Azerbaijan and Turkey; Close Alliance
Turkey to stand ‘shoulder to shoulder’ with Azerbaijan
Turkish PM Davutoglu visited Baku against backdrop of renewed clashes with Armenia over disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.
Turkey and Azerbaijan will work “shoulder to shoulder” to settle regional conflicts, Turkey’s prime minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Friday.
The Turkish leader was speaking at a joint press conference following a meeting with President Ilham Aliev in the Azerbaijani capital Baku.
Regarding the long-running Nagorno-Karabakh dispute Davutoglu said: “Turkey will stand by Azerbaijan’s struggle until the last centimeter of its territory is liberated.”
Azerbaijan and Armenia, two former Soviet republics, fought a war between 1988 and 1994 over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region, which is a de jure territory of Azerbaijan but remains under de facto Armenian control.
Davutoglu said: “Turkey and Azerbaijan will work shoulder to shoulder until the wider region is converted into a region of peace and requirements of international law are fulfilled.
“If Azerbaijan feels any pain, the same is felt in Turkey’s heart.”
The Turkish PM was referring to the most recent clashes on border of the disputed region in late July, where thirteen soldiers from the Azerbaijani side and more soldiers from Armenia were killed, according to Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Defense.
“When neighbouring regions and the world are observed and two success stories are to be told, Turkey and Azerbaijan are the two success stories in the Middle East, Balkans, Caucasus and all Eurasia,” Davutoglu added.
Davutoglu’s comments come against a backdrop of renewed fighting between Azerbaijan and Armenia. There have been sporadic outbreaks of violence along the border between Azerbaijan and the enclave for decades but fighting intensified at the start of August.
The last agreement for a peaceful settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict was signed in Moscow in 2008. Armenia and Azerbaijan originally signed a ceasefire in 1994 but never agreed a peace settlement. The two countries currently do not have diplomatic relations.
President Ilham Aliyev spoke of the conflict affecting energy development in the region: “Armenia has been isolated from cooperation projects among regional countries because of its occupying attitude.
“Our projects in the energy field are important, not only for our country, but for the world also.”
A ground breaking ceremony for the high-profile Trans Anatolian Natural Gas Pipeline project will be held on Saturday. Aliyev said: “September 20 is a historic day for us. We had signed the project of the 20th century 20 years ago on 20 September; we are starting the project of the 21st century in which Turkey and Azerbaijan have assumed a major role.”
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Azerbaijan and Turkey hold joint military exercise
More than 30,000 troops from the two countries are taking part in the week-long manoeuvres.
More than 30,000 Turkish and Azerbaijani troops have been conducting joint operations over the past five days, the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said in a statement.
The manoeuvres, ongoing since Saturday, have including exercises by special operations teams, air forces, air defense forces and land forces from both countries, alongside reconnaissance and intelligence teams.
The drills, which end on Saturday, involve more than 250 armored vehicles, 150 missile and artillery batteries, 20 warplanes and 15 helicopters.
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