Are Azerbaijan-Turkey drills meant to send a tough message to Iran?

After Iran’s military deployment on its border with Azerbaijan, the two allies, Baku and Ankara, are conducting joint military drills in the Nakhchivan province of the Turkic state, sending signals to Tehran.

Turkish soldiers are welcomed with a ceremony as they arrived in the Nakhchivan autonomous region of Azerbaijan to take part in the Indestructible Brotherhood 2021 military drill on September 20, 2021.
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Turkish soldiers are welcomed with a ceremony as they arrived in the Nakhchivan autonomous region of Azerbaijan to take part in the Indestructible Brotherhood 2021 military drill on September 20, 2021.

Across Caucasia, where several conflict zones exist, tensions have continued to escalate between Azerbaijan and Iran, the two Shia-majority countries.

In what appears to be a counter tactic to Tehran's military buildup close to the border of Azerbaijan, Baku and Ankara have joined forces, conducting military drills. 

Iran has recently sent military units to its border with Azerbaijan after Baku reclaimed most of its occupied territories in the disputed region of Nagorno Karabakh, defeating Armenia with the help of Turkey’s drones. Tehran has quietly supported Armenia, a Christian-majority country, in the conflict. 

Azerbaijan also disrupted Tehran’s transportation in the Karabakh region, which is a crucial supply route connecting Iran with West Asia, imposing customs on it. That further sparked Iran’s anger as Turkey, Azerbaijan and Pakistan conducted trilateral military drills across Caucasia last month. 

But Turkey, with its newly-started joint drills with Azerbaijan, has indicated that Ankara fully supports Baku against Yerevan and will not allow Tehran to bully its Turkic neighbour, according to experts. 

“It could be indeed that Turkey’s and Azerbaijan’s current military drills in Nakhchivan (an Azerbaijani territory neighbouring Turkey) are ratcheting up that tension with Tehran,” says Matthew Bryza, the former US ambassador to Azerbaijan and a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council. 

“The situation is very emotional in both countries toward the other. There are protests in front of the Iranian embassy in Baku after the Iranian foreign ministry spokesman made some derogatory statements about Azerbaijan and its military, claiming Azerbaijan’s military is only one one hundredth the size of Iran,” Bryza tells TRT World

While Turkey-Azerbaijan military maneuvers escalate tensions, it might also mean to send a political message to Yerevan, according to the former diplomat. “Turkey and Azerbaijan might also be sending a signal to Yerevan that it’s time to have serious discussions about defining or demarcating the international border between Azerbaijan and Armenia,” he says. 

Transportation links

Demarcating the international border between Baku and Yerevan is crucial to reopen transportation links between Azerbaijan and Turkey and also among other regional states. “It’s clear that Turkey and Azerbaijan are eager to move that process forward,” Bryza says. 

But primarily defining borders regarding the Karabakh region is also important to make trade routes available between Baku and Yerevan and also Turkey and Armenia, ensuring economic growth and investment across the region, according to the former diplomat. 

There is a strategic route, which lies across what Azerbaijanis called Zangezur corridor, connecting Azerbaijan's main territory with Turkey through Armenia and the Nakhchivan province, where the current joint drills of Ankara and Baku are also being conducted. 

TRTWorld

Zangezur corridor connects Azerbaijan's main territory with Turkey through Armenia and the Nakhchivan province.

That route is not operational yet. “These current military drills may be intended as a way to use military activity as a diplomatic tool with Armenia as well,” Bryza views, referring to Turkey-Azerbaijan efforts to make the route operational. But he is also not sure for certain on the ultimate aims of the drills. 

Opening the crucial route through the Zangezur corridor between Turkey and Azerbaijan, following Azerbaijan’s Karabakh victory, concerns Iran much, says Otabek Omonkulov, an Uzbek academic, who is an expert on Central Asia politics. 

“Iran considers Turkey's land connection with Azerbaijan and its opening to Central Asia via Azerbaijan as a threat to its national unity and territorial integrity,” Omonkulov tells TRT World. Central Asia has been a Turkic-dominated region for centuries and both Azerbaijanis and Turkey’s Turks consider it as their fatherland prior to their ancestors’ migration to Caucasia and Anatolia. 

Prior to the Pahlavi dynasty, until the early 20th century, Iran had also been under Turkic-origin Shia rulers. As a result, Iran currently also has a large Turkic population, which includes Turkmen, Qashgais and other Turkish-speaking groups, amounting to nearly 40 percent of the country. 

“Iran is concerned that the Karabakh victory will reinvigorate millions of Azeris living in Iran and trigger a possible uprising. For this reason, Tehran has established close relations with Moscow and Yerevan against Turkey and Azerbaijan,” says the Uzbek academic. Many Azerbaijanis call Iran’s north southern Azerbaijan, where nearly 20 million Azerbaijanis live according to different estimates

Tehran’s nervousness

But Fatima Karimkhan, a Tehran-based Iranian journalist, does not think that tensions between Tehran and the Baku-Ankara alliance will escalate further. “In words maybe, but across the borders I don't think so,” Karimkhan tells TRT World

Iran's supreme leader Ali Khamenei, whose father was an ethnic Azerbaijani, defended Tehran's military exercises on the country's border with Azerbaijan. 

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Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei defended the country's military deployment on its border with Azerbaijan.

While emotions are high, they have usually “died down” in the past, Bryza says.  But he also adds that the situation is not so predictable. 

Iran’s latest drill on the border with Azerbaijan was its reaction to the Turkey-Azerbaijan-Pakistan military exercises, which took place last month, Karimkhan says. “I don't think here in Iran anyone looks forward to another drill at least not in the near future,” she opines. 

“Azerbaijan’s connections with Israel is something Iran could not accept. Turkey’s increasing political role in the region is another thing Iran finds difficult to accept. Iran’s regional isolation also angers Tehran much,” says Aydin Ibrahimov, an Azerbaijani expert and professor of international relations at Ege University. 

“Increasing strategic cooperation between Azerbaijan and Turkey particularly makes Iran feel lonely in the region,” Ibrahimov tells TRT World. But the Azerbaijani professor also thinks that recent tensions will deescalate at some point. “It can’t continue like that.” 

While Iran feels alone and angry, it’s also aware of the fact that neither Azerbaijani nor Turkish leadership has ever attempted to interfere with Tehran's internal issues like its large Azeri population’s aspirations, according to Ibrahimov. 

“Both Azerbaijan and Turkey have never provoked Iranian Azerbaijanis on any political grounds. Iran respects both Ankara’s and Baku’s careful act regarding Iranian Azerbaijanis,” the professor says. 

But Tehran has also sought Moscow’s support as Baku-Ankara rapprochement continues to develop further. 

The recent meeting between Iranian and Russian foreign ministers was Tehran’s political reaction to continuing Azerbaijan-Turkey drills, aiming to pull Russia, the main ally of the Shia-majority country, in the conflict, according to Karimkhan.

Bryza also thinks that Iranian foreign minister’s visit to Moscow is probably related to recents tensions between Tehran and Baku. “It’s clear that Iran, Russia and Turkey have a plan to try to work together to open up transport links” across all directions between Azerbaijan and Armenia as well as other involving powers like Russia, Turkey, Iran and Georgia, he says. 

“The foreign ministry didn't mention it, but I believe that there is a connection, Iran can not lose its access to West Asia, and to keep it, it will need some regional negotiations. One of them, of course, should be with Russia,” Karimkhan sees. 

Ibrahimov also thinks that Russia, Iran, Turkey and Azerbaijan will find a way to address their own differences. “They will reach an agreement,” he says. 

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