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Azerbaijan escalates “U.S. spy” rhetoric, arrests another journalist

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Azerbaijan’s pro-government media has been ramping up its anti-U.S. rhetoric and the government is publicly musing about banning the activities of USAID, the U.S. government’s international development arm. 

campaign against supposed “U.S. spies” continued with the arrest of a fourth media manager in a week’s time.

The sharp anti-U.S. turn is in line with Azebaijan’s recent rejection of Western mediation of the peace talks with its rival Armenia and increasing preference for settling the conflict in a bilateral format or through the mediation of authoritarian regional powers like Turkey and Russia. 

On November 27, the U.S. embassy in Baku canceled a planned meeting with Azerbaijani alumni of U.S. universities. The decision came shortly after pro-government outlet Qafqazinfo alleged, without providing evidence, that the event’s invitees had been recruited to spy for the U.S. during their studies.

“According to our information, the law enforcement agencies of Azerbaijan are already aware of the issue, it is reported that the event will be monitored in order to expose the participants in the future,” it read. 

In its statement to local news outlet Turan, the embassy did not address the allegation. 

“The embassy looked forward to celebrating the anniversaries of our two flagship educational and cultural exchange programs, as well as highlighting the achievements of the Azerbaijani community of US-educated graduates and their contributions to their communities,” it said. “We look forward to rescheduling soon.”

Many in Azerbaijan are not taking the allegation seriously. Some observers have noted that many current government officials have studied in the U.S. 

“Articles about U.S.-educated graduates are cheap publicity. These are baseless, low and ridiculous accusations. There are a large number of foreign-educated personnel who serve this government wholeheartedly,” political analyst Anar Mammadli wrote on Facebook.

“The number of foreign-educated personnel in the opposition camp can be counted on one hand. The government is offended by the Biden government and expresses its resentment in this low form. They should demonstrate their resentment in a more coherent and logical way and explain the points they disagree with.”

Azerbaijan’s law enforcement made no statement on Qafqazinfo’s report about the alumni gala. 

But arrests of independent media managers have continued amid the pro-government media’s campaign of painting independent content creators as “U.S. spies.”

On November 27, police arrested the chief of Kanal13 internet television, Aziz Orujov, and searched his house. A criminal case was launched against him on charges of illegal construction. He was placed in pretrial detention for three months. 

photo of Orujov saying goodbye to his young daughter during his arrest went viral on social media.  

“It’s not a photo of the day, it’s a photo of the era. It symbolizes [President] Ilham Aliyev’s policy to make us more like Central Asia,” opposition leader Ali Karimli wrote on Facebook. “It’s 2023 on the calendar, but feels like 1937,” he said, referring to the nadir of the Soviet purges. 

It wasn’t Orujov’s first arrest. He was jailed in 2017 on charges of illegal entrepreneurship and abuse of power, and released on probation a year later. 

Kanal13 is the first internet television in Azerbaijan, founded in 2008. Its YouTube channel has 1.59 million subscribers and publishes some content in English. 

Orujov’s arrest follows those of the senior management of the investigative news outlet Abzas Media. Director Ulvi Hasanli, Editor-in-Chief Sevinj Vagifgizi, and Deputy Director Mahammad Kekalov were charged with smuggling after law enforcement claimed to have recovered 40,000 euros of cash at Abzas’ office in Baku. Each of the three were given pretrial detention terms of roughly four months. 

After the arrest, pro-government news agency Report.az published a series of articles targeting Abzas and other independent outlets, arguing that they were funded by the U.S. One such piece specifically attacked Abzas Media and provided a list of its alleged Western donors. 

On November 28, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry summoned the ambassadors of the U.S., France, and Germany.

“In the meetings, it was brought to the attention that AbzasMedia news portal carried out illegal financial operations with the participation of organizations registered in these countries, as well as that the embassies of the mentioned countries were also involved in this activity, and a serious objection was expressed to this activity,” the foreign ministry said in an English-language statement.

Azerbaijani pro-government media’s attacks against “U.S. spies” started after the country’s relations with the U.S. deteriorated over disagreements on peace negotiations with Armenia and Washington’s move to boost support for Armenia. That support is aimed at aiding Yerevan’s attempt to pivot away from its traditional strategic ally Russia and helping it accommodate the 100,000-some Armenians displaced from Nagorno-Karabakh after Azerbaijan’s offensive to take over the region in September. 

On November 21, Hikmat Hajiyev, President Ilham Aliyev’s senior advisor on foreign affairs, took exception to USAID administrator Samantha Power’s criticism of Azerbaijan’s military operation, and declared: “There is no place for USAID operation in Azerbaijan any longer!”

On November 28, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken had a phone conversation with President Aliyev. According to the readout on the Azerbaijani presidential website, the sides agreed to allow visits by high-ranking officials to each other’s countries. 

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Ukraine Says Someone Poisoned the Food of Their Spy Chief’s Wife

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The wife of Ukraine’s spy chief has been hospitalized after someone allegedly poisoned her food.

A spokesperson for Ukrainian military intelligence confirmed the flurry of reports that broke early Tuesday about Marianna Budanova’s condition. The 30-year-old wife of Kyrylo Budanov has indeed been poisoned by heavy metals and is undergoing treatment, Andriy Yusov told Radio Free Europe.

Unnamed intelligence sources cited by Ukrainska Pravda said Budanova is thought to have eaten something containing the poison. Several staffers of the Main Intelligence Directorate were also poisoned but suffered less severe symptoms, according to the report.

Budanov himself is said to be perfectly fine, showing no symptoms of poisoning.

“These substances are not used in any way in everyday life and military affairs,” a source told the Ukrainian news outlet Babel. “Their presence may indicate a purposeful attempt to poison a specific person.”

There is no indication of who attempted the poisoning at this stage, although it is a known tactic favored by Russia’s GRU military intelligence agency.

The independent Russian news outlet Meduza cited Valery Kondratyuk, the former head of the Ukrainian foreign intelligence service, confirming that Budanova is expected to survive.

“I just spoke with Kyrylo Alekseevich, he confirmed the poisoning,” Kondratyuk was quoted saying, adding that “certain organs were affected.”

“Now investigators are working with her, finding out how and under what circumstances the poisoning occurred; the SBU is looking into this,” he said.

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Armenia stands alone

Uncertain and changing alliances in South Caucasus

Azerbaijani forces wrested control of the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh from neighbouring Armenia in September. It’s unlikely to be the last act in this long-running feud.

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An Armenian police officer guides refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh at a registration centre near Kornidzor, 24 September 2023

Alain Jocard · AFP · Getty

In a two-day military offensive launched on 19 September, Azerbaijan took back control of the Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, internationally recognised as part of its territory; most of its Armenian inhabitants have since fled. According to Armenia, Azerbaijan’s nine-month blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh, its refusal to guarantee the cultural and political rights of the Armenian population, and the hate speech coming from the Azerberjaini authorities in Baku created a climate designed to provoke the exodus and amount to ethnic cleansing. Officially, the Armenian population are free to return, but a lack of concrete security guarantees and the resentment that has built up over more than three decades suggest few will do so.

The conflict over the enclave started in February 1988, when its Armenian population demanded independence and the government of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast voted to unite with Armenia, which came to their support. The first Nagorno-Karabakh war (1988-94) followed: Armenia occupied the enclave and the surrounding area (nearly 13% of Azerbaijan’s territory), driving out its Azeri population.

Is Azerbaijan’s repossession of the enclave the end of the matter? Probably not. The propaganda from Baku – which refers to the Republic of Armenia as ‘Western Azerbaijan’ – hints at more fighting to come.

Unable to reorganise

Armenia stands alone against these threats. It has not been able to reorganise or re-equip its armed forces after the heavy losses they suffered in 2020, in the second Nagorno-Karabakh war. Russia, its traditional security partner, has failed to deliver on an arms contract worth $400m. And neither Russia nor the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO, of which Armenia is a member) condemned Azerbaijan’s military incursions in 2021-22, when it captured strategic heights, enabling it to redraw the border in its own favour. Nor did they intervene to protect Armenia’s territory. (…)

Full article: 1 777 words.

Vicken Cheterian

Vicken Cheterian is a lecturer in history and international relations at the University of Geneva and Webster University Geneva. His latest book is Open Wounds, Armenians, Turks and a Century of Genocide (Hurst and Oxford University Press, 2015).

(1‘Declaration on allied interaction between the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Russian Federation’, President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, 22 February 2022, president.az/.

(4Adrien Pécout and Faustine Vincent, ‘Arménie: la hausse des importations de gaz d’Azerbaïdjan met l’Europe dans l’embarras’ (Armenia: Rising gas imports from Azerbaijan put Europe in an embarrassing position), Le Monde, Paris, 7 October 2023.

(7Russian peacekeeping force in Nagorno-Karabakh, infographic (in Russian), 11 November 2023, mil.ru/russian_peacekeeping_forces/infograf.htm/.

(8‘Importer/Exporter TIV Tables’, SIPRI, 2023.

(9Avi Scharf and Oded Yaron, ‘92 flights from Israeli base reveals arm exports to Azerbaijan’, Haaretz, Tel Aviv, 6 March 2023, and Isabel Debre, ‘Israeli arms quietly helped Azerbaijan retake Nagorno-Karabakh, to the dismay of region’s Armenians’, Associated Press, 5 October 2023.

(11Ilham Aliyev: “We do not need a new war” ’, JAM, 9 November 2023.


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Putin ‘offered Ukraine to end war in 2022’ in exchange for unacceptable move

Volodymyr ZelenskyRussia offered to end the war in the spring of 2022 on condition Ukraine didn’t join NATO (Image: GETTY)

Russia offered Kyiv to end the war just weeks into its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, according to a prominent Ukrainian politician.

However, in order for peace to return to the country, Ukraine was asked to abandon its NATO ambition and adopt a neutral stance, David Arahamiya, the leader of the Servant of the People party, claimed.

The politician, also known as David Braun, recalled the talks held in the early spring of 2022 during an interview with Ukrainian journalist Natalia Moseychuk.

He claimed: “They really hoped almost to the last that they would put the squeeze on us to sign such an agreement so that we would take neutrality. It was the biggest thing for them.

“They were ready to end the war if we took – as Finland once did – neutrality and made commitments that we would not join NATO. This was the key point.”

David ArahamiyaDavid Arahamiya is the leader of Volodymyr Zelensky’s party (Image: GETTY)

Mr Arahamiya, who is a member of the same party of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, noted Russia‘s demand presented two major flaws.

First, bending to this request would have required Ukraine to change its constitution, which states the country’s intention to eventually join the Western military alliance.

Moreover, Mr Arahamiya claimed Russia was not offering enough security guarantees to Ukraine to assure it wouldn’t eventually try a second invasion if Kyiv agreed to ditch its NATO ambitions.

As reported by the Kyiv Post, Mr Arakhamia added: “There is no, and there was no, trust in the Russians that they would do it. That could only be done if there were security guarantees.”

Russian negotiators, the politician believes, “came in unprepared” for the resistance put up by Ukraine.

Peace talks between Ukraine and Russia took place in the early weeks of the invasion and were being brokered by Belarus and Turkey.

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Reports of a possible meeting between Mr Zelensky and Vladimir Putin were also reported at the time.

However, as Ukrainian troops managed to push back Moscow’s soldiers from Kyiv in early April and the horrors perpetrated by Russian soldiers in Bucha emerged, chances of talks got slimmer.

Then, Mr Zelensky’s adviser Mykhailo Podoliak said it was “not the time” for a meeting between the two countries’ leaders.

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@mikenov: The News And Times #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT #Israel Israel #World World #USA USA #POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU 6:24 AM 11/28/2023 I say: Give Aliyev 2 The KGB Old Turkey a boot! Regime change,… https://t.co/PeCJdi1Qdr

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Кива: экс-министр обороны Украины Резников после отставки эмигрировал в США

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Алексей Резников после отставки с поста главы Минобороны Украины из-за коррупционных скандалов вокруг ведомства уехал в США «неприлично богатый», утверждает экс-депутат Верховной рады Илья Кива в своем Telegram-канале.

Кива ссылается на источник в офисе президента. По его словам, Резников улетел к своей супруге в США, «где у него вилла и где давно живет его семья».

Напомним, украинский лидер Владимир Зеленский уволил Резникова с поста министра обороны из-за ряда коррупционных скандалов, связанных с армией. Речь, в частности, об обвинениях в завышении цен на военное обмундирование и продовольствие для армии.

Сейчас оборонное ведомство Украины возглавляет Рустем Умеров.