The Art Of Turning Neighbors Into Enemies: The Khomeinist Regime Relations With Azerbaijan
28 April 2013
By Amir Taheri
By all accounts Azerbaijan should be Iran's closest
ally.
The tiny republic on the Caspian Sea is home to nine
million people with strong ethnic, historic, and
religious ties to the Iranian people. Almost 80
percent speak Azeri, an Altaic language with a
vocabulary drawn from Turkish, Persian, and Arabic.
Around 12 million people in five Iranian provinces
speak a version of the language.
Azerbaijan also contains Kurdish, Gushtasbi-Talysh,
Tat, and Lezgin minorities; ethnic groups with kith
and kin in Iran (ethnic and linguistic minorities
account for 22 percent of Azerbaijan's population).
Known as Aran, Shiravan and Nakhjivan, the areas that
actually form Azerbaijan were part of the Iranian
heartland for more than 25 centuries. Iran lost them
in two disastrous wars with Tsarist Russia which was
pursuing its dream of reaching warm waters through
Iran. With treaties imposed on the Qajar Shahs in 1824
and 1830 Iran ceded the areas to the Tsars.
When the Tsarist Empire collapsed following the
1917-1918 Russian Revolution, these areas came
together to form an independent state. The experiment
lasted two years before Lenin sent an army of to
reassert Russian domination. Next, Josef Stalin,
acting as Commissar for Nationalities, transformed the
territories into a new unit named Azerbaijan,
establishing it as an autonomous republic within the
USSR. The fall of the Soviet Empire in 1991 gave the
people of Azerbaijan a chance to regain their
independence.
Due to these events, large numbers fled from the
affected territories, seeking refuge in Iran. Today
there are millions of Iranians whose ancestors fled
the Tsarists and the Bolsheviks. The flow of refugees
to Iran from Azerbaijan continued for decades, albeit
with varying intensity. In the 1990s as Armenia
invaded and annexed Nagorno-Karabakh, half a million
people fled from Azerbaijan to Iran.
With Shi'ite Muslims representing some 85 percent of
the population, Azerbaijan also shares strong
religious ties with Iran. Linguistically, the Kurdish,
Tat, and Gushtasbi-Talysh minorities belong to the
family of Iranic languages. (Iran's Zoroastrian "holy"
book Avesta was originally written in the
Gushtasbi-Talysh language.)
Thus, relations between Azerbaijan and Iran should be
at least correct if not cordial. And, yet, the
opposite is the case.
Last week, Iran recalled its ambassador from Baku,
capital of Azerbaijan, and closed border passages.
The move came after Azerbaijan arrested 41 people on
charges of espionage for Iran. Azerbaijani journalist
Anar Bayramli, who worked for Iranian media, was also
arrested.
As the drama unfolded, two Azerbaijani writers Farid
Hussein and Shahriar Haji-Zadeh disappeared in Iran,
presumably seized as hostages.
Last week, Tehran's anger rose when Baku hosted a
conference on "The Future of Southern Azerbaijan".
This was a gathering of militants, mostly US citizens
of Iranian origin, who regard all the various peoples
who speak versions of the Azeri language as Turks. It
is not quite clear what they mean by "South
Azerbaijan". But one must assume that they want
Azerbaijan to merge with the five Iranian provinces
where Azeri is widely spoken to form a single new
nation of 22 million people.
Tehran sees the move as a plot hatched by the United
States, Israel, and Turkey against Iran's territorial
integrity.
However, the "unification" plan would mean the
disappearance of the Republic of Azerbaijan in its
present shape. In a "greater" Azerbaijan the people of
the republic would become a minority.
Not surprisingly, on Wednesday the daily Kayhan,
reflecting the views of "Supreme Guide" Ali Khamenei
called for the "return" of Azerbaijan to Iran. It
suggested that a referendum be held under
international auspices on the subject, giving the
people of Azerbaijan the choice of "returning to their
Iranian homeland."
Hosting secessionists is not the only reason for
Tehran's anger. Azerbaijan has close ties with Israel
including a USD 1.6 billion contract to purchase arms
from the Jewish state. Tehran media claim that
Azerbaijan would give Israel bases to bomb Iran's
nuclear sites.
Iran also regards Azerbaijan's ties wit Turkey, a
member of NATO, as a potential threat in case of a
military clash with the United States.
To add to Tehran's anger, Azerbaijan has sided with
Russia over dividing the resources of the Caspian Sea
including oil and gas and caviar-bearing fish
reserves.
Iran wants the Caspian to be declared an inland sea
jointly owned by its five littoral states. Under that
scheme, Iran's share would be 20 percent. Russia and
Kazakhstan want the sea divided according to the
length of each littoral state's shoreline. Under this
scheme, Iran would end up with 11 percent. At first
equivocating on the issue, Azerbaijan now tilts
towards the Russian position while Turkmenistan, the
fifth littoral state, is hedging its bet.
Azerbaijan, too, has complaints against Iran.
The Islamic Republic supports Christian Armenia in its
conflict with Azerbaijan. Without support from Iran,
landlocked Armenia would not have been able to annex
Nagorno-Karabakh. It is clear that as long as Iran
backs Armenia, Azerbaijan will not be able to
recapture its lost territories.
Baku has another complaint.
Iran's ruling mullahs try to incite Azerbaijan's
Gushtasbi-Talysh minority against the Azeri majority
despite the fact that the majority of the
Gushtasbi-Talysh are Sunni Muslims. Baku also accuses
Tehran of trying to foment nationalism among Kurdish,
Tat and Lezgins in Azerbaijan.
Tehran's mishandling of relations with Azerbaijan is a
classic example of how ideological blindness could
turn a nation's potentially closest neighbor into an
enemy.
Blinded by its anti-Americanism, the Khomeinist regime
not only ignores deep-rooted cultural and historical
ties but has also set aside Islamic or even Shi'ite
sensibilities in shaping relations with Azerbaijan.
Instead of the current tension, under a normal regime
Iran would have been able to draw Azerbaijan close to
its ancestral cultural and historic homeland by
opening the borders, merging markets, and allowing
maximum contact between populations on both sides of
the Aras River.
Sadly, however, tension with Azerbaijan need not be
surprising. Today, Iran's relations with all its
neighbors are marked by varying degrees of mistrust
and hostility. A sad story, all round.
Amir Taheri was born in Ahvaz, southwest
Iran, and educated in Tehran, London and Paris. He was
Executive Editor-in-Chief of the daily Kayhan in Iran
(1972-79). In 1980-84, he was Middle East Editor for
the Sunday Times. In 1984-92, he served as member of
the Executive Board of the International Press
Institute (IPI). Between 1980 and 2004, he was a
contributor to the International Herald Tribune. He
has written for the Wall Street Journal, the New York
Post, the New York Times, the London Times, the French
magazine Politique Internationale, and the German
weekly Focus. Between 1989 and 2005, he was editorial
writer for the German daily Die Welt. Taheri has
published 11 books, some of which have been translated
into 20 languages. He has been a columnist for Asharq
Alawsat since 1987. Taheri's latest book "The Persian
Night" is published by Encounter Books in London and
New York.
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