Here is a lengthy article from a year ago which I had saved on my computer. It deals with the history and present of the jooish-Israeli-Azeri relations. It is a little biased but still interesting to read if you want to have some insights in the relations between Israel and Azerbaijan.
(I replaced the word j-e-w in this article with joo)
THE AZERI TRIANGLE
by Netty C. Gross
The Jerusalem Report
July 10, 2006
Israel and Diaspora Joory are deepening their own links with
oil-rich Muslim Azerbaijan and helping the Azeri regime win friends
in Washington. Critics scoff at talk of democracy in this Central
Asian republic and see the spectre of neighbouring Iran clouding the
rosy picture.
On a crisp spring morning in mid-May a delegation of Israeli
dignitaries and Russian Jooish functionaries gather solemnly in
the pristinely landscaped national cemetery in Baku, the capital
of Azerbaijan, an oil-rich former Soviet Muslim republic in the
south-eastern Caucasus region of Western Asia. As required by Azeri
state protocol, the delegation is beginning its two-day visit by laying
wreaths at the monumental tomb of Heydar Aliyev, the late Azerbaijani
leader. A Soviet-era strongman and chairman of Azerbaijan's Communist
party, Aliyev reinvented himself as a pro-Western pragmatist after the
country won independence in December 1991, and served as president
from 1993 until his death in the United States, where in 2003, he
had gone for medical treatment after collapsing of a heart attack on
Azeri television.
This kind of homage to the leader is hardly surprising. Though he has
been dead for three years, billboards around the country of 8 million
are plastered with images of the beaming, clean-shaven, tanned face
of Aliyev, who looks on the posters a lot like Giorgio Armani.
Schools and parks are also named for Heydar Baba (Grandfather
Heydar). Critics say that the cult of his personality reflects
Azerbaijan's lingering totalitarian orientation, that the country is
not a real democracy and that corruption and political repression
are rife; supporters counter that Aliyev was genuinely popular,
and that his regime stabilized the country and oriented its foreign
policy toward the West.
The itinerary also requires a visit to Martyrs Alley, a run-down
cemetery a 10-minute drive away, where guests are given red
carnations to place on the graves of some 132 young Azeri’s, including
an 18-year-old Jooish woman named Vera Bessantina, all innocent
bystanders killed in 1990 by Soviet troops sent in to put down unrest
in the tumultuous dying days of the Soviet Union. The end of the
crumbling Soviet empire also triggered war between newly independent
Azerbaijan and (Christian) Armenia over the disputed area known as
Nagorno-Karabakh, a predominantly ethnic Armenian enclave within
Azerbaijan. The 1992-94 war claimed 30,000 lives; Azerbaijan lost 20
percent of its territory to Armenian occupation, and 800,000 Azeris
were displaced. Nagorno-Karabakh has declared its independence, but
the enclave and territory conquered in the war remain under Armenian
control, and have become the major issue on Azerbaijan's agenda.
Taken together, the two cemetery stops offer a glimpse into
Azerbaijan's psyche. And what they represent are at the root of a
strong Azerbaijani-American-Israel-Jooish connection, a relationship
that some critics warn will unravel just as Israel's romance with
Iran did, and for similar reasons. The connection benefits everyone.
In a world thirsty for oil and plagued by Islamic fundamentalism,
energy-rich Azerbaijan has become an important U.S. strategic ally
and partner in the war on terror in a region where Washington has
few friends. Baku solidifies the link by allowing the U.S to use its
airspace, and contributing troops to coalition forces in Iraq. To
underscore the political trade-offs, Ilham Aliyev, Heydar's son
and successor, was invited to the White House for the first time
last April. Israel, too, is deeply interested in consolidating its
relations with this secular oil-rich Muslim state, which was once home
to an ancient Jooish community, most of whose members, some 80,000,
have since emigrated to Israel and Russia. And Israel has seen it
in its interest to encourage U.S. Joos to take up the Azeri cause in
the Washington corridors of power, at the same time reinforcing the
notion held by many Azeri and others in the Third World that the way
to Washington leads through Jerusalem.
There are other players as well: rich and influential Russian Jooish
businessmen, some of whom have powerful contacts from the old Soviet
days - and who proudly point out to me that Ilham's son-in-law has
a Jooish mother and a Muslim father.
Azerbaijan also sees the good relations with Israelis and Joos as
reinforcing the image of a tolerant Muslim country. But Dr. Asim
Mollazade, chairman of the Democratic Reforms Party, one of a handful
of opposition parties, warns that Azerbaijan "is corrupt, and the
enormous oil revenues are not reaching the people, who remain very
poor. Those who can, emigrate. Islamic extremists are a great danger.
Azerbaijan is Iran circa 1975." The U.S., Israel and Jooish supporters,
he maintains, will be "deeply disappointed. They are fighting the
wrong fight."
The charges, though disputed, are not entirely unfounded. Azerbaijan
got a poor score for corruption, political repression and prisoner
mistreatment in a recent State Department report. And though Heydar
Aliyev assured president Bill Clinton in 1997 that he would work
to make Azerbaijan more democratic, his son, Ilham, now 45, was
elected president in 2003, two months before Heydar died, garnering
a too-good-to-believe 75 percent of the vote in balloting marked
by allegations of serious irregularities. Elections in 2005 for
the 125-seat Azerbaijani National Assembly (the Milli Majlis) were
similarly marred.
But the United States, Israel and Diaspora Joos have chosen to ignore
the warnings, and these days, the apocalyptic scenario is a minority
opinion. "Mollazade's views are myopic," says Israel's ambassador to
Azerbaijan, Arthur Lenk.
In recent months, a parade of several high-level Israeli and Jooish
delegations, who have been mobilized to help Azerbaijani interests
in the U.S., passed through Baku, a city of 2 million dotted with
a hodgepodge of elegant but neglected late-19th-century European
structures, blighted Soviet blocs, and gleaming new "oil-money"
high-rises. In early February, a 50-strong delegation from the
Conference of Presidents of Major American Organizations was received
by Aliyev. In April, the Azeri president welcomed Israeli tycoon Lev
Leviev. Leviev, born in nearby Uzbekistan, heads his own non-profit
organization, which has a Chabad-Lubavitch religious and educational
agenda, and runs religious programs in much of the former Soviet Union,
particularly in the Muslim republics of Central Asia.
And in early June, Israeli National Infrastructures Minister Binyamin
Ben-Eliezer arrived in Baku, to explore the idea of purchasing Azeri
oil or gas at some time in the future.
The star of today's delegation is Yosef Chagall, 56, a Baku-born former
journalist and newly elected member of Knesset from the right-wing
Yisrael Beiteinu party, who immigrated to Israel in 1977 and is making
his maiden voyage back home as an MK. Azerbaijan's National Assembly
also boasts its first Jooish representative, Yedva Abramov (though
three of his children now live in Israel, Abramov says he did not hide
his Jooishness on visits to Syria, Pakistan and North Korea). At the
tomb Chagall, with Lenk at his side, lays the ceremony's first wreath
on behalf of the State of Israel, which opened an embassy in Baku
in 1993. That act of diplomacy hasn't been reciprocated, however,
in part because Azerbaijan, though secular, sees a role for itself
in the Islamic world as well as with the West.
In June, Azerbaijan assumed the annual chairmanship of the Organization
of Islamic Countries (OIC), and the organization's yearly meeting
took place in Baku. Insiders say an Azeri embassy in Tel Aviv would
be perceived as a "tease" to Iran, which is home to 20 million ethnic
Azeri’s just across the borders established by Russia and the Western
powers in the first half of the 20th century. Another example of
the Azeri balancing act: At the World Conference Against Racism in
Durban in 2001, which Israel and the U.S. abandoned in protest over
anti-Israel sentiment, Azerbaijan was one of 10 nations that abstained
rather than vote for or against a compromise motion.
The motion eventually passed 51-38, to eliminate the charge of racism
against Israel. And, in fact, Iran is a constant presence in Baku,
say insiders, supporting, for example a large bookstore in downtown
Baku known as Alhoda (Almighty), where one can buy religious books
and framed posters of Iran's leaders from the stern-looking male
sales staff.
The second wreath is presented by regional leaders of the Euro-Asian
Jooish Congress. (Each of the wreaths is the size of a semi-trailer
tire, embellished with hundreds of roses, and satin sashes bearing
gold lettering in the Azeri language.) A political NGO created by
Jooish oligarch Alexander Mashkevich 15 years ago, EAJC is now a
regional section of the World Jooish Congress, with offices in Moscow
and Kiev and links with communities across Central Asia. Mashkevich,
a former university lecturer in philology in Kyrgyzstan who made an
estimated $1 billion in mining and banks and is known to have Azeri
business interests, maintains homes in Belgium and Israel but is said
by employees to "live on an airplane." In late June, Mashkevich was
presented with an award from the Keren Hayesod fundraising organization
by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.
Underscoring the close ties between the Russian Jooish machers and
the locals, EAJC operatives move about Baku's corridors of power like
kings, freely initiating press conferences and government meetings,
to the occasional discomfort of Lenk, who feels they are acting on
their own rather than coordinating with the official representative
of the Jooish state.
Chagall seems to be expressing the view of both his new country and
the EAJC leaders when, speaking to a gaggle of local TV reporters
covering his return to Baku as an MK, he says admiringly, "Heydar
was like Arik Sharon. He knew how to make the switch" from ideology
to pragmatism when realities changed.
Azerbaijan is sandwiched strategically between Russia, Turkey and
Iran. With the latter it shares a 432-km border, religion and, with
20 million Iranians, a common ethnic identity, language and history.
For almost two centuries oil has determined - cynics say ruined -
its fate. Discovered in the 1880s, Baku's oil fields dwarfed those
of the same period in Pennsylvania, Texas and Oklahoma, and by 1901
they were yielding more crude than all the wells in the United States
combined. Russian rule, which had begun earlier, by conquest, in 1828,
brought schools and a degree of modernity to Azerbaijan (Czarist-era
buildings, some mutilated by the Soviets, still grace downtown Baku),
but it also brought political repression and unsuccessful attempts
to convert the Muslims to the Russian Orthodox Church.
Still, in the last quarter of the 19th century, an educated Muslim
elite, which believed that a modernized, secular Islam could be
compatible with Western science and democracy, sprung up. Fuelled
by Muslim oil barons such as Shamsi Assadullayev (whose glorious
Parisian-styled mansion at 9 Gogol Street in Baku was later subdivided
into communal housing by the Soviets and was recently renovated by
young Baku entrepreneurs), Azeri teachers, writers and poets forged
a modern Azeri national consciousness, and ushered in a golden era
of arts, literature and culture, which included the first operas
written by Muslims. Late-19th-century Baku was a cosmopolitan city that
included 11 mosques, four Russian Orthodox cathedrals, a synagogue, 12
printing presses, a boy's and girl's classical gymnasia high school,
and a special Russian-language school for Muslim adults, according
to a 1997 book on Old Baku by Nazim Ibrahimov.
The secular Muslims of that era ruled the independent Azerbaijan
Democratic Republic, which was established in 1918-1920, in the
wake of the collapse of the czarist empire and continues to inspire
opposition leader Mollazade. "The idea that a Muslim can be secular,
tolerant and democratic was established right here in Baku long ago,"
he says. But it ended with the oil-thirsty Bolshevik conquest of
Azerbaijan in April 1920. Baku crude was nationalized and dispensed
free to Russia, neighbouring Armenia and Georgia. A Soviet-era bronze
statue depicting a woman throwing off her veil still stands in a
downtown Baku square, ironically in front of a building occupied by
the National Melli Bank of Iran. The Soviets eventually drove out the
Azeri intellectual elite and repressed religion, a move that has made
it more difficult for 21st-century Islamic fundamentalism to put down
roots since independence. Indeed 70 years of rule by the Soviet empire
left its mark on Baku, where after generations, some of the social
distinctions between Central Asian Azeri’s and transplanted European
Russians have become blurred. There are few mosques; pork and alcohol
can be found in many restaurants; there's nary a headscarf in sight;
and a constitutional law separating religion and state is firmly
enforced. "I don't have any religious friends," says Fuad Akhundov,
a 38-year-old Baku police investigator and popular local historian
who moonlights as a tour guide.
Azerbaijan had its second chance at independence after the Soviet
empire crumbled. The republic's first democratically elected president,
Abulfez Elchibey, saw himself as spiritual heir to the independent
Azeris of 1918. But Elchibey was also an Azeri dreamer who studied
the Israeli ulpan method with an eye toward phasing out Russian as
Azerbaijan's official tongue and replacing it with Azeri.
(I replaced the word j-e-w in this article with joo)
THE AZERI TRIANGLE
by Netty C. Gross
The Jerusalem Report
July 10, 2006
Israel and Diaspora Joory are deepening their own links with
oil-rich Muslim Azerbaijan and helping the Azeri regime win friends
in Washington. Critics scoff at talk of democracy in this Central
Asian republic and see the spectre of neighbouring Iran clouding the
rosy picture.
On a crisp spring morning in mid-May a delegation of Israeli
dignitaries and Russian Jooish functionaries gather solemnly in
the pristinely landscaped national cemetery in Baku, the capital
of Azerbaijan, an oil-rich former Soviet Muslim republic in the
south-eastern Caucasus region of Western Asia. As required by Azeri
state protocol, the delegation is beginning its two-day visit by laying
wreaths at the monumental tomb of Heydar Aliyev, the late Azerbaijani
leader. A Soviet-era strongman and chairman of Azerbaijan's Communist
party, Aliyev reinvented himself as a pro-Western pragmatist after the
country won independence in December 1991, and served as president
from 1993 until his death in the United States, where in 2003, he
had gone for medical treatment after collapsing of a heart attack on
Azeri television.
This kind of homage to the leader is hardly surprising. Though he has
been dead for three years, billboards around the country of 8 million
are plastered with images of the beaming, clean-shaven, tanned face
of Aliyev, who looks on the posters a lot like Giorgio Armani.
Schools and parks are also named for Heydar Baba (Grandfather
Heydar). Critics say that the cult of his personality reflects
Azerbaijan's lingering totalitarian orientation, that the country is
not a real democracy and that corruption and political repression
are rife; supporters counter that Aliyev was genuinely popular,
and that his regime stabilized the country and oriented its foreign
policy toward the West.
The itinerary also requires a visit to Martyrs Alley, a run-down
cemetery a 10-minute drive away, where guests are given red
carnations to place on the graves of some 132 young Azeri’s, including
an 18-year-old Jooish woman named Vera Bessantina, all innocent
bystanders killed in 1990 by Soviet troops sent in to put down unrest
in the tumultuous dying days of the Soviet Union. The end of the
crumbling Soviet empire also triggered war between newly independent
Azerbaijan and (Christian) Armenia over the disputed area known as
Nagorno-Karabakh, a predominantly ethnic Armenian enclave within
Azerbaijan. The 1992-94 war claimed 30,000 lives; Azerbaijan lost 20
percent of its territory to Armenian occupation, and 800,000 Azeris
were displaced. Nagorno-Karabakh has declared its independence, but
the enclave and territory conquered in the war remain under Armenian
control, and have become the major issue on Azerbaijan's agenda.
Taken together, the two cemetery stops offer a glimpse into
Azerbaijan's psyche. And what they represent are at the root of a
strong Azerbaijani-American-Israel-Jooish connection, a relationship
that some critics warn will unravel just as Israel's romance with
Iran did, and for similar reasons. The connection benefits everyone.
In a world thirsty for oil and plagued by Islamic fundamentalism,
energy-rich Azerbaijan has become an important U.S. strategic ally
and partner in the war on terror in a region where Washington has
few friends. Baku solidifies the link by allowing the U.S to use its
airspace, and contributing troops to coalition forces in Iraq. To
underscore the political trade-offs, Ilham Aliyev, Heydar's son
and successor, was invited to the White House for the first time
last April. Israel, too, is deeply interested in consolidating its
relations with this secular oil-rich Muslim state, which was once home
to an ancient Jooish community, most of whose members, some 80,000,
have since emigrated to Israel and Russia. And Israel has seen it
in its interest to encourage U.S. Joos to take up the Azeri cause in
the Washington corridors of power, at the same time reinforcing the
notion held by many Azeri and others in the Third World that the way
to Washington leads through Jerusalem.
There are other players as well: rich and influential Russian Jooish
businessmen, some of whom have powerful contacts from the old Soviet
days - and who proudly point out to me that Ilham's son-in-law has
a Jooish mother and a Muslim father.
Azerbaijan also sees the good relations with Israelis and Joos as
reinforcing the image of a tolerant Muslim country. But Dr. Asim
Mollazade, chairman of the Democratic Reforms Party, one of a handful
of opposition parties, warns that Azerbaijan "is corrupt, and the
enormous oil revenues are not reaching the people, who remain very
poor. Those who can, emigrate. Islamic extremists are a great danger.
Azerbaijan is Iran circa 1975." The U.S., Israel and Jooish supporters,
he maintains, will be "deeply disappointed. They are fighting the
wrong fight."
The charges, though disputed, are not entirely unfounded. Azerbaijan
got a poor score for corruption, political repression and prisoner
mistreatment in a recent State Department report. And though Heydar
Aliyev assured president Bill Clinton in 1997 that he would work
to make Azerbaijan more democratic, his son, Ilham, now 45, was
elected president in 2003, two months before Heydar died, garnering
a too-good-to-believe 75 percent of the vote in balloting marked
by allegations of serious irregularities. Elections in 2005 for
the 125-seat Azerbaijani National Assembly (the Milli Majlis) were
similarly marred.
But the United States, Israel and Diaspora Joos have chosen to ignore
the warnings, and these days, the apocalyptic scenario is a minority
opinion. "Mollazade's views are myopic," says Israel's ambassador to
Azerbaijan, Arthur Lenk.
In recent months, a parade of several high-level Israeli and Jooish
delegations, who have been mobilized to help Azerbaijani interests
in the U.S., passed through Baku, a city of 2 million dotted with
a hodgepodge of elegant but neglected late-19th-century European
structures, blighted Soviet blocs, and gleaming new "oil-money"
high-rises. In early February, a 50-strong delegation from the
Conference of Presidents of Major American Organizations was received
by Aliyev. In April, the Azeri president welcomed Israeli tycoon Lev
Leviev. Leviev, born in nearby Uzbekistan, heads his own non-profit
organization, which has a Chabad-Lubavitch religious and educational
agenda, and runs religious programs in much of the former Soviet Union,
particularly in the Muslim republics of Central Asia.
And in early June, Israeli National Infrastructures Minister Binyamin
Ben-Eliezer arrived in Baku, to explore the idea of purchasing Azeri
oil or gas at some time in the future.
The star of today's delegation is Yosef Chagall, 56, a Baku-born former
journalist and newly elected member of Knesset from the right-wing
Yisrael Beiteinu party, who immigrated to Israel in 1977 and is making
his maiden voyage back home as an MK. Azerbaijan's National Assembly
also boasts its first Jooish representative, Yedva Abramov (though
three of his children now live in Israel, Abramov says he did not hide
his Jooishness on visits to Syria, Pakistan and North Korea). At the
tomb Chagall, with Lenk at his side, lays the ceremony's first wreath
on behalf of the State of Israel, which opened an embassy in Baku
in 1993. That act of diplomacy hasn't been reciprocated, however,
in part because Azerbaijan, though secular, sees a role for itself
in the Islamic world as well as with the West.
In June, Azerbaijan assumed the annual chairmanship of the Organization
of Islamic Countries (OIC), and the organization's yearly meeting
took place in Baku. Insiders say an Azeri embassy in Tel Aviv would
be perceived as a "tease" to Iran, which is home to 20 million ethnic
Azeri’s just across the borders established by Russia and the Western
powers in the first half of the 20th century. Another example of
the Azeri balancing act: At the World Conference Against Racism in
Durban in 2001, which Israel and the U.S. abandoned in protest over
anti-Israel sentiment, Azerbaijan was one of 10 nations that abstained
rather than vote for or against a compromise motion.
The motion eventually passed 51-38, to eliminate the charge of racism
against Israel. And, in fact, Iran is a constant presence in Baku,
say insiders, supporting, for example a large bookstore in downtown
Baku known as Alhoda (Almighty), where one can buy religious books
and framed posters of Iran's leaders from the stern-looking male
sales staff.
The second wreath is presented by regional leaders of the Euro-Asian
Jooish Congress. (Each of the wreaths is the size of a semi-trailer
tire, embellished with hundreds of roses, and satin sashes bearing
gold lettering in the Azeri language.) A political NGO created by
Jooish oligarch Alexander Mashkevich 15 years ago, EAJC is now a
regional section of the World Jooish Congress, with offices in Moscow
and Kiev and links with communities across Central Asia. Mashkevich,
a former university lecturer in philology in Kyrgyzstan who made an
estimated $1 billion in mining and banks and is known to have Azeri
business interests, maintains homes in Belgium and Israel but is said
by employees to "live on an airplane." In late June, Mashkevich was
presented with an award from the Keren Hayesod fundraising organization
by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.
Underscoring the close ties between the Russian Jooish machers and
the locals, EAJC operatives move about Baku's corridors of power like
kings, freely initiating press conferences and government meetings,
to the occasional discomfort of Lenk, who feels they are acting on
their own rather than coordinating with the official representative
of the Jooish state.
Chagall seems to be expressing the view of both his new country and
the EAJC leaders when, speaking to a gaggle of local TV reporters
covering his return to Baku as an MK, he says admiringly, "Heydar
was like Arik Sharon. He knew how to make the switch" from ideology
to pragmatism when realities changed.
Azerbaijan is sandwiched strategically between Russia, Turkey and
Iran. With the latter it shares a 432-km border, religion and, with
20 million Iranians, a common ethnic identity, language and history.
For almost two centuries oil has determined - cynics say ruined -
its fate. Discovered in the 1880s, Baku's oil fields dwarfed those
of the same period in Pennsylvania, Texas and Oklahoma, and by 1901
they were yielding more crude than all the wells in the United States
combined. Russian rule, which had begun earlier, by conquest, in 1828,
brought schools and a degree of modernity to Azerbaijan (Czarist-era
buildings, some mutilated by the Soviets, still grace downtown Baku),
but it also brought political repression and unsuccessful attempts
to convert the Muslims to the Russian Orthodox Church.
Still, in the last quarter of the 19th century, an educated Muslim
elite, which believed that a modernized, secular Islam could be
compatible with Western science and democracy, sprung up. Fuelled
by Muslim oil barons such as Shamsi Assadullayev (whose glorious
Parisian-styled mansion at 9 Gogol Street in Baku was later subdivided
into communal housing by the Soviets and was recently renovated by
young Baku entrepreneurs), Azeri teachers, writers and poets forged
a modern Azeri national consciousness, and ushered in a golden era
of arts, literature and culture, which included the first operas
written by Muslims. Late-19th-century Baku was a cosmopolitan city that
included 11 mosques, four Russian Orthodox cathedrals, a synagogue, 12
printing presses, a boy's and girl's classical gymnasia high school,
and a special Russian-language school for Muslim adults, according
to a 1997 book on Old Baku by Nazim Ibrahimov.
The secular Muslims of that era ruled the independent Azerbaijan
Democratic Republic, which was established in 1918-1920, in the
wake of the collapse of the czarist empire and continues to inspire
opposition leader Mollazade. "The idea that a Muslim can be secular,
tolerant and democratic was established right here in Baku long ago,"
he says. But it ended with the oil-thirsty Bolshevik conquest of
Azerbaijan in April 1920. Baku crude was nationalized and dispensed
free to Russia, neighbouring Armenia and Georgia. A Soviet-era bronze
statue depicting a woman throwing off her veil still stands in a
downtown Baku square, ironically in front of a building occupied by
the National Melli Bank of Iran. The Soviets eventually drove out the
Azeri intellectual elite and repressed religion, a move that has made
it more difficult for 21st-century Islamic fundamentalism to put down
roots since independence. Indeed 70 years of rule by the Soviet empire
left its mark on Baku, where after generations, some of the social
distinctions between Central Asian Azeri’s and transplanted European
Russians have become blurred. There are few mosques; pork and alcohol
can be found in many restaurants; there's nary a headscarf in sight;
and a constitutional law separating religion and state is firmly
enforced. "I don't have any religious friends," says Fuad Akhundov,
a 38-year-old Baku police investigator and popular local historian
who moonlights as a tour guide.
Azerbaijan had its second chance at independence after the Soviet
empire crumbled. The republic's first democratically elected president,
Abulfez Elchibey, saw himself as spiritual heir to the independent
Azeris of 1918. But Elchibey was also an Azeri dreamer who studied
the Israeli ulpan method with an eye toward phasing out Russian as
Azerbaijan's official tongue and replacing it with Azeri.
Comment