Iranian spy network unveiled in Azerbaijan
An Iranian spy network was discovered operating in
Azerbaijan, as tensions continue to rise between the two countries, the
Azerbaijani State Security Service announced on Monday morning.
Asgarov Zahir Fakhraddin, a ship captain with the Caspian
Shipping Company, was charged with treason for working with the Iranian special
service in exchange for financial compensation.
According to the state security service, Fakhraddin
collected intelligence on companies and representative offices of foreign
countries operating in Azerbaijan, the times and locations of exercises
conducted by the Azerbaijani Navy in the Caspian Sea and the cargo transported to
oil rigs.
Another Azerbaijani named Rasulov Elnur Akif was also
accused of conducting espionage operations for the Iranian special service,
along with a relative named Rasulov Arif Amrah, in exchange for payments. The
two sent photos and videos of oil and gas infrastructure, areas where drones
and tanks are kept, anti-aircraft missile complexes and radar devices to
Iranian agents through WhatsApp messages, according to the Azerbaijani agency.
Another Azerbaijani named Aghazade Bakhtiyar Rafiq was also
accused of collecting information for Iran about representative offices of
foreign countries in Azerbaijan, about the socio-political processes in the
country and about military units.
Two other Azerbaijanis named Jafarzadeh Mirhafiz Mirisag and
Mammadov Orkhan Kamran were accused on espionage charges as well. Mirisag was
arrested in 2018, while Kamran is hiding in Iran.
The announcement by the Azerbaijani State Security Service
comes just two weeks after the security service said it had found an illegal
armed group operating in the country for Iran's intelligence services.
The security service claimed that the group was formed
through indoctrination with "radical extremist religious ideas." The
group received military training in Damascus and many of its members are in
Iran. One member of the group was arrested while attempting a terrorist attack
in an unnamed third country, according to the announcement.
Additionally, on Sunday, the Azerbaijani news agency Report
published a video alleging that Iranian soldiers entered Azerbaijani territory
during the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war.
Report claimed that the Iranian forces entered the area to
allow Armenian forces to regroup. The report has not been confirmed by
Azerbaijani officials.
Tensions have risen between Azerbaijan and Iran in
recent months in light of a number of issues, including efforts by Azerbaijan
to create a corridor through Armenia to an exclave belonging to Azerbaijan,
claims that Israeli intelligence is operating against Iran from Azerbaijan and
op-eds by Azerbaijani newspapers encouraging the West Azerbaijan province of
Iran to secede and join Azerbaijan.
Last week the Azerbaijani ambassador to Iran was summoned by
Iranian Foreign Ministry for what it called "anti-Iran propaganda"
and a "smear campaign against the Islamic Republic" published by
Azerbaijani media.
Additionally, the Iranian ambassador to Azerbaijan was
summoned by the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry regarding what it called
"propaganda against Azerbaijan" and a "smear campaign," as
well as "the threatening rhetoric of the high-ranking political and
military officials of the Islamic Republic of Iran."
Comments recently made by Aliyev lamenting that Azerbaijanis
living outside of the country are not learning "in their native
language" were reported by many news agencies as referring to ethnic
Azerbaijanis living in northern Iran.
"We will continue our efforts so that our compatriots,
who were separated from the state of Azerbaijan due to bitter fate, preserve
our language, traditions, and culture, remain loyal to the ideas of
Azerbaijanism, and never cut ties with their historical homeland," said
Aliyev.
The Iranian MP for Tabriz in the West Azerbaijan Province
expressed outrage at Aliyev's comments, stating "pay attention to how
ignorant this president is about history. Azerbaijan separated from Iran and it
is not as you say."
"Do not create a problem in our neighborhood with this
rhetoric," warned Mohammad Reza Mirtaj Al-Din, the Tabriz representative.
Al-Din then addressed Aliyev in Turkish, stating "If someone wants to
join, Nakhchivan (an exclave of Azerbaijan located between Armenia and Iran)
should join Iran."
In response to Aliyev's comments, Iranian Foreign Ministry
spokesperson Nasser Kanani warned Azerbaijan that "no one should interpret
Iran's patience as weakness."
The spokesperson claimed that "hands from outside the
region" were trying to "destroy Iran's relations with some of its
neighbors."
Iran has also expressed concerns regarding Azerbaijani
efforts to create a corridor called the Zangezur corridor through Armenia to
the Nakhchivan exclave in recent months, as such a corridor would disrupt
transit between Armenia and Iran.
Late last month, the Iranian military launched large-scale
exercises along its border with Azerbaijan called "Mighty Iran."
Shortly after the exercises were announced, Iranian Foreign
Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian told IRNA that the exercises were linked to
concerns surrounding the Zangezur corridor efforts.
“Iran will not permit the blockage of its connection route
with Armenia, and in order to secure that objective the Islamic Republic of
Iran also launched a war game in that region,” said Amir-Abdollahian.
Azerbaijani media encourages ethnic Azerbaijanis to secede
from Iran
In September, multiple editorials in Azerbaijani media
called on ethnic Azerbaijanis in northern Iran to try separating from Iran,
with Iranian officials warning against foreign efforts to disrupt relations
between the two countries.
The articles cited a Turkish report by the Turkish Yeni
Safak news site, linked to the Turkish government, which claimed that a former
Iranian diplomat named Ebulfezl Zuhtevend made "scandalous
statements" about Turkey and Azerbaijan in audio recordings.
Last year, tensions spiked between Azerbaijan and Iran after
Azerbaijan began targeting Iranian trucks with fines and arrests, and Iran
moved military forces to the border and warned against Israeli influence near
its borders.
Ahmed Ali Goudarzi, commander of Iran's Border Guard,
claimed at the time that Israeli forces are present in "sensitive
areas" in neighboring countries and conducting intelligence and espionage
work, advising Muslim countries "not to allow this," according to
Iranian state broadcaster IRIB.
The commander additionally claimed that Israel incited
neighboring countries to take action concerning their borders or impose large
tolls on heavy vehicles, an apparent reference to fees imposed on Iranian truck
drivers by Azerbaijan.
Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian also
claimed that Israel had a presence along the Azerbaijani-Iranian border, saying
"the Zionist regime has started provocative actions in our region through
the territory of Azerbaijan. We consider some of the harsh statements made by
the Azerbaijani authorities these days to be unconstructive."
Azerbaijan's State Border Service (SBS) rejected the claims,
saying that Azerbaijan "does not need the support of foreign forces."
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