Created in July 1992 following the collapse of
the Soviet Union, the Azerbaijan Navy (Azərbaycan Hərbi Dəniz Qüvvələri) is considered
the second strongest in the Caspian Sea after
the Russian fleet. Nevertheless, the geopolitical situation in the Caucasus and
the arms race that is taking place in the lake, once peacefully divided between
Moscow and Tehran,
forces Azerbaijan to further
improve its naval capabilities in an attempt to defend Baku’s position in one of the most
geo-strategically important regions of the planet.
Last month, Azerbaijan’s
State Border Service (SBS) reported on the successful completion of week-long
tactical exercises in the Azerbaijani sector of the Caspian
Sea. The exercises, called “Protection of Oil and Gas Fields,
Platforms, and Export Pipelines,” involved around 1,200 servicemen, 21 ships,
20 speedboats, as well as 8 helicopters. High-ranking military officials, including
SBS head, General-Lieutenant Elchin Gulyev, and Minister of Defence Safar
Abiyev, launched and attended the events.
The exercises were conducted in three stages
and nine tactical tasks were implemented. The first stage involved neutralizing
a conventional terrorist group, which was eliminated with the help of the Igla
anti-aircraft missile system. This suggests that the terrorists were using a
helicopter or other aircraft. The second stage involved helicopters and ships
which monitored the designated area, eventually locating and destroying an
enemy submarine. The last stage envisioned stopping ships that did not respond
to inquiries, sending marines aboard the ships, and then searching for and
locating explosives, drugs and components of weapons of mass destruction.
Besides the above-mentioned arms and equipment,
the exercise used anti-aircraft rocket launchers, heavy machine guns and
various missile systems, suggesting that Baku
is actually worried about possible threats posed by conventional actors, rather
than terrorists. Recently, Russia
built a new stealth equipped artillery ship, the Makhachkala,
while Kazakhstan successfully
launched its first domestically built warship, the “Kazakhstan” missile boat.
Nevertheless, the main potential threat to Azerbaijan’s
comes from the South, being constituted by Iran.
IRANIAN OIL TANKER FLOATING ON THE CASPIAN SEA
Privileged partner of China, Russia,
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan
and Kyrgyzstan through its
observer status at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), the Islamic
Republic is also a close ally of Armenia,
with whom Azerbaijan
faces a long-standing conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.
In 2000, an Iranian naval ship refused to allow an Azerbaijani
exploration vessel to begin working on oil fields in the southern Caspian,
claiming that Baku
was violating Iranian territorial waters. A lack of serious arms and equipment,
and an unwillingness to escalate the conflict, did not allow Azerbaijan to continue exploration
of the “disputed” oilfield.
Today, things look different, and Azerbaijan has become more assertive in
defending its regional interests thanks to military assistance coming from Turkey, the US
and Israel.
Founded from the remains of the Soviet Union’s Red Banner Caspian Flotilla
elements based in Baku, the Azerbaijan Navy currently numbers roughly 2,500
personnel and 39 warships, including 1 Petya class frigate, 7 patrol boats
consisting out of 2 OSA-II-Class and 5 Stenka Class patrol boats, 7 minesweepers
consisting out of 2 Sonya Class and 5 Yevgenya Class minesweepers, 6 landing
craft, 2 landing cutters, 1 special purposes warship, 1 special purposes cutter,
and other patrol boats and cutters acquired from Turkey and the US.
Washington has played a large role in building
up Azerbaijan’s
navy, donating some patrol boats and training Azerbaijani naval special forces with
the aim of increasing the country’s ability to conduct surveillance in its part
of the Caspian. For its side, Jerusalem recently
provided Baku
with Gabriel-5 anti-ship missiles as a part of an Azerbaijani-Israeli arms deal
worth $1.5 billion. As a result, the Azerbaijan Navy is today a formidable force
that can not and should not be ignored by the other Caspian states, notably Iran. In case of war between the West and Tehran, Azerbaijan
may in fact be a thorn in Iran’s
northern flank, providing coalition forces with military and logistic support.
Nevertheless, the geopolitical ties between Russia,
Iran and Armenia would likely be enough to deter Baku from getting
involved in the conflict. Otherwise, not even the powerful Azerbaijan Navy may
be enough to avoid Baku the same fate of Saakashvili’s
Georgia
in what, ultimately, is still a Russian lake.