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ISTANBUL — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has signed up to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s plan to turn Turkey into a Russian natural gas hub. Erdogan, addressing his parliamentary deputies Wednesday, said Turkey had secured a vital opportunity by agreeing to Putin’s plan. “European countries are currently searching to find where to get natural gas supplies,” he said. “Thank God Turkey does not have such a problem. Hopefully, we will soon become a hub for natural gas.” Last week, Putin said the gas would be redirected through Turkey from the Nord Stream pipelines under the Baltic Sea, which were damaged by blasts last month. Russia already supplies Turkey’s TurkStream pipeline gas under the Black Sea. But the Kremlin admitted the pipeline has limited extra capacity. By the time new capacity has been created, said international relations professor Senem Duzgit of Istanbul’s Sabanci University, Europe will likely have secured alternative supplies. “I mean, who’s going to buy that energy?” he said, “I mean, realistically speaking, if the Europeans refuse to buy that gas, who’s going to buy it? So who will Turkey be a center for? Right? Who will be the destination of that gas? That’s what I’m just not convinced about.” Putin’s hub proposal comes as Ankara is seeking to position itself as an alternative to Russian energy for Europe, as Turkish presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin underlined Wednesday. Kalin said, “The offer by Putin is very important. But if Europe is looking for alternatives from Russian gas, there are two places it can find it: through a pipeline from Azerbaijan running through Turkey, and possible Iranian gas in the future, again, using Turkish pipelines.” Putin appeared to take Ankara by surprise with his gas hub plan. The proposal came as Turkey has faced growing scrutiny from its Western allies over its refusal to enforce sanctions against Russia. Washington and the European Union have warned that Turkey could face secondary sanctions if it violated its measures against Russia. Ankara denies any wrongdoing, but Putin’s gas proposals come as the West’s patience may be running out, warned Maria Shangina, a specialist on international sanctions at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. “The more Turkey explodes this space between legal and illegal activities with Russia, I think there might be a snapping point from the West to impose sanctions,” she said. But some analysts point out that Erdogan will try to accommodate Putin, given that he is trying to negotiate a cut in the price of Russian gas and a deferral of payments until after next year’s Turkish presidential elections. Erdogan is seeking to cut near triple-digit inflation, as most opinion polls indicate his electoral defeat. Source: Voice of America

BAKU, AZERBAIJAN — Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is conducting military exercises along the country’s border with Azerbaijan amid signs of tensions between the two countries.

 

Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency has reported that the maneuvers, which commenced Monday in the northwestern region, were being held in accordance with a pre-planned, annual activity calendar.

 

The location of the exercises, which include Iran’s East Azerbaijan and Ardabil provinces, is home to a large ethnic Azerbaijani population.

 

Mohammad Pakpour, ground forces commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) — also known as Sepah — said the exercises include practicing construction of a bridge over the Arax River and capture of strategic positions.

 

“The message of these exercises for the neighboring countries is the strengthening of peace, friendship and stable security, and for the enemies it is that the IRGC is ready to protect the borders of the country and respond to any threats,” IRNA said, citing Pakpour.

 

Baku given notice, Iran says

 

The Iranian Embassy in Azerbaijan issued a statement on the exercises, saying Tehran had given Baku advance notice of the drills, which military leaders from both countries discussed.

 

“The chief of staff of the Iranian armed forces [Mohammad Hossein] Bagheri had a phone conversation with the minister of defense of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Zakir Hasanov, during which some proposals were made regarding cooperation in conducting exercises,” the statement read. “The relations between Iran and Azerbaijan, which are two friendly and brotherly countries, have always been the target of extensive propaganda by the enemies, but the vigilance of the leaders of the two countries prevented them from achieving their goals.”

 

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi discussed security issues on the sidelines of an October 13 regional summit in Astana, Kazakhstan.

 

During those talks, Aliyev told Raisi that Azerbaijan was continuing efforts to ensure peace and security in the Caspian Sea and the South Caucasus region, according to a statement posted on Aliyev’s official website.

 

In July, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei expressed concern about a transport corridor promoted by Azerbaijan as “Zangezur Corridor,” which seeks to connect Azerbaijan’s Nakhchivan exclave with the mainland via Armenia’s Syunik province, which borders Iran, an idea rejected by the Armenian government.

 

“Of course, if there is a policy intended to block the Iran-Armenia border, the Islamic Republic will oppose it, for this border is a 1000s-year-old connecting route,” Khamenei tweeted.

 

Caucasus concern

 

In a phone call Monday with Azerbaijani Minister of Foreign Affairs Jeyhun Bayramov, top Iranian diplomat Hossain Amir-Abdollahian described the presence of foreign forces in the Caucasus as a common concern among nations in the region, emphasizing Tehran’s opposition to deployments in the area.

 

Speaking with Iran’s semiofficial ISNA news agency on Sunday, Brigadier General Ali Akbar Pourjamshidian, deputy coordinator of IRGC ground forces, emphasized the importance of stability and security throughout the Caucasus region. While the Islamic Republic does not consider Azerbaijan a threat to Iran, Pourjamshidian said, Tehran viewed “the presence of the Zionist regime in the Caucasus region” as a serious threat to the entire area, in an apparent reference to Israel.

 

According to numerous regional outlets, Iran’s Raisi broached the issue of an alleged Israeli military presence in Azerbaijan while meeting with Aliyev on the sidelines of the Caspian Sea littoral states summit this summer in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan.

 

The latest military drills come just weeks after an early October visit to Azerbaijan by Israel’s defense minister.

 

Israel is one of Azerbaijan’s largest weapons suppliers, and Tehran has long espoused concerns about Azerbaijan’s military cooperation with Israel, with whom it recently signed new military and security agreements.

 

Iran’s military exercises on the border have also been met with some criticism in Azerbaijan.

 

In comments to Voice of America, Tofig Zulfugarov, a former Azerbaijan foreign minister, described Iran’s military drills as actions directed against his country.

 

“The interests of some circles, especially the Sepah, are behind these exercises,” he said. “Because the maintenance of the connection with Armenia has been repeatedly expressed on behalf of the officials of the Sepah. The tension in this direction is also increasing.”

 

Source: Voice of America