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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, January 3, 2016
How Azerbaijan and Its Lobbyists Spin Congress
The Aliyev regime is selling itself in Washington as friendly and progressive. Is your Congressman buying it?

“However life turns out — the hardest part is I can’t see you. And this is our 37th year together.” So ends a letter from
Azerbaijani political prisoner Leyla Yunus to her husband Arif, also
imprisoned by his country’s increasingly thin-skinned authoritarian
government. The Yunuses were arrested nearly a year ago and have not
been allowed to see each other since. The charges leveled against them —
high treason, espionage, fraud — are patently absurd.
Leyla Yunus is one of the country’s best-known human rights activists
and a relentless critic of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and hiscorrupt regime. She is also a tireless advocate for the country’s other political prisoners, who add up to twice as many — according to a detailedopen letter signed by a plethora of human rights organizations, academics, and regional experts — as Belarus and Russia combined.
For years,
Azerbaijan has papered over its dismal human rights record by presenting itself to the United States as a loyal partner in the “war on terror,” a stalwart friend to Israel, and an important energy supplier.
Azerbaijan
has papered over its dismal human rights record by presenting itself to
the United States as a loyal partner in the “war on terror,” a stalwart
friend to Israel, and an important energy supplier.In addition to traditional diplomacy, it has advanced these messages through aggressive lobbying in the think-tank world, instate legislatures,
and in the halls of Congress. Mandatory filings by the Azerbaijan
government and its U.S. lobbyists reveal that, in total, it and its
proxies spent at least $4 million to this end in 2014 alone. (In 2013,
when Azerbaijan spent only $2.3 million, it was stillamong the top 10 foreign
governments buying influence in Washington, according to the Sunlight
Foundation.) This February, the Azerbaijani embassy increased the
monthly retainer of its main lobbyist, thePodesta Group,
from $50,000 to $75,000. The Podesta Group’s filings reveal hundreds of
contacts with congressional offices, executive branch agencies, members
of the media, and think tanks.
None of the disclosed spending is illegal, and many foreign governments — including liberal democracies — buy influence in
Washington. But what the Azerbaijanis and their lobbyists have been
able to achieve in the halls of Congress is striking — especially
considering the true nature of the regime.
On January 21, Rep. Gene Green (D-Texas) praised Azerbaijan
for its “close and important relationship” with the United States, and
described it as a “beacon of democracy.” In February, Rep. Ryan Zinke
(R-Mont.) said that Azerbaijan and the United States “share the same commitment to freedom and liberty,” Rep. Donald Payne (D-N.J.) lauded Azerbaijan’s “commitment to the ideals of democracy,” Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-N.C.) said the country was a “reliable friend and valuable ally,” and Rep. Pete Olson (R-Texas) called it
a close ally of Israel and a “reliable partner.” Needless to say, no
mention was made, in any of these statements, of the Aliyev regime’s
well-documented abuses of its own citizens.
These are public statements made on the floor of Congress — but a large
fraction of this kind of rhetoric takes place at private functions. A
congressional staffer who wished to remain anonymous described receptionsorganized by pro-regime groups, such as the Azerbaijan America Alliance,
where up to 20 members of Congress at a time would “line up at the
podium” waiting for their turn to praise Azerbaijan for its economic
successes, its partnership with the United States, and its friendship
with Israel. The events were remarkable, the staffer said, for how many
members attended and for the uniformity of their comments, suggesting
that they were being fed their lines by lobbyists or pro-regime
organizations. Though there are no publicly available transcripts of
what is said at such affairs, regime-affiliated groups like to boast of the glowing testimonials the regime receives from U.S. officials — and it makes for nauseating read.
The Azerbaijan America Alliance is run by Anar Mammadov, the son of the country’s transportation minister, notorious for
his corrupt dealings and outrageous exploits. His reputation, however,
hasn’t prevented Dan Burton, a former House member from Indiana, from
working for him as the Alliance’schairman, praising the Azeri government in print, and giving remarks at celebrations of the former President’s birthday (thinly disguised as a faux “national holiday”). The Alliance is also closely involved with the House’s Azerbaijan Caucus, a group of over 60 legislators it considersfriendly. In May, the Washington Post published a damning exposé of
an all-expenses-paid trip ten members of Congress took to Azerbaijan in
2013. The trip was secretly funded by SOCAR, the country’s state-run
oil company. Of the ten members who went on the trip,
eight are members of the Azerbaijan Caucus. Neither of the caucus’s
co-chairs — Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) and Bill Shuster (R-Pa.) —
responded to requests for comment.
Emin Milli, an Azerbaijani activist who spent 17 months in prison on
trumped-up charges, recently visited the United States to accept a
prestigiouspress freedom award on behalf of his friend Khadija Ismayilova,
Azerbaijan’s premier independent journalist, who is now also behind
bars. When I asked him what difference it made if U.S. members of
Congress praised the regime, he could barely contain his fury: “The
effect is devastating,” he said, “because you have
democratically-elected representatives confirming the legitimacy of a
mafia. The legitimacy of thugs. The legitimacy of a group of people who
kill, torture, and put people in jail just for expressing their
opinion.” Milli pointed out that brittle, self-conscious authoritarian
regimes always welcome signs of legitimacy from abroad:“If one
congressman writes a letter or says something positive about Aliyev or
his regime,” he said, “they show it on TV 20 times a day.”
What’s striking is that the positive sentiments extended to Azerbaijan
by its friends on the Hill aren’t reciprocated by the government in
Baku. In December 2014, the head of Aliyev’s administration penned a
vicious (and distinctly Putin-esque) anti-Americanscreed,
accusing Washington of fomenting revolution under the pretext of
promoting democracy. This, says former U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan
Richard Kauzlarich, was meant as a deliberate message: “You need us more
than we need you.” The letter has been accompanied by a relentless
anti-American campaign in the state-run media, a series of hostile statements by senior officials, and crackdowns on organizations funded by the U.S. government, like Radio Free Europe.
Milli highlights the absurdity of U.S. members of Congress praising a
regime whose pliant media spares no breath fomenting anti-U.S. sentiment
amongst its people: “Every day on TV, from nine in the morning till
late in the evening, they say John Kerry has left all his other business
and spends the entire day trying to destroy Azerbaijan. So I want to
ask all those people in Congress: Is this the great regime you’re
praising? Is this your great ally?”
Aside from generally bolstering its image, there are at least two
specific reasons why the government in Baku is so keen to build support
in Congress. One is to create a counterweight against its sworn enemies,
the Armenians, who have a powerful lobby of
their own. The other is to ward off burgeoning efforts by the human
rights community to press for sanctions against key regime individuals.
David Kramer, former president of Freedom House — and a high-profile
proponent of the Magnitsky Act,
which placed sanctions on Russian officials who committed human rights
violations — speculated that a similar push might eventually succeed
against Azerbaijan. Once talk of sanctions gains steam, he said, the
regime “can say [to friendly legislators]: You were with us back then;
we hope we can count on you now.” Judging by the inroads the lobby has
made so far, this is a disquieting possibility.
In the meantime,Azerbaijan’s
key lobbyist, the Podesta Group, is not above crossing ethical lines to
try to tilt the climate on the Hill in favor of its client. In February, Maran Turner, executive director of the rights organization Freedom Now,
organized a briefing to inform Capitol Hill staffers about Azerbaijan’s
political prisoners. As the briefing approached, Turner says, she heard
from invitees that the Podesta Group had called “every single office”
to convince them not to attend. Podesta also contacted staffers of the
House Committee on Foreign Affairs, under whose auspices the briefing
was being held, and asked them to cancel it. Though the briefing went
ahead, only a few staffers ended up attending (though over a dozen had
RSVP’d). Turner doesn’t know whether Podesta pressure was responsible
for the poor showing, but expressed outrage that an American lobbying
firm would attempt to prevent members of Congress from hearing about a
foreign country’s human rights record.
But Podesta wasn’t done yet. Among the briefing’s few attendees, Turner
says, was Katelyn Wohlford, an expensively-attired young woman who
presented herself as a graduate student studying Azerbaijan. Her
appearance immediately aroused suspicion, as the briefing was not open
to the public — and though Wohlford asked no questions, she took copious
notes. Afterward, Turner found Wohlford’s profile on
the Podesta web site, describing her as “an associate working on the
Podesta Group’s public relations and international teams.”
This version of events was confirmed by several other attendees.
Wohlford did not respond to requests for comment, and a Podesta
representative referred me to the Azerbaijani embassy, which also did
not reply. Turner doesn’t know for sure what Wohlford did with her
notes, but strongly suspects they were handed over to the Azeris.
Indeed, several weeks later, Turner was told by Azerbaijan’s delegation
to the United Nations in New York that they were “fully informed” about
her organization and its efforts to organize the briefing. If Wohlford
was indeed the source of this information, the implication is that the
Podesta Group is providing details of closed congressional briefings to
representatives of a dictatorial regime.
This week, Azerbaijan is hosting the first European Games, a major new international sporting event it’s promoting with gusto. Such glittery spectacles — like the Eurovision contest in 2012 and theFormula 1 Grand Prix next
year — are meant to showcase the country as a modern, developed member
of the international community. To make sure this message isn’t marred
by inconvenient references to political prisoners, the government barred
both Amnesty International and theGuardian from entering at the last minute. And just last week, a new FARA filing by
the Podesta Group revealed that it will be providing one month of
additional advice to Azerbaijan about its “online engagements.” Maran
Turner of Freedom Now speculates that this is intended to counteract thenegative press Azerbaijan
is receiving in the run-up to the games. So if you see any trending
stories about how America’s best friend in the Caucasus is making a name
for itself in sport, treat them with appropriate skepticism — and
remind your congressmen and women to do the same.
The photo shows Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliyev, at a meeting in Germany this January.
Photo credit: Sean Gallup/Getty Images
Photo credit: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

