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THE STANS
Iran, Azerbaijan try to soothe tensions
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) March 13, 2012


Iran and Azerbaijan are taking steps to soothe bilateral tensions most recently stoked by Baku's ties to Israel and its reported purchase of hundreds of millions of dollars of weapons from the Jewish state.

Public assurances of good neighbourly relations were being made in Tehran during a visit by Azerbaijan Defence Minister Safar Abiyev that continued into its second day on Tuesday.

"We are sure that we will face no problem from our brother and neighbour Azerbaijan," Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was quoted by the official Islamic Republic News Agency as saying on Monday after meeting Abiyev.

"Rest assured that Tehran-Baku ties will never be harmed," he said, adding that "artificial problems" that existed would be resolved and ties would be strengthened.

Abiyev was quoted as saying that "no nation can damage ties between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Republic of Azerbaijan."

He vowed that his country "will not allow anyone to use its soil and airspace against the Islamic Republic of Iran, since we consider Iran as a friend and brother."

The professed closeness sought to mend a rift opened up by Iranian news reports that Azerbaijan had bought $1.5 billion worth of weapons from Israel.

Iran's foreign ministry last month summoned Azerbaijan's ambassador to Tehran to request an explanation about the purchase, and to deliver a warning that Israel must not be permitted to use Azerbaijan to stage "terrorist acts" against Iran.

While Azerbaijan did not confirm the arms deal with Israel at the time, it did say it was boosting its arsenal "to liberate occupied Azerbaijani land" and it did not have hostile intentions against other countries in the region.

The "occupied land" referred to the disputed region of Nagorny Karabakh which was seized from Azerbaijan by Armenian forces during a war in the 1990s. No peace deal has been signed between Azerbaijan and Armenia despite years of negotiations since a 1994 ceasefire.

Abiyev discussed the weapons issue in greater detail on Monday with Iranian Defence Minister Ahmad Vahidi.

After their meeting, Abiyev was quoted by the Iranian news agency ISNA as saying: "These relations (with Israel) are not the way that the media have portrayed and I don't want the media to take this issue so seriously."

Vahidi added: "We talked about this issue with our Azerbaijani friends and they explained to us that it is not as it was reported by the media, and that the deal goes back to previous years and that amount is not that much."

Neither minister elaborated on the Azerbaijan-Israel arms deal.

The problem with that deal emerged after a separate incident in Azerbaijan in which police said they arrested an unspecified number of people linked to Iran and to the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah on suspicion of planning attacks in the country.

Iran last month also accused Azerbaijan, which is mainly Muslim, of working with Israel's spy services and helping assassins who murdered Iranian nuclear scientists in recent years -- a claim rejected by Baku as "slander".

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US pushes to use Kyrgyztan base after 2014
Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan (AFP) March 13, 2012 - US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta flew into Kyrgyzstan on Tuesday amid concern in Washington over the future of an air base that serves as a crucial hub for the war in Afghanistan.

The Pentagon chief planned to discuss the Manas base in an unannounced visit to Bishkek as US officials weigh a possible troop presence in Afghanistan beyond 2014, which would require use of runways at the base after a current rental deal expires.

Panetta said he would speak to Kyrgyz leaders about the "importance" of the air base, a vital transit point used to ferry troops to Afghanistan, refuel warplanes and evacuate wounded soldiers.

"I want to thank them and ensure that relationship can continue into the future as well," Panetta told reporters aboard his plane before landing in the capital.

President Almazbek Atambayev has called for changes in the arrangement at Manas after the current agreement runs out in mid-2014.

The visit was part of an effort by the United States to persuade Atambayev to leave the door open to renewing access to the Manas base after the current deal ends, a US defense official suggested.

"We think that there may be some longer-term wiggle room there, so we're not ruling anything out," the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told reporters.

"It's important that we underscore to them and to this new president that it is in fact very important to us," said the official.

The US administration also hopes to make the case that supporting the war effort in Afghanistan serves Kyrgyzstan's interests, by boosting stability in the region, the official added.

After Kyrgyzstan threatened to cancel US access to the base in 2009, Washington secured a new deal by agreeing to triple the rent paid to Bishkek. The United States now pays $60 million a year for use of the air field, up from an earlier annual fee of about $17 million, officials said.

As part of the agreement, the facility was renamed the Manas "transit center" to downplay the military operations.

The US presence has irritated Russia, placing Kyrgyzstan at the center of a power rivalry for regional influence.

Manas, which hosts about 1,500 US troops and contractors and a fleet of KC-135 refueling tanker aircraft, operates round-the-clock, with planes transporting thousands of troops and hundreds of tonnes of cargo every month.

Last year, the base oversaw 4,786 refueling flights, with more than 296 million pounds of fuel delivered, according to the Pentagon.



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THE STANS
US pushes to use Kyrgyztan base after 2014
Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan (AFP) March 13, 2012
US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta flew into Kyrgyzstan on Tuesday amid concern in Washington over the future of an air base that serves as a crucial hub for the war in Afghanistan. The Pentagon chief planned to discuss the Manas base in an unannounced visit to Bishkek as US officials weigh a possible troop presence in Afghanistan beyond 2014, which would require use of runways at the base af ... read more


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