Azerbaijan holds first joint drills with Turkiye since Karabakh victory

Azerbaijan holds first joint drills with Turkiye since Karabakh victory
A view through a car window shows a checkpoint of Azerbaijani law enforcement officers in Stepanakert city, known as Khankendi by Azerbaijan, following a military operation conducted by Azeri armed forces October 2, 2023. (Reuters)
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Updated 23 October 2023
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Azerbaijan holds first joint drills with Turkiye since Karabakh victory

Azerbaijan holds first joint drills with Turkiye since Karabakh victory
  • Up to 3,000 of Azerbaijan’s military personnel were participating in exercises named for the founder of modern Turkiye Mustafa Kemal Ataturk

Azerbaijan said on Monday it had begun a series of joint military exercises with close ally Turkiye, the first since Baku retook the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh last month, prompting most of the territory’s ethnic Armenians to flee.
Azerbaijan’s defense ministry said in a statement that up to 3,000 military personnel were participating in exercises named for the founder of modern Turkiye, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.
It said the drills were being held across Azerbaijan, including in Baku, the Nakhichevan exclave which borders Turkiye, and in what the ministry called the “liberated territories” of Karabakh.
Turkiye has close linguistic and cultural links to Azerbaijan, and offered Baku military and political support during its three decade-long conflict with Armenia, with which Ankara has no formal diplomatic relations.
Armenia and Azerbaijan have recently signalled willingness to sign a peace treaty formally ending their conflict following Azerbaijan’s victory in Karabakh and the exodus of almost all the region’s 120,000 ethnic Armenians.
The foreign ministers of the two countries, along with those of Turkiye, Iran and Russia, were due to hold talks hosted by Tehran on Monday on progress toward a peace agreement.
However, Baku this month accused Yerevan of undermining the peace process with “aggressive rhetoric.”
Armenia describes the Karabakh Armenians’ flight as ethnic cleansing driven by the threat of violence after a nine-month blockade of essential supplies, the latest chapter in a conflict between Christian Armenians and Turkic Muslim Azeris that goes back more than a century.
Azerbaijan says the Karabakh Armenian civilians were welcome to stay and be integrated in Azerbaijani society, but left voluntarily.