and unofficial coffers in Baku and serves as
                    the financial backbone of the country.

                    4. (C) The President and his cohorts, who largely were
                    carried over from his father’s administration, now seek
                    predictability, stability and continuity to preserve and
                    protect public and private fortunes. Ilham Aliyev’s
                    landslide 2008 re-election was followed by a hastily-called
                    March 2009 referendum, which among other things removed term
                    limits for the President. Aliyev’s cabinet has changed very
                    little over the years, with few “reformers” brought in or
                    remaining in power. The Prime Minister position is largely
                    ceremonial and weak. Because of family connections, dynastic
                    succession, the strong arming of the opposition and the
                    creation of an elaborate patronage/protection network, the
                    Aliyev Administration has developed an “organized crime”
                    image in some quarters, leading some analysts to see Ilham
                    Aliyev at times in a mafia-like role.

                    “Never hate your enemies. It affects your judgment.”

                    BAKU 00000749 002 OF 004

                    ——————————————— ——–

                    5. (C) In their short study “The Godfather Doctrine,”
                    Hulsman and Mitchell present brothers Sonny and Michael
                    Corleone from “The Godfather” as exemplars of two out of
                    three schools of U.S. foreign policy thought (with
                    consigliere Tom Hagen representing the third.) However,
                    there are important points they raise about the two that
                    apply well to Aliyev and his policies abroad and at home.
                    Michael, they write, is a talented balancer of alliances,
                    aware of limitations on his own power who, importantly, knows
                    when something isn’t personal, but only business. Sonny, by
                    contrast, is brash, impulsive, and puts blind faith in force
                    to address affronts to the Corleone family. For him,
                    business is personal. Finally, Sonny refuses to contemplate
                    a present or a future in which the Corleone family does not
                    dominate New York, despite obvious and growing portents to
                    the contrary.

                    “This is business, not personal” – Balanced Foreign Policy
                    ——————————————— ————-

                    6. (S) President Aliyev inherited from his father a clever,
                    realistic foreign policy that he has largely maintained.
                    With the overarching goal of maintaining and increasing
                    Azerbaijan’s independence and sovereignty, he encourages
                    involvement with NATO and Euro-Atlantic security and
                    political structures and supports a policy of westward
                    transit of Azerbaijani oil and gas through non-Russian
                    channels. Otherwise, though, he alternates between
                    assertiveness and appeasement where his powerful neighbors
                    Russia and Iran are concerned. For example, Azerbaijan
                    routinely accuses Russia of supplying Armenia with weapons
                    and pointedly absents itself from the Collective Security
                    Treaty Organization (CSTO), while participating in GUAM. At
                    the same time, Aliyev constantly plays up his relations with
                    President Medvedev with frequent visits and has kept open the
                    channels of negotiation on energy issues, concluding a small
                    but symbolically important agreement with Gazprom to supply
                    gas to Dagestan (Reftel B). He is assertive enough to defend
                    Azerbaijan’s prerogative for an independent policy, but
                    discreet enough that he is in no danger of joining
                    Saakashvili on Moscow’s hit list.

                    7. (S) In foreign policy, Aliyev has also been able to
                    maintain generally the distinction between “business and
                    personal.” For all his bluster about Azerbaijan’s legal
                    right to liberate the Armenian-occupied territories by force,
                    Aliyev has worked constructively on the Minsk Group-proposed
                    Basic Principles and developed a reportedly good rapport with
                    Armenian President Sargsian – in contrast to the much more
                    confrontational relationship between the countries’ foreign
                    ministers. Similarly, even as Aliyev regards with horror the
                    prospect of Turkey-Armenia rapprochement ahead of
                    Nagorno-Karabakh resolution, the President has instructed
                    SOCAR to continue gas transit and supply talks with Turkey,
                    and no one in Baku has dared to consider a cut in oil exports
                    through the BTC pipeline. The gas transit talks are a
                    hardball affair to be sure, but Aliyev surely recognizes that
                    Azerbaijan cannot really afford a total rupture with Turkey
                    and certainly is not going to go so far as to foreclose on
                    options out of pique while the Turkey-Armenia question
                    remains open.

                    “You touch my sister again and I’ll kill you.” – The Hardliner
                    ——————————————— —————–

                    8. (S) For all of the cool-headed calculation that generally
                    influences Aliyev’s foreign policy, his domestic policies are
                    another matter. As Aliyev perceives a challenge to his
                    authority or affronts to his family dignity, even minor ones,
                    he and his inner circle are apt to react (or overreact), much
                    to the detriment of the country’s democratic development and
                    movement toward Western alliances. The example of the crude
                    retaliation against the young bloggers Emin Milli and Adnan
                    Hajizade is the most recent and public example (Reftel A).
                    Earlier, defending his decision to rescind licenses for
                    foreign broadcasters, Aliyev expressed his anger that Radio

                    BAKU 00000749 003 OF 004

                    Liberty had mocked his plan to build the world’s tallest
                    flagpole in the Baku port area, demonstrating exceedingly
                    thin skin (Reftel C).

                    9. (S/NF) It is examples like these that inspired ––––’––––
                    quip to the Charge about Sonny and Michael. ––––
                    elaborated on the point in that conversation, recalling times
                    when he was an –––– –––– –––– –––– and similar
                    situations arose. Heydar would never have allowed himself to
                    be goaded into ridiculous reactions, he said. (Note:
                    ––––’–––– memory on this might be a little selective, but he
                    has a point that the space for opinion was wider under the
                    last President, a view often echoed by journalists who look
                    back to the 1990s nostalgically. End Note.) Ilham Aliyev,
                    in ––––’–––– view, is not inclined to subtlety or
                    deliberation in his response to these kinds of issues.

                    “I don’t feel I have to wipe everybody out. Just my enemies.”

                    Q———————————– ————————–

                    10. (S) Aliyev takes the actions he does in order to
                    eliminate even the semblance of risk to his political
                    prominence. His goal appears to be a political environment
                    in which the Aliyev dynasty is unchallenged, which was
                    demonstrated by the hastily organized March 2009
                    constitutional referendum removing presidential term limits.
                    This strangled the hopes of any and all pretenders to
                    succession, including his wife (who in Azeri politics is
                    thought of as a rival Pashayev, not an Aliyev).

                    11. (S) The dissonance between Aliyev’s sensible approach to
                    foreign affairs, manifested by the cosmopolitan image he
                    presents to Western visitors, with his tailored suits and
                    flawless English, and the unpleasant reality of his approach
                    to domestic issues raises the obvious question of how these
                    two realities coexist. One explanation is that Aliyev is
                    insecure in domestic politics and relies heavily on the
                    advice of old-line Soviet-style political figures carried
                    forward from his father’s administration, such as
                    Presidential Chief of Staff Ramiz Mehdiyev. Alternatively,
                    Aliyev’s domestic actions are free choices made in accordance
                    with his instincts, with Mehdiyev and others playing the
                    “heavy.”.

                    12. (S) Occasionally, Aliyev’s confident tough-guy image
                    gives way to an impression that he is yielding on domestic
                    issues. Outside pressure does not always fail. A recent
                    positive example was the outcome of the parliament’s
                    initiative to ram through a Russian-style law on NGOs. In
                    the face of a domestic outcry – including from
                    government-supported NGOs, the Presidential Administration
                    intervened to prevent the law as drafted from passing (Reftel
                    D). Likewise, the President recently rejected a bill from
                    parliament that would have required foreign-based entities to
                    hire vetted Azerbaijanis citizens as deputy directors. The
                    business community strongly opposed this bill (Reftel E).
                    Also, the government earlier this year released one of the
                    prominent journalists whose imprisonment was widely believed
                    to have been politically motivated (Reftel F).

                    “Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.”
                    ——————————————— —–

                    13. (S) Comment: It is clear that Azerbaijan’s future
                    development would better suit United States policy goals if
                    Aliyev pursued his domestic policies in a manner that
                    resembled his foreign policy methods, however imperfect they
                    may be. A full-scale democratic conversion, however, is an
                    unlikely outcome, and the record of presidents in this region
                    leaving office voluntarily is rather thin. What is desirable
                    and perhaps achievable, however, is that Aliyev would govern
                    as a manager of alliances, viewing the political space
                    occupied by dissents as a source of ideas and a warning
                    system for when policies are hurting the national interest;
                    and ceasing to feel that he should strike hard at every
                    criticism that arises, or that he can do so without
                    consequences. At least this type of evolution would better
                    prepare Azerbaijan for the post-Ilham Aliyev era, whenever

                    BAKU 00000749 004 OF 004

                    that begins.

                    14. (S) Comment Continued: Here is where the Godfather
                    analogy begins to break down. In Azerbaijan the role of
                    loyal consigliere to the father and the son is played by the
                    long-time head of Presidential Administration Ramiz Mehdiyev.
                    Mehdiyev is no calm, conciliating Tom Hagen. We do not know
                    if President Aliyev personally ordered the many iron-fisted
                    domestic initiatives, although he almost certainly approved
                    them, even if after-the-fact. We do see Mehdiyev’s
                    fingerprints all over the arrests of journalists, the
                    stifling of opposition leaders, the closure of mosques, the
                    restrictions on the media and the general law-and-order
                    approach to governance. Is he the puppet or the
                    puppet-master? At age 71 and often seen in frail health,
                    this is an increasingly important question. While the rule
                    of 47-year old Ilham Aliyev could continue for decades, it
                    would be most likely without the benefit of his consigliere.
                    Without Mehdiyev, it is not clear whom Aliyev will turn to
                    for help in maintaining the same firm grip on the instruments
                    of power.

                    15. (U) “Don Corleone, I need a man with powerful friends .
                    . . I need all of those policians you carry around in your
                    pocket, like so many nickels and dimes.”
                    LU

                    Destination

                    VZCZCXRO8966
                    PP RUEHAG RUEHDBU RUEHROV RUEHSL
                    DE RUEHKB #0749/01 2611117
                    ZNY SSSSS ZZH
                    P 181117Z SEP 09
                    FM AMEMBASSY BAKU
                    TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 1767
                    INFO RUCNCIS/CIS COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
                    RUCNMEM/EU MEMBER STATES PRIORITY
                    RUEHAK/AMEMBASSY ANKARA PRIORITY 3544
                    RUEAIIA/CIA WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
                    RUEKDIA/DIA WASHDC PRIORITY
                    RHMFISS/CDR USCENTCOM MACDILL AFB FL PRIORITY
                    RHMFISS/CDR USEUCOM VAIHINGEN GE PRIORITY
                    RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHDC PRIORITY
                    RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC PRIORITY
                    RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC PRIORITY
                    RUEHVEN/USMISSION USOSCE PRIORITY 1463

                    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2010/1...nny-on-inside/
                    Excellent. He is exceedingly vain and thin-skinned. His worst nightmare is not whether Azerbaijan loses another war with Armenia, but that his family loses power.
                    General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

                    Comment


                    • #20
                      Re: LEAKED - Confidential Report, U/S Burns interview Aliyev

                      Of course, the only reason Aliyev rants about Karabakh is to maintain support among the populace. In reality his main concern is his oil profits and staying in power, he could care less about Karabakh. Is it me or is Aliyev's reputation in the international arena deteriorating very rapidly? There's been even a cooling Azeri-turkish relations,
                      Մեկ Ազգ, Մեկ Մշակույթ
                      ---
                      "Western Assimilation is the greatest threat to the Armenian nation since the Armenian Genocide."

                      Comment

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