The WikiLeaks released a diplomatic cable from the US Embassy in Azerbaijan to the US State US department dating from February 4, 2008, which analysed the political ambitions of the first lady of Azerbaijan Mehriban Aliyeva and her chances to succeed Ilham Aliyev as the next leader of the Aliyev regime. The report portrays Mehriban Aliyeva as a person ill-suited for the role of the next leader of the Aliyev regime. Below is the full report:
C O N F I D E N T I A L BAKU 000093
SIPDIS
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/03/2018
TAGS: AJ, PGOV, PINR
SUBJECT: AZERBAIJAN’S FIRST LADY: FINDING HER OWN VOICE
Classified By: Ambassador Anne E. Derse, per 1.4 (b, d).
1. (C) Summary: The Azerbaijani Government is making a new effort to present First Lady Mehriban Aliyeva as a significant political leader in meetings with senior U.S. officials. The Foreign Ministry, including her uncle who serves as Deputy Foreign Minister, is helping to shape this new image. Rumors that she is forming a separate political party persist, although the President said cryptically that there should be no “opposition” in a family. The First Lady’s soft spoken demeanor and lack of political experience suggest that it will be challenging to portray her as a national political leader and eventually as a possible successor to her husband. End Summary.
2. (C) The following observations were made during four separate interactions with First Lady Mehriban Aliyeva between January 9-20 during the visits of three Congressional delegations.
Partner or Competitor
3. (U) On December 23, President Ilham Aliyev wrote of his wife in the State-run newspaper, “Mehriban is my great supporter . . . In a family, the man and woman are people who share similar principles of life and moral values. Therefore, I think that there should be no “opposition” in a family in the radical sense of the word. Mehriban and I share the same views on many issues . . . A woman is a woman, even if she is the President’s wife, and she is a guarantor of peace, harmony and love in the family.”
4. (C) The denial that opposition exists within the First Family is perhaps a reference to press speculation that the First Lady is launching her own political party that would be distinct from her husband’s ruling party. Aliyeva was elected to the Parliament in 2005 from the ruling Yeni Azerbaijan Party. In the Azizbeyov constituency, she won 92 percent of the vote in an election that was rife with irregularities. Over dinner with Senator Lugar, she spoke proudly of the work that she is doing in her constituency building schools and meeting with constituents. With a wry smile, the President told Lugar that his wife received hundreds of letters from all over the country from citizens pleading for her to represent their district in Parliament because they knew she is well-connected and could benefit her constituency.
Boosting Her Political Credentials
4. (C) In past years, members of Congress and senior Administration officials have not requested meetings with the First Lady. Nor did they in this case. The Azerbaijani Ambassador to Washington, Yashar Aliyev (no family relation to the President, although considered to have good access), lobbied hard for the meetings both with Congressional staff in Washington and in person with the members when they arrived in Baku. Charge witnessed a conversation between Ambassador Aliyev and the First Lady in which he had to convince her to take a meeting with the co-chair of the Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus. Moreover, Ambassador Aliyev persuaded the First Lady to join a dinner with the President and Senator Lugar when it became apparent that it would be hard to add an additional separate meeting with her into the Senator’s packed schedule.
5. (C) For the two office calls with members of Congress, there was extensive TV and print media coverage of the meetings. Aliyeva is the chairperson of the Azerbaijan-U.S. inter-parliamentary group within the Parliament. These meetings were clearly intended to show her activity and outreach as a member of Parliament, as distinct from her responsibilities as First Lady and the President of the Heydar Aliyev Foundation. They also reinforce the view that she is being groomed as a significant national political figure, and even perhaps a potential successor to her husband.
Presentation Style and Image
6. (C) The First Lady is soft-spoken and made introductory remarks in English but several times consulted with her husband or her uncle, former Azerbaijani Ambassador to the U.S. and current Deputy Foreign Minister Hafiz Pashayev, to try to follow the comments made in English by members of the U.S. delegation. She never used the professional interpreter, although he remained in the room. Embassy observers note that the First Lady has made impressive progress over the last 18 months in improving her English, including the delivery of speeches in English without reading. Former Ambassador Pashayev responded to the majority of questions from the members of Congress, and even occasionally cut off the First Lady when she started to respond. While appearing annoyed, she did not attempt to reinsert herself after having been cut off by her uncle. In one case they argued about a historical fact during the discussion, but she eventually deferred to her uncle.
7. (C) Aliyeva appeared ill at ease in discussing the work of the Parliament and anything to do with the U.S. political system. When asked about her role in the parliament, she discussed her position as the chair of the U.S. inter-parliamentary group and the importance of advocating for her parliamentary district. Aliyeva has been conspicuously absent from the Parliamentary sessions monitored by the Embassy. Long-time political observers believe that her irregular attendance is the primary reason the GOAJ has not allowed the Parliament to publish voting records, as requested by a public interest group.
8. (C) On the United States, she seemed interested in the progress of the U.S. presidential campaign. She was surprised to find out from her uncle that Hillary Clinton is a Democrat. When a member of Congress asked Aliyeva about Azerbaijan,s upcoming presidential election, she had to turn to her uncle for confirmation of the date and seemed surprised to learn that the election would be held in October. She brightened up when asked about the Heydar Aliyev Foundation and was able, in confident English, to provide statistics and details about the Foundations support for schools, cultural activities, and health care.
9. (C) She received the delegations in the lavish conference room on the upper floors of the Heydar Aliyev Foundation Building. The building is decorated with an 8-story atrium, gilded ceilings, and dual glass elevators. In one of the meetings, the delegation expressed surprise that the First Lady wore a black, low-cut lacy black cocktail dress and enormous jeweled earrings. Aliyeva typically wears such attire to official GOAJ events. The President describes her as “the most beautiful woman in Azerbaijan.” She is renowned for her fashions and her apparent periodic plastic surgeries. When Turkish President Gul visited Baku in November, Azerbaijanis were buzzing about Aliyeva’s photo with the First Lady of Turkey. Mrs. Gul wore a headscarf and Aliyeva wore a racy dress with a bare back.
Biographical Details
10. (C) The First Family’s oldest daughter, Leyla Aliyeva, lives in Moscow with her ethnic Azerbaijani Russian-based businessman husband. The First Lady said that her eldest daughter and the First Lady herself were unhappy that she was in Moscow. Leyla Aliyeva had been studying in London and the transition to Moscow had been difficult. The First Lady added that she misses her daughter and wishes that she and her husband would return to Baku. The Aliyevs also have a 17-year old daughter, Arzu Aliyeva, and a 10-year old son, Heydar Aliyev.
11. (C) The President and First Lady met in Moscow when she was a first year medical student at the Sechenov Moscow State Medical Institute. She graduated there in 1988 with a medical degree and worked as a researcher on eye diseases for four years in Moscow. In 2004, Aliyeva became head of the Heydar Aliyev Founation. Also in 2004, she received the title of UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador for her work to protect and develop Azeri folk literature and music. She was also made an Islamic Education, Science, and Cultural Organization (ISESCO) Goodwill Ambassador in 2006 (the first woman to receive this post) for her work on bridging the “clash of civilizations.”
12. (C) Comment: Since her election to parliament in 2005, conventional wisdom in Baku has increasingly held that Mehriban Aliyeva and her side of the family are taking over the dominant role in Azerbaijan,s political and economic affairs once held by the powerful “Yeraz” group from “Western Azerbaijan.” While the Pashayev family definitely has taken on a more prominent role in Azerbaijan,s commercial affairs, the First Lady’s soft spoken demeanor and lack of experience in political affairs suggest that it will be challenging to portray her as a national political leader and eventually as a possible successor to her husband. DERSE
(azerireport.com)