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  • Karabakh Tensions Part of New Great Game

    Karabakh Tensions Part of New Great Game
    By John Antranig Kasbarian

    Moscow Times, Russia
    March 14 2005

    As the United States and Russia continue their uneasy struggle for
    influence across the CIS, a remote corner of the southern Caucasus is
    gaining prominence once again, part of a series of regional subplots
    that could aid or impede any grand designs for power. The corner in
    question is Nagorny Karabakh, a tiny mountainous enclave inhabited
    predominantly by Armenians, which was the scene of a brutal armed
    struggle in the 1990s when local separatists successfully ended
    Azerbaijan's rule. Since that time, Karabakh's Armenians have
    controlled the enclave and its borderlands, having fashioned their
    own republic, which enjoys significant support from neighboring
    Armenia. Meanwhile, Azerbaijan refuses to acknowledge any change,
    instead seeking Karabakh's return to its full control.

    Emerging in 1988, the Karabakh struggle was once heralded as a
    test case for Soviet nationalities policy under Mikhail Gorbachev.
    Karabakh's Armenians, with the support of Armenia, initially sought
    to secede from Azerbaijan, citing their constitutional right to
    self-determination. However, when these demands met with violent
    reprisals against Armenians across Azerbaijan, peaceful rallies and
    petitions were replaced by low-intensity conflict pitting Armenian
    partisans against Azerbaijan's special forces, amid the rapid demise
    of Soviet power.


    With the fall of the Soviet Union, the Karabakh struggle quickly
    spiraled into all-out war. By 1994, it had left tens of thousands
    dead and hundreds of thousands uprooted on both sides. The conflict
    also drew in a host of regional actors -- Armenia and Azerbaijan, of
    course, but also neighboring Turkey and Iran, as well as Russia and
    eventually the United States. This made for a complex geopolitical
    equation. Indeed, depending on whom you speak to, the Karabakh
    issue is framed differently. For native Karabakhtsis, it is a
    pure-and-simple national liberation struggle that seeks to remove
    foreign occupation. For politicians in Yerevan and Baku, Karabakh
    is an apple of discord vied over by competing states. For regional
    powers, it is a political playing card, through which ethnic tensions
    can be stoked, suppressed or otherwise manipulated depending on the
    interests at stake. The problem, of course, is that all four levels
    operate simultaneously within a hierarchical nest of power relations.

    Following a 1994 cease-fire, the Karabakh conflict has subsided
    to a large extent. True, border skirmishes continue, and military
    preparedness remains a priority for Armenians and Azeris alike. Yet
    all concede that a tenuous "not-war, not-peace" environment has
    slowly set in. The war on the ground has been largely replaced by
    a war of words, as all sides press for advantage at the negotiating
    table. Meanwhile, these sides seek to create new facts-on-the-ground
    that will bolster their positions in the future. For example, the
    self-declared Nagorny Karabakh Republic has consolidated its de facto
    independence by establishing firm links to Armenia, on which it now
    relies for substantial economic and political support. At the same
    time, Azerbaijan has skillfully parlayed its trump card -- massive
    Caspian energy reserves -- into a strong multilateral foreign policy
    that has steered away from dependence on Russia and toward friendly
    ties with Turkey and the United States, thus creating a favorable
    mix of anxiety and dependence among those who seek favor with Baku.
    Diplomacy aside, there are also concerns that oil and gas money now
    entering Baku may contribute to its remilitarization, thus leading
    to renewed hostilities.

    In this war of maneuver, uneasy coexistence has been the norm for the
    last decade or so. In Baku, Soviet strongman and former President
    Haidar Aliyev made some noise occasionally, but generally remained
    low-key, as he favored negotiated solutions and steered clear of any
    destabilizing developments that might upset investors. In Yerevan,
    the dovish President Levon Ter-Petrosyan and his successor, the
    slightly more hawkish Robert Kocharyan, have been even less prone to
    belligerence, given the ongoing pressures they face from neighboring
    Turkey and the United States, which have scarcely concealed their
    support for Azerbaijan. Perhaps most compelling has been the rivalry
    between the United States and Russia, as the two have evinced markedly
    different approaches to the region. The former seeks a negotiated
    settlement within an East-West integrated sphere of influence that
    would extend from Turkey to Central Asia, effectively cutting off
    Iran from Russia. The latter has sought permanent instability in
    Karabakh and elsewhere that would ensure the Caucasus' continuance
    as its primary zone of influence.

    This slow-motion dance has faltered only twice: once in early 1998
    when Ter-Petrosyan was ousted after becoming too conciliatory in
    his talks with Aliyev and again in 2001 when Kocharyan and Aliyev
    agreed to a tentative compromise that blew up when Aliyev returned
    to Baku and apparently changed his mind. Today, however, things
    appear to be changing: Ilham Aliyev, recent successor to Haidar, has
    retained his father's authoritarian habits at home while demonstrating
    increasing belligerence abroad, both in his pronouncements and concrete
    initiatives. He is emboldened by Russia's seeming retreat, coupled with
    the United State's recent involvement in the region, as well as its
    present attempts to court Baku in the campaign to isolate Iran. Thus,
    with wind in his sails, Aliyev has combined periodic threats to retake
    Karabakh by force with diplomatic offensives designed to paint Armenia
    as the conflict's aggressor. The most recent initiative is a proposed
    UN resolution decrying Karabakh's hold over "occupied territories"
    surrounding the enclave, in which Baku demands that Armenians evacuate
    these lands before negotiating anything regarding Karabakh's status.

    Armenians reply that these are buffer zones, required as a cushion
    against possible future attacks -- a claim supported by the occasional
    war cries that still emanate from Baku. Moreover, Karabakh's
    authorities report that their "occupation" hardly resembles the West
    Bank or Baghdad; rather, Karabakh's borderlands have been settled
    sporadically and unevenly, in many cases by itinerant refugees driven
    from Azerbaijan during the war years. These claims, too, have been
    borne out, most recently by French mediator Bernard Fassier, who was
    in Karabakh as part of an OSCE monitoring team in January. Fassier
    notes in part, "In many areas there is no electricity and poverty
    predominates. I wouldn't say people live. Rather, they are surviving
    in half-destroyed walls topped by a tin roof."

    Not surprisingly, Armenians have rejected Baku's territorial
    preconditions for a settlement, saying that the central issues --
    guarantees of Karabakh's security and, ultimately, its political
    status -- must remain at the forefront of any negotiating process.
    Azerbaijan replies by stressing Karabakh's illegitimacy as a party in
    negotiations, insisting it will only deal in state-to-state scenarios
    involving Armenia.

    So what is to be done? Having spent a good deal of the past decade
    in Karabakh, I know first-hand that native Armenians are stubbornly
    distrustful of Azeri authorities, and would sooner die than return
    to the pre-1988 status quo. Accordingly, Azerbaijan must take the
    fundamental steps of acknowledging Karabakh's right to exist and
    allowing its inclusion as a side to the negotiations. No solution --
    no matter how clever -- can work without local involvement.

    A second issue, however, is perhaps even more thorny: It involves the
    regional balance of power and, specifically, how Russia intends to
    react to growing U.S. aggressiveness in and around the Caucasus. If
    Russia retreats, leaving matters in the hands of U.S.-led interests,
    more blood may be spilled before a solution is reached. On the other
    hand, Russia must acknowledge that it cannot use the blunt instruments
    and blatant manipulations of its recent past, if it is to maintain
    influence. Rather, Moscow's intentions must become more transparent,
    aiming to build trust within a framework of regional cooperation
    rather than by perpetuating instability among vassal states. Otherwise,
    the stalemate will continue well into the next decade.


    John Antranig Kasbarian holds a Ph.D. in geography from Rutgers
    University and serves as Nagorny Karabakh program director for the
    New York-based Tufenkian Foundation. He contributed this comment to
    The Moscow Times.
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