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Chairman Cardin Statement on Need to Reevaluate Military Assistance to Azerbaijan | United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations

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WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Senator Ben Cardin (D-Md.), Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, issued the following statement on the need to support Armenia and reevaluate military assistance and security cooperation with Azerbaijan.

“Following nearly a year of a horrific blockade, President Aliyev finally used military power to exert control over the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, effectively erasing its Armenian population and rich history. As the world continues to grapple with Azerbaijan’s coordinated, intentional campaign of ethnic cleansing, we must both prioritize support for the Armenians who have been expelled as well as holding Azerbaijan accountable.

“As we look forward we must take steps to ensure that Azerbaijan does not advance militarily in pursuit for further territorial gains, including forcefully condemning inflammatory rhetoric. The United States should halt security assistance to Azerbaijan until it has stopped this brutal campaign. The United States and the international community must also reaffirm our commitment to documenting war crimes and atrocities, as well as continue to support efforts to repatriate prisoners of war, many of whom Azerbaijan continues to detain.

“Finally, we must stand in solidarity with the Armenian people, particularly as Azerbaijan and Turkey eye the potential Zangezur corridor. We should increase humanitarian support for those ethnic Armenians who have left Nagorno-Karabakh. The U.S. should also continue to support democratic reforms that Armenia’s leadership has taken in recent years, including efforts to promote transparency, good governance, and economic cooperation with the United States and Western Europe more broadly.”

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Azerbaijan’s Aliyev pulls out of talks with Armenia and EU

Azerbaijani President Aliyev addresses the nation

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev delivers a televised address to the nation in Baku, Azerbaijan, September 20, 2023. Press Service of the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights

Oct 4 (Reuters) – Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev on Wednesday pulled out of an EU-brokered meeting with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, dealing a blow to prospects for rescuing the peace process between the two countries.

The meeting had been aimed at preventing any further escalation and restoring dialogue after Azerbaijan last month seized back control of a region populated by ethnic Armenians, prompting more than 100,000 of them to flee to Armenia.

Pashinyan, in need of support to tackle the resulting humanitarian crisis and shore up his embattled leadership, said he would still attend Thursday’s talks in Spain with EU Council President Charles Michel and the leaders of France and Germany.

But Azerbaijan’s state-run APA news agency, citing unnamed sources, said Aliyev had decided not to go.

It said Aliyev had wanted his ally Turkey to be represented at the meeting, but that France and Germany had objected, and said that Baku felt “an anti-Azerbaijani atmosphere” had developed among the meeting’s potential participants.

A source in Aliyev’s administration confirmed to Reuters that the president would not go, but said he was prepared to talk instead in a three-way format with Pashinyan and the EU’s Michel.

Aliyev’s forces mounted a lightning offensive last month to retake control of Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region, whose ethnic Armenian population had broken away in a war in the 1990s. Aliyev said his “iron fist” had restored his country’s sovereignty.

Karabakh has been the focus of two wars between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the past 30 years and they have yet to seal a peace treaty, a task made more urgent by the latest crisis.

SETBACK

Olesya Vartanyan, South Caucasus analyst at the non-profit International Crisis Group which works to defuse global conflicts, said Aliyev’s no-show was a big setback.

“It was very important for him to come, after this military operation in Nagorno-Karabakh, to recommit to the (peace) process with the mediation of the European Union and the United States,” she said.

Vartanyan said advisers to Pashinyan and Aliyev had met French, German and EU officials in Brussels last week to prepare for the talks in Spain and avoid surprises or misunderstandings.

She said experience had shown that the chances of clashes on the ground were higher at moments when the two sides stopped talking. Outstanding bilateral issues include how to define their shared border and reopen transport links that have been severed by decades of conflict.

Azerbaijan’s APA agency said Aliyev’s decision not to attend was partly prompted by “pro-Armenian statements” by French officials and France’s decision, announced on Tuesday, to supply Yerevan with military equipment.

Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry also condemned what it said were unfounded comments on Wednesday by French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna.

Colonna told a parliamentary hearing that France was not looking to escalate the crisis, but that it was normal to continue defensive weapons sales to Yerevan when “Azerbaijan has never stopped arming itself to carry out offensive actions”.

The EU must send a clear signal that any threats to Armenia’s territorial integrity are unacceptable, said Colonna, who visited Pashinyan on Tuesday.

“I repeat, any action in this direction would give rise to robust reactions,” she said.

APA said Azerbaijan would not attend any future talks that included France.

Omer Celik, spokesman for Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling AK Party, backed Aliyev’s decision to shun the talks.

“Mr Aliyev cancelled his Spain visit because the condition of Turkey’s participation was not accepted. We admire this,” he said.

U.S. Senator Ben Cardin, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, said Washington should withhold security assistance to Azerbaijan and hold it accountable for what he called its “coordinated, intentional campaign of ethnic cleansing” in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Azerbaijan denies ethnic cleansing, saying the Armenians were not forced to leave and would enjoy full civic rights if they stayed. But many of those who fled said they did not trust that promise, given the bloody history between the two peoples.

Additional reporting by Nailia Bagirova, Andrew Osborn, John Irish, Tuvan Gumrukcu, Doina Chacu and Paul Grant; writing by Mark Trevelyan
Editing by Gareth Jones

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Chief writer on Russia and CIS. Worked as a journalist on 7 continents and reported from 40+ countries, with postings in London, Wellington, Brussels, Warsaw, Moscow and Berlin. Covered the break-up of the Soviet Union in the 1990s. Security correspondent from 2003 to 2008. Speaks French, Russian and (rusty) German and Polish.

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Azerbaijan moves to reaffirm control of Nagorno-Karabakh as the Armenian exodus slows to a trickle

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The last bus carrying ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh left the region Monday, completing a grueling weeklong exodus of over 100,000 people — more than 80% of its residents — after Azerbaijan reclaimed the area in a lightning military operation.

The bus that entered Armenia carried 15 passengers with serious illnesses and mobility problems, said Gegham Stepanyan, a human rights ombudsman for the former breakaway region that Azerbaijan calls Karabakh. He called for information about any other residents who want to leave but have had trouble doing so.

In a 24-hour campaign that began Sept. 19, the Azerbaijani army routed the region’s undermanned and outgunned Armenian forces, forcing them to capitulate. The separatist government then agreed to disband itself by the end of the year, but Azerbaijani authorities are already in charge of the region.

Azerbaijan Interior Ministry spokesman Elshad Hajiyev told The Associated Press on Monday the country’s police have established control of the entire region.

“Work is conducted to enforce law and order in the entire Karabakh region,” he said, adding that Azerbaijani police have moved to “protect the rights and ensure security of the Armenian population in accordance with Azerbaijan’s law.”

While Baku has pledged to respect the rights of ethnic Armenians, most of them hastily fled the region, fearing reprisals or losing the freedom to use their language and practice their religion and customs.

The Armenian government said Monday that 100,514 of the region’s estimated 120,000 residents have crossed into Armenia.

Armenian Health Minister Anahit Avanesyan said some people had died during the exhausting and slow journey over the single mountain road into Armenia that took as long as 40 hours. The exodus followed a nine-month Azerbaijani blockade of the region that left many suffering from malnutrition and lack of medicine.

Armenia alleged the closure denied basic food and fuel supplies to Nagorno-Karabakh, but Azerbaijan rejected the accusation, saying the Armenian government was using it for weapons shipments and argued the region could receive supplies through the Azerbaijani city of Aghdam — a solution long resisted by Nagorno-Karabakh authorities.

Sergey Astsetryan, 40, one of the last Nagorno-Karabakh residents to leave in his own vehicle Sunday, said some elderly people decided to stay, adding that others might return if they see it’s safe for ethnic Armenians under Azerbaijani rule.

“My father told me that he will return when he has the opportunity,” Astsetryan told reporters at a checkpoint on the Armenian border.

Azerbaijani authorities have arrested several former members of the separatist government and encouraged ethnic Azerbaijani residents who fled the area amid a war three decades ago to start moving back.

The streets of the regional capital, which is called Khankendi by Azerbaijan and Stepanakert by the Armenians, appeared empty and littered with trash, with doors of deserted businesses flung open.

The sign with the city’s Azerbaijani name was placed at one entrance and Azerbaijani police checkpoints were set up on the outskirts, with officers checking the trunks of cars.

Just outside the city, a herd of cows grazed in an abandoned orchard, and a small dog, which appeared to have been left behind by its owners, silently watched passing vehicles.

Russian peacekeeping troops could be seen on a balcony of one building in the city, and others were at their base outside it, where their vehicles were parked.

On Sunday, Azerbaijan prosecutors issued an arrest warrant for former Nagorno-Karabakh leader Arayik Harutyunyan, who led the region before stepping down at the beginning of September. Azerbaijani police arrested one of Harutyunyan’s former prime ministers, Ruben Vardanyan, on Wednesday as he tried to cross into Armenia.

“We put an end to the conflict,” Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said in a speech Monday. “We protected our dignity, we restored justice and international law.”

He added that “our agenda is peace in the Caucasus, peace in the region, cooperation, shared benefits, and today, we demonstrate that.”

After six years of separatist fighting ended in 1994 following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Nagorno-Karabakh came under the control of ethnic Armenian forces, backed by Armenia, turning about 1 million of its Azerbaijani residents into refugees. After a six-week war in 2020, Azerbaijan took back back parts of the region in the south Caucasus Mountains, along with surrounding territory that Armenian forces had captured earlier.

Armenian authorities have accused the Russian peacekeepers, who were deployed to Nagorno-Karabakh after the 2020 war, of standing idle and failing to stop the Azerbaijani onslaught. The accusations were rejected by Moscow, which argued that its troops didn’t have a mandate to intervene.

The mutual accusations have further strained the relations between Armenia and its longtime ally Russia, which has accused the Armenian government of a pro-Western tilt.

Allegations of shooting on both sides resumed Monday for the first time since a Sept. 20 cease-fire.

Russian Defense Ministry alleged Monday that its patrol in the region’s capital, conducted jointly with Azerbaijani forces, was fired at by a sniper, although it added that it wasn’t clear who was behind the attack.

Armenia’s and Azerbaijan’ defense ministries, in turn, traded accusations of cross-border shooting. The Armenian military accused Azerbaijan of shooting at one of its vehicles, killing one soldier and wounding two more in an area near the Armenia-Azerbaijani border in the Gegharkunik region of Armenia. The ministry said a car carrying food for soldiers came under fire, along with an ambulance. Azerbaijani forces said the Armenian military opened fire at their positions in the Kalbajar region, which lies between the north of Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan alleged Thursday that the exodus of ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh amounted to “a direct act of ethnic cleansing and depriving people of their motherland.”

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry strongly rejected Pashinyan’s accusations, arguing their departure was “their personal and individual decision and has nothing to do with forced relocation.”

Speaking to the AP in Lachin, the Azerbaijani town that had been controlled by separatists for nearly three decades until Baku’s forces reclaimed it in 2020, Solmaz Abbasova, 67, said returning home was a dream that sustained her family since the earlier exodus.

“It was a boundless happiness to come back home after 31 years and see the things which were so dear — the land, the river, the forest and the lake,” Abbasova said, adding that her husband and son were with her but their daughter died before she could return.

She said the Armenians are leaving the region safely by their own choice, unlike her family and other Azerbaijani refugees, adding that many were killed as they tried to leave.

“I feel sorry for simple Armenians leaving Karabakh now, but there is a big difference: They and their children aren’t being hunted and killed as they killed our refugees,” she said. “They have a choice whether to stay or leave calmly.”

Azerbaijan’s presidential office said the country has presented a plan for the “reintegration” of ethnic Armenians in the region, noting that “the equality of rights and freedoms, including security, is guaranteed to everyone regardless of their ethnic, religious or linguistic affiliation.”

It said the plan envisages improving infrastructure to bring it line with the rest of the country and offers tax exemptions, subsidies, low-interest loans and other incentives. The statement added Azerbaijani authorities have held three rounds of talks with representatives of the region’s ethnic Armenian population and will continue the discussions.

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Associated Press writers Aida Sultanova in Shusha, Azerbaijan, and Avet Demourian in Yerevan, Armenia, contributed.

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France agrees to sign contract for military equipment supply to Armenia

French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna has announced that France has agreed to sign a contract to provide military equipment to Armenia. She made this announcement during a joint press conference with the Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan in Yerevan on October 3.

Colonna emphasized that France’s consent to this future contract will enable Armenia to acquire military equipment for its defense. However, she did not provide further details about the agreement at the time of the announcement.

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Terror Group Threatens Jewish People After Vandalizing Synagogue In Yerevan

“If rabbis in the U.S. and Europe continue to support the Aliyev regime, then we will burn synagogues in other countries” threatened the terror group

The only synagogue in the Armenian capital Yerevan was vandalized with spray paint and attacked with a Molotov cocktail, late Monday night.

There have been conflicting reports over the group responsible for the attack, with Azerbaijani media pinning it on the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA), and Israeli media saying it was a group called Young Fighters for the Freedom of Armenia (YFFA).

The YFFA group stated the synagogue attack was “in retaliation to Israel and world Jewry’s support of Azerbaijan.” While ASALA said “Jews are sworn enemies of the Armenian state and the Armenian people.”

“Jews are the enemies of the Armenian people and the Jewish state sells weapons to the (Azerbaijani President) Aliyev regime,” wrote YFFA members in a statement posted on Telegram, according to the Israeli Kan Public Broadcaster

“This is a warning, if rabbis in the U.S. and Europe continue to support the Aliyev regime, then we will burn synagogues in other countries,” the YFFA statement continued. 

The ASALA statement also threatened synagogues worldwide, saying “this is a warning: Our successful operation on October 3 in Yerevan is just the beginning.”

In response, Yerevan’s small Jewish community said, “We must not give in to provocations aimed at stirring up conflict between Armenians and Jews,” as quoted by Kan.

“Now we must all mobilize to help the refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh“, added the Jewish leaders.

Calling it a “provocation,” one of the leaders of the Armenian Jewish community said the incident was “a gift to the Azerbaijanis who maintain that there is anti-Semitism in Armenia.”

Today, Armenia’s Jewish population is estimated at around 200.

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Poland Summons Ukraine’s Ambassador After Zelenskiy’s Comments At UN

A still pictures from a drone footage shows military hardware on fire, near Svitle

A still pictures from a drone footage shows military hardware on fire, near Svitle

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said Ukrainians will “do everything” in their power to prevail over invading Russian forces despite all difficulties as Britain urged the West to beef up its military assistance to help Ukraine “finish the job.”

“There is fatigue but we will do everything to win against the enemy, and our counteroffensive goes ahead, even if slowly we do everything to repel the enemy,” Zelenskiy told Italian news station SkyTg24 on October 4.

Zelenskiy also said Russia was weaker than at the start of the invasion in February 2022 and was trying to freeze the conflict.

He thanked Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni for Italy’s support for Ukraine and mentioned his “personal relationship and human relationship [with Meloni] based on shared values.”

Despite growing signs of war fatigue in the U.S. Congress and in some European Union countries, Zelenskiy said Kyiv felt support from Washington and that he hoped to discuss with EU leaders ways to improve Ukraine’s air defenses ahead of the cold season, when fresh Russian strikes are expected on the country’s energy infrastructure.

In Britain, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on October 4 urged Western allies to continue supplying Ukraine with weapons.

“I say this to our allies: If we give President Zelenskiy the tools, the Ukrainians will finish the job,” Sunak told the Conservative Party conference in northern England.

Earlier on October 4, air-raid alerts sounded across Ukraine’s south, east, and center on October 4 amid reports of explosions in the southern region of Dnipropetrovsk, as Moscow claimed that it had “destroyed” swarms of Ukrainian drones over three Russian areas.


RFE/RL’s Live Briefing gives you all of the latest developments on Russia’s full-scale invasion, Kyiv’s counteroffensive, Western military aid, global reaction, and the plight of civilians. For all of RFE/RL’s coverage of the war in Ukraine, click here.

There was little initial information about the blasts that were reported in Kryviy Rih. Alerts were declared early in the day in Odesa, Mykolayiv, and the Kherson regions, regional officials said.

In Russia, sirens also wailed across the country and TV stations interrupted regular programming to broadcast warnings on October 4 as part of sweeping drills intended to test the readiness of the country’s emergency responders amid the fighting in Ukraine.

The exercise follows Ukrainian drone attacks on Moscow and other cities.

As the readiness drill went on, the Russian Defense Ministry said air defenses shot down 31 Ukrainian drones over border regions early on October 4.

“Air-defense systems intercepted and destroyed 31 Ukrainian aircraft-type unmanned aerial vehicles over the Belgorod, Bryansk, and Kursk regions,” the ministry said on Telegram on October 4.

“Russian aircraft prevented an attempt to penetrate the territory of Crimea by a Ukrainian landing group traveling in the direction of Cape Tarkhankut on a high-speed military boat and three jet skis,” it added.

The information could not be independently confirmed. Russia, which has launched countless deadly drone and missile attacks on Ukrainian cities and energy infrastructure since the start of its unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, has been in recent months subjected itself to increasingly frequent aerial and naval drone strikes targeting regions close to the border and even Moscow. On the battlefield, Ukrainian forces have been engaged in heavy fighting with Russian troops in the east and south, the military said, amid a seesaw of offensive and defensive actions by both sides in the Donetsk, Kharkiv, and Zaporizhzhya regions. Offensive operations were under way in the Melitopol area of Zaporizhzhya and Bakhmut in Donetsk, the General Staff reported early on October 4, adding that Ukrainian forces also repelled Russian counterattacks near Bakhmut.

“During the past 24 hours, 43 close-quarter battles took place along the front line,” it said.

Meanwhile, U.S. President Joe Biden spoke by phone with key allies to reassure them that the United States will stand fast on Ukraine after funding for U.S. aid to help Kyiv’s war effort was dropped from a stopgap spending measure passed by Congress over the weekend.

Poland’s President Andrzej Duda said Biden assured allies of continued U.S. support for Ukraine and of his strong conviction that Congress will not walk away. Biden explained the situation after Congress passed and he signed legislation that keeps the U.S. government funded through mid-November but that excluded billions of dollars to help Ukraine in its fight against Russia.

“He assured us that there is backing for the continuing support for Ukraine, first of all for the military support. He said that he will get that backing in the Congress,” Duda said at a news conference. Duda said Biden called on allies to continue their support for Ukraine and that all the leaders assured him that they would. “All of us…are determined to continue supporting Ukraine,” Duda said.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said on X, the social media platform formerly called Twitter, that it was a “good call,” adding that “we are all committed to supporting #Ukraine for as long as it takes.”

Others joining Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken on the call were the leaders of Canada, Germany, Italy, Japan, Romania, Britain, the European Commission, and the European Council. France’s foreign minister also participated, the White House said. While Biden told the leaders he is “confident” that Congress will agree to fund new assistance for Ukraine, White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby warned that U.S. aid will only last “perhaps a couple of months or so,” adding that it is vital to help Kyiv’s slow-moving counteroffensive before winter sets in.

“Time is not our friend,” Kirby told reporters. “We have enough funding authorities to meet Ukraine’s battlefields needs for a bit longer, but we need Congress to act.”

With reporting by Reuters, AP, and AFP
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“Azersky-2” satellite to be produced in Azerbaijan

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Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), a world-leading aerospace and defense company and Azercosmos, a pioneering force of Azerbaijan in the space industry, are announcing a cooperation agreement for the sale of two of IAI’s cutting-edge multi spectral electro optical satellites, better than 0.5 meter native resolution with a long life span and high imaging performance, APA-Econmics reports.

This landmark deal represents a significant step forward in space technology and cooperation between the two companies. Under the terms of the agreement IAI will provide Azercosmos with two satellites within Azersky -2 program, technology and knowledge for the construction and the operation of the satellites.

The transaction is expected to bring about exciting developments in the field of satellites technology, opening up new opportunities for both companies to explore. The agreement includes a long term business partnership between IAI and Azercosmos, reflected in the establishment of innovation, entrepreneurship, academic and study ecosystem in the field of space in Azerbaijan over the years.

IAI and Azercosmos are committed to a successful implementation of the Azersky-2 program, and are looking forward to mutually beneficial cooperation in future space programs.

“This project is unique for both Azercosmos and Israel Aerospace Industries, and will undoubtedly contribute to the development of space cooperation between our countries. I consider our cooperation to be an important step in the development of human capital and space technologies in the country,” Azercosmos Chairman of the Board, Samaddin Asadov noted.


“For IAI, the sky is not a limit but merely the starting point for our systems capabilities. Our commitment to innovation and exploration motivates us to partner with the foremost experts in the global space community, as we ambitiously shape the future of space observation together. We are proud to have made significant contributions to this cooperation for Azerbaijan, and we are sure that this collaboration will propel us to new heights,” IAI President and CEO, Boaz Levy said.

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Azerbaijan acquiring two reconnaissance satellites from Israel | CTech

Israel Aerospace Industries and Azercosmos, the space agency of Azerbaijan, announced on Tuesday a cooperation agreement for the sale of two of the IAI’s advanced satellites. The IAI did not disclose what satellites were sold, but according to reports they are the OptSat500 reconnaissance satellites that provide better than 0.5 meter native resolution with a long life span and high imaging performance. According to reports in Azerbaijan, the deal is valued at $120 million.

Under the terms of the agreement the IAI will also provide technology and knowledge for the construction and the operation of the satellites.

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SatelliteSatellite

IAI satellite.

(Israel Aerospace Industries)

The agreement includes a long term business partnership between IAI and Azercosmos, reflected in the establishment of innovation and entrepreneurship centers in the field of space in Azerbaijan, academic and study programs in the field of space in Azerbaijan, and the establishment of a joint business center.

“Our commitment to innovation and exploration motivates us to partner with the foremost experts in the global space community, as we ambitiously shape the future of space observation together,” said IAI President and CEO, Boaz Levy. “IAI is proud of winning the tender for Azerbaijan, and we are sure that this collaboration will propel us to new heights.”

Azercosmos Chairman of the Board, Samaddin Asadov, said: “This project is unique for both Azercosmos and Israel Aerospace Industries, and will undoubtedly contribute to the development of space cooperation between our countries. I consider our cooperation to be an important step in the development of human capital and space technologies in the country.”

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Azerbaijan acquiring two reconnaissance satellites from Israel | CTech

Israel Aerospace Industries and Azercosmos, the space agency of Azerbaijan, announced on Tuesday a cooperation agreement for the sale of two of the IAI’s advanced satellites. The IAI did not disclose what satellites were sold, but according to reports they are the OptSat500 reconnaissance satellites that provide better than 0.5 meter native resolution with a long life span and high imaging performance. According to reports in Azerbaijan, the deal is valued at $120 million.

Under the terms of the agreement the IAI will also provide technology and knowledge for the construction and the operation of the satellites.

1 View gallery

SatelliteSatellite

IAI satellite.

(Israel Aerospace Industries)

The agreement includes a long term business partnership between IAI and Azercosmos, reflected in the establishment of innovation and entrepreneurship centers in the field of space in Azerbaijan, academic and study programs in the field of space in Azerbaijan, and the establishment of a joint business center.

“Our commitment to innovation and exploration motivates us to partner with the foremost experts in the global space community, as we ambitiously shape the future of space observation together,” said IAI President and CEO, Boaz Levy. “IAI is proud of winning the tender for Azerbaijan, and we are sure that this collaboration will propel us to new heights.”

Azercosmos Chairman of the Board, Samaddin Asadov, said: “This project is unique for both Azercosmos and Israel Aerospace Industries, and will undoubtedly contribute to the development of space cooperation between our countries. I consider our cooperation to be an important step in the development of human capital and space technologies in the country.”

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Israel, Azerbaijan announce landmark deal for sale of two satellites

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On the backdrop of the escalation of tensions between Azerbaijan and Armenia, and just two weeks after Azerbaijan’s offensive emptied Nagorno-Karabakh of over 100,000 ethnic Armenians, Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) and the Azeri space agency Azercosmos announced on Tuesday they have signed an agreement for the sale of two Israeli-developed reconnaissance satellites for the Azersky-2 satellite program. 

A picture published on X, formerly known as Twitter, shows IAI CEO Boaz Levy and Azercosmos Chairman Samaddin Asadov signing the agreement. The deal, announced last April, was signed Tuesday within the framework of the 74th International Astronautical Congress held in Baku.

Although Israeli-Azeri defense ties remain discreet, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute the majority of Azerbaijan’s arms imports come from Israel.

A statement issued by the IAI said that “the companies signed on a cooperation agreement for the sale of two of IAI’s cutting-edge multispectral electro-optical satellites,” adding that the “landmark deal represents a significant step forward in space technology and cooperation between the two companies.”

A statement issued by the Azeri Ministry of Digital Development and Transport said that “according to the contract, two satellites will be developed within the framework of the Azersky-2 program. These will be remote Earth observation satellites with high-resolution electro-optical sensors. IAI will design, assemble, integrate and test the first satellite of the satellite cluster with the participation of Azerbaijani experts.”

The Azeri statement noted that Israeli experts will also support Azercosmos in the design of a new satellite development center to be established in Azerbaijan.

The IAI did not offer details on the models of the satellites to be sold to Azerbaijan. It also did not specify whether the satellites would be manufactured in Israel or in Azerbaijan, though the Azeri statement indicates that at least part of the production process will take place in Azerbaijan.

The two countries maintain close relations in security, energy, infrastructure and smart agriculture. Azerbaijan is especially important for Israel because of its strategic location, neighboring Iran. Azerbaijan is also a major oil supplier for Israel. In 2022, it exported more than 2 million tons to Israel, which constituted approximately 40% of Israel’s oil consumption that year. 

Reports over the years have claimed that Israel exports weapons to Azerbaijan, though Israel has always declined to confirm that officially. That being said, during his visit to Baku last July, Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said, “We discussed important cooperations in the security, intelligence and industrial fields. The visit will strengthen strategic relations and deepen cooperation in many ways.”

Last March, Azerbaijan opened an embassy in Israel. A month later, Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen visited Baku, emphasizing bilateral efforts at deepening the security and strategic alliance between the two countries. In an interview with The Times of Israel shortly after the visit, Cohen confirmed that IAI will supply Azerbaijan with two satellites at a total cost of $120 million.

Israeli lawyer and human rights activist Eitay Mack, considered an expert on Israel’s weapons exports, told Al-Monitor that Israeli authorities do not limit security exports to Azerbaijan. This means that Israeli authorities allow for the export to Azerbaijan of sensitive technologies. It is unclear, he said, whether the satellites now being sold to Azerbaijan are destined for civil or military use, though satellite technologies are considered in general of dual use. 

The Israeli Foreign Ministry and the Israeli Defense Ministry both declined to comment on the satellite deal.