Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on June 18 dismissed as “rumors” talks about a potential Turkish military base in Azerbaijan.
Another Russian official – Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that Russia was monitoring talks over possible Turkish military base in Azerbaijan.
“The deployment of military facilities of NATO countries near the borders of Russia is a reason for special attention and necessary steps to ensure security,” Peskov said.
The spokesperson of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Maria Zakharova also commented on the issue, saying “we strongly believe that bilateral ties in the region, including defence contacts, should not be aimed against any other states. We strongly support any steps focused on normalising the dialogue between Baku and Yerevan, and between Yerevan and Ankara. International contacts in the South Caucasus should be based on neighbourly principles and should take into account a balance of interests of all the countries in the region.”
She added that Kremlin “does not consider it correct to mix any topics concerning Nagorno-Karabakh proper with Azerbaijan’s (or Armenia’s) bilateral relations with third countries. This is how we view the most recent Azerbaijani-Turkish contacts at the highest level.”
Azerbaijan and Turkey on June 15 agreed to cement a new stage of military cooperation by signing the Declaration on Allied Relations in Shusha city liberated from the Armenian occupation in last year’s war. The declaration also envisages the strengthening of economic, political, energy and trade ties.
“But most important is the agreement on cooperation between Azerbaijan and Turkey in the defense industry sphere and mutual military assistance,” Aliyev said while addressing a presser after the signing of the agreement.
Erdoğan was cited as saying by Turkish NTV on Thursday that he did not rule out a Turkish military base in Azerbaijan.
“There may be development, expansion here later,” he said.
It should be noted that Russia sees the South Caucasus region as its sphere of influence and has a military base in Armenia’s Gyumri region.
It brokered the peace deal between Azerbaijan and Armenia following the war in autumn 2020. 2,000-strong Russian peacekeeping mission was stationed in Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region in line with the peace deal.