Categories
Selected Articles

“Azersky-2” satellite to be produced in Azerbaijan


651c1dd45795b651c1dd45795c1696341459651c

Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), a world-leading aerospace and defense company and Azercosmos, a pioneering force of Azerbaijan in the space industry, are announcing a cooperation agreement for the sale of two of IAI’s cutting-edge multi spectral electro optical satellites, better than 0.5 meter native resolution with a long life span and high imaging performance, APA-Econmics reports.

This landmark deal represents a significant step forward in space technology and cooperation between the two companies. Under the terms of the agreement IAI will provide Azercosmos with two satellites within Azersky -2 program, technology and knowledge for the construction and the operation of the satellites.

The transaction is expected to bring about exciting developments in the field of satellites technology, opening up new opportunities for both companies to explore. The agreement includes a long term business partnership between IAI and Azercosmos, reflected in the establishment of innovation, entrepreneurship, academic and study ecosystem in the field of space in Azerbaijan over the years.

IAI and Azercosmos are committed to a successful implementation of the Azersky-2 program, and are looking forward to mutually beneficial cooperation in future space programs.

“This project is unique for both Azercosmos and Israel Aerospace Industries, and will undoubtedly contribute to the development of space cooperation between our countries. I consider our cooperation to be an important step in the development of human capital and space technologies in the country,” Azercosmos Chairman of the Board, Samaddin Asadov noted.


“For IAI, the sky is not a limit but merely the starting point for our systems capabilities. Our commitment to innovation and exploration motivates us to partner with the foremost experts in the global space community, as we ambitiously shape the future of space observation together. We are proud to have made significant contributions to this cooperation for Azerbaijan, and we are sure that this collaboration will propel us to new heights,” IAI President and CEO, Boaz Levy said.


Categories
Selected Articles

Azerbaijan acquiring two reconnaissance satellites from Israel | CTech


Israel Aerospace Industries and Azercosmos, the space agency of Azerbaijan, announced on Tuesday a cooperation agreement for the sale of two of the IAI’s advanced satellites. The IAI did not disclose what satellites were sold, but according to reports they are the OptSat500 reconnaissance satellites that provide better than 0.5 meter native resolution with a long life span and high imaging performance. According to reports in Azerbaijan, the deal is valued at $120 million.

Under the terms of the agreement the IAI will also provide technology and knowledge for the construction and the operation of the satellites.

1 View gallery

SatelliteSatellite

IAI satellite.

(Israel Aerospace Industries)

The agreement includes a long term business partnership between IAI and Azercosmos, reflected in the establishment of innovation and entrepreneurship centers in the field of space in Azerbaijan, academic and study programs in the field of space in Azerbaijan, and the establishment of a joint business center.

“Our commitment to innovation and exploration motivates us to partner with the foremost experts in the global space community, as we ambitiously shape the future of space observation together,” said IAI President and CEO, Boaz Levy. “IAI is proud of winning the tender for Azerbaijan, and we are sure that this collaboration will propel us to new heights.”

Azercosmos Chairman of the Board, Samaddin Asadov, said: “This project is unique for both Azercosmos and Israel Aerospace Industries, and will undoubtedly contribute to the development of space cooperation between our countries. I consider our cooperation to be an important step in the development of human capital and space technologies in the country.”


Categories
Selected Articles

Azerbaijan acquiring two reconnaissance satellites from Israel | CTech


Israel Aerospace Industries and Azercosmos, the space agency of Azerbaijan, announced on Tuesday a cooperation agreement for the sale of two of the IAI’s advanced satellites. The IAI did not disclose what satellites were sold, but according to reports they are the OptSat500 reconnaissance satellites that provide better than 0.5 meter native resolution with a long life span and high imaging performance. According to reports in Azerbaijan, the deal is valued at $120 million.

Under the terms of the agreement the IAI will also provide technology and knowledge for the construction and the operation of the satellites.

1 View gallery

SatelliteSatellite

IAI satellite.

(Israel Aerospace Industries)

The agreement includes a long term business partnership between IAI and Azercosmos, reflected in the establishment of innovation and entrepreneurship centers in the field of space in Azerbaijan, academic and study programs in the field of space in Azerbaijan, and the establishment of a joint business center.

“Our commitment to innovation and exploration motivates us to partner with the foremost experts in the global space community, as we ambitiously shape the future of space observation together,” said IAI President and CEO, Boaz Levy. “IAI is proud of winning the tender for Azerbaijan, and we are sure that this collaboration will propel us to new heights.”

Azercosmos Chairman of the Board, Samaddin Asadov, said: “This project is unique for both Azercosmos and Israel Aerospace Industries, and will undoubtedly contribute to the development of space cooperation between our countries. I consider our cooperation to be an important step in the development of human capital and space technologies in the country.”


Categories
Selected Articles

Israel, Azerbaijan announce landmark deal for sale of two satellites


GettyImages-3240508.jpg?h=99abf657&itok=

On the backdrop of the escalation of tensions between Azerbaijan and Armenia, and just two weeks after Azerbaijan’s offensive emptied Nagorno-Karabakh of over 100,000 ethnic Armenians, Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) and the Azeri space agency Azercosmos announced on Tuesday they have signed an agreement for the sale of two Israeli-developed reconnaissance satellites for the Azersky-2 satellite program. 

A picture published on X, formerly known as Twitter, shows IAI CEO Boaz Levy and Azercosmos Chairman Samaddin Asadov signing the agreement. The deal, announced last April, was signed Tuesday within the framework of the 74th International Astronautical Congress held in Baku.

Although Israeli-Azeri defense ties remain discreet, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute the majority of Azerbaijan’s arms imports come from Israel.

A statement issued by the IAI said that “the companies signed on a cooperation agreement for the sale of two of IAI’s cutting-edge multispectral electro-optical satellites,” adding that the “landmark deal represents a significant step forward in space technology and cooperation between the two companies.”

A statement issued by the Azeri Ministry of Digital Development and Transport said that “according to the contract, two satellites will be developed within the framework of the Azersky-2 program. These will be remote Earth observation satellites with high-resolution electro-optical sensors. IAI will design, assemble, integrate and test the first satellite of the satellite cluster with the participation of Azerbaijani experts.”

The Azeri statement noted that Israeli experts will also support Azercosmos in the design of a new satellite development center to be established in Azerbaijan.

The IAI did not offer details on the models of the satellites to be sold to Azerbaijan. It also did not specify whether the satellites would be manufactured in Israel or in Azerbaijan, though the Azeri statement indicates that at least part of the production process will take place in Azerbaijan.

The two countries maintain close relations in security, energy, infrastructure and smart agriculture. Azerbaijan is especially important for Israel because of its strategic location, neighboring Iran. Azerbaijan is also a major oil supplier for Israel. In 2022, it exported more than 2 million tons to Israel, which constituted approximately 40% of Israel’s oil consumption that year. 

Reports over the years have claimed that Israel exports weapons to Azerbaijan, though Israel has always declined to confirm that officially. That being said, during his visit to Baku last July, Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said, “We discussed important cooperations in the security, intelligence and industrial fields. The visit will strengthen strategic relations and deepen cooperation in many ways.”

Last March, Azerbaijan opened an embassy in Israel. A month later, Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen visited Baku, emphasizing bilateral efforts at deepening the security and strategic alliance between the two countries. In an interview with The Times of Israel shortly after the visit, Cohen confirmed that IAI will supply Azerbaijan with two satellites at a total cost of $120 million.

Israeli lawyer and human rights activist Eitay Mack, considered an expert on Israel’s weapons exports, told Al-Monitor that Israeli authorities do not limit security exports to Azerbaijan. This means that Israeli authorities allow for the export to Azerbaijan of sensitive technologies. It is unclear, he said, whether the satellites now being sold to Azerbaijan are destined for civil or military use, though satellite technologies are considered in general of dual use. 

The Israeli Foreign Ministry and the Israeli Defense Ministry both declined to comment on the satellite deal. 


Categories
Selected Articles

Azerbaijan to launch two satellites into orbit in 2026 and 2028


189158-0233474.jpg

On the sidelines of the 74th International Astronautical Congress in Baku, the Space Agency of the Republic of Azerbaijan “Azercosmos”, and Israel Aerospace Industries Ltd (IAI), a world-leading aerospace and defense company, have announced a groundbreaking agreement on Azersky-2 program, a cooperation agreement for the sale of two of IAI’s cutting-edge multi spectral electro-optical satellites, better than 0.5 meter native resolution with a long life span and high imaging performance, News.Az reports. 

This landmark deal represents a significant step forward in space technology and cooperation between the two companies. Under the terms of the agreement, IAI will provide Azercosmos with two satellites within the Azersky -2 program, technology and knowledge for the construction and operation of the satellites.

The Israeli specialists will help Azercosmos design the Satellite Development Center. The knowledge and experience acquired will enable Azerbaijani specialists to construct the second satellite in Azerbaijan.

The transaction is expected to bring about exciting developments in the field of satellite technology, opening up new opportunities for both companies to explore. The agreement includes a long-term business partnership between IAI and Azercosmos, reflected in the establishment of innovation, entrepreneurship, academic and study ecosystems in the field of space in Azerbaijan over the years.

IAI and Azercosmos are committed to a successful implementation of the Azersky-2 program and are looking forward to mutually beneficial cooperation in future space programs.

“This project is unique for both Azercosmos and Israel Aerospace Industries, and will undoubtedly contribute to the development of space cooperation between our countries. I consider our cooperation to be an important step in the development of human capital and space technologies in the country,” Azercosmos Chairman of the Board Samaddin Asadov said.

“We are proud to have made significant contributions to this cooperation for Azerbaijan, and we are sure that this collaboration will propel us to new heights,” said IAI President and CEO, Boaz Levy.

IAI will provide all the necessary ground systems for the management and operation of the “Azersky-2” system in Azerbaijan within the program. Local specialists will be trained on satellite control and satellite image processing. The satellites will be launched in 2026 and 2028. The carrier rocket that will lift the satellite into orbit will be known in the next months.

News.Az 


Categories
Selected Articles

Erdogan appears in public following rumors of illness


default.jpg

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made a public appearance on Wednesday amidst local media reports suggesting that he was not feeling well.

On Wednesday, at approximately 3:30 p.m., Turkish TV channels broadcasted live footage of the president’s arrival at the ruling party’s headquarters in Ankara. Erdogan, who exited his car unassisted, greeted party members, engaged in a brief conversation, and then entered the building.

Erdogan had canceled a planned trip to Spain on the same day, where the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan were set to meet as part of the third summit of the European Political Community. The Bloomberg agency, citing informed sources, attributed the trip cancellation to Erdogan’s busy schedule. However, Turkish opposition media suggested that Erdogan might have been dealing with a cold.

!

This text available in   Հայերեն and Русский

Print


Categories
Selected Articles

Azerbaijan’s president snubs EU-hosted talks on Nagorno-Karabakh


4307.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=8

Azerbaijan will not attend an EU-brokered event in Spain where its president, Ilham Aliyev, was set to hold talks with his Armenian counterpart over the future of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Aliyev had been considering taking part in a meeting to discuss the breakaway region – which has largely emptied out after the mass exodus of ethnic Armenians – with the leaders of France, Germany, Armenia and the EU Council president, Charles Michel.

Azerbaijani state media said Aliyev had wanted Turkey to be represented at the meeting with Armenia’s prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan, which was scheduled for Thursday, but that France and Germany had objected.

Baku felt “an anti-Azerbaijani atmosphere” had emerged among potential participants, according to reports.

The Azerbaijani news outlet APA said Baku had been angered by French officials and France’s decision, announced on Tuesday, to supply Yerevan with military equipment.

“Any format involving France is not acceptable for Azerbaijan, Baku will not participate in such a platform,” APA said, citing an unnamed Azerbaijani official.

Accounts from within Nagorno-Karabakh have revealed the dramatic aftermath of the region’s defeat by Azerbaijani forces in a lightning-fast military operation last month.

“The city is now completely deserted. The hospitals, more than one, are not functioning,” Marco Succi, who travelled to the region this week as part of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), said. “The medical personnel have left. The water board authorities left. The director of the morgue … the stakeholders we were working with before, have also left. This scene is quite surreal.”

Succi said his ICRC team were scouring the regional capital, Stepanakert’s, abandoned streets with megaphones looking for the last residents who had been unable or unwilling to leave.

Succi said they found Susanna, an elderly cancer patient confined to bed, who was reportedly showing signs of malnutrition and was taken by ambulance to Armenia.

A video published on Wednesday by the Russian peacekeeping mission from Stepanakert similarly showed empty streets littered with debris left by former residents.

International media outlets have been refused entry to Stepanakert because the area is not yet secure, Azerbaijani officials have said.

Estimates of ethnic Armenians still in the Karabakh region ranged from only 50-1,000, after more than 100,000 fled in recent days, the first UN mission to the area in 30 years reported on Monday.

One of the few men left was thought to be a farmer from a village near Stepanakert. Speaking in Yerevan, his daughter Ani – who asked that her second name and father’s name be withheld for security reasons – told the Guardian he had decided to stay for now because he “could not leave his cattle behind”.

“He told me that he does not want his cattle to die, they are his life,” Ani said.

Ani last spoke to her father on Monday, when he described how fleeing neighbours had left food and other provisions that would last for three weeks. “I am not sure what he will do after that. There are no shops, no food. He is all alone there.”

Western officials have urged Baku to provide the ethnic Armenians who left Nagorno-Karabakh with security guarantees that would ensure their eventual return.

skip past newsletter promotion

Sign up to This is Europe

The most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environment

Privacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

after newsletter promotion

During a visit to Armenia on Tuesday, the French foreign ministry said that Paris was working on “a draft resolution aimed at guaranteeing a permanent international presence in Nagorno-Karabakh” that would enable Armenians “to return to their lands” in due course.

But several refugees said they saw no way for them to go back to their homes, mindful of a long history of bloodshed between the two sides.

“We will not return, no matter what the promises are,” said Tigran, a Nagorno-Karabakh native, in an interview from Dilijan, a town north of Yerevan where his family had been housed in a temporary shelter. “We just don’t trust Azerbaijan. We don’t want to live under their rule.”

Azerbaijani officials have emphasised that they would guarantee “the equal rights and freedoms of everyone” in Nagorno-Karabakh, “regardless of ethnic, religious or linguistic affiliation”.

But the Brussels-based International Crisis Group, pointing to the mass exodus, wrote in a report this week that “the [Azerbaijani] promises made are insufficient to build trust”.

“While it should be a goal of international diplomacy that the displaced can safely visit and, eventually, return to the enclave, that is likely to require a long-term effort,” the report said. “More immediately, residents of Nagorno-Karabakh will need help to start new lives in Armenia, where they may be for some time, if not permanently.”

It also remains unclear whether Azerbaijan is planning to repopulate the mountainous region with its own citizens.

Between 1988 and 1994, about 500,000 Azerbaijanis from Karabakh and the areas around it were expelled from their homes, according to Thomas de Waal, a Caucasus scholar and senior fellow at the Carnegie Europe thinktank.

The ethnic Azeri population made up about 25% of the total population of Nagorno-Karabakh before a Russian-brokered ceasefire signed in 1994 that left Karabakh, as well as swathes of Azeri territory around, it in Armenian hands.

Baku previously said it had resettled some districts in Nagorno-Karabakh that it had retaken from Armenia after six weeks of fighting in 2020, in a programme that the authorities called the “big return”.


Categories
Selected Articles

Ukrainian President makes phone call to Azerbaijani President


16964327145694663291_1200x630.jpg

On October 4, President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy made a
phone call to the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham
Aliyev, Azernews reports.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy expressed his gratitude for the
significant humanitarian aid provided by Azerbaijan to Ukraine,
especially for the support for the energy sector in winter
conditions.

During the phone conversation, the sides expressed support for
the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the states and
exchanged views on regional security, current threats, and future
cooperation formats.

Follow us on Twitter @AzerNewsAz


Categories
Selected Articles

Armenian PM holds phone call with French president


breaking.png

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan held a phone conversation with French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday, Interfax news agency reported.


Categories
Selected Articles

Armenian PM To Attend EU-Sponsored Talks In Spain Despite Reports Baku Won’t Show – Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty


Armenian PM To Attend EU-Sponsored Talks In Spain Despite Reports Baku Won’t Show  Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty