Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Are Karabakh Skirmishes Meant To Draw Attention From Yerevan?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Are Karabakh Skirmishes Meant To Draw Attention From Yerevan?

    ARE KARABAKH SKIRMISHES MEANT TO DRAW ATTENTION FROM YEREVAN?
    By Fariz Ismailzade

    Eurasia Daily Monitor
    http://jamestown.org/edm/article.php?artic le_id=2372874
    March 3 2008
    DC

    Azerbaijanis increasingly see the recent wave of cease-fire violations
    in Karabakh as an attempt by Yerevan to divert attention from
    the domestic turmoil that has erupted since Armenia's February 19
    presidential election. Reportedly, four soldiers from the Azerbaijani
    side and eight from the Armenian side have died as a result of the
    worst cease-fire violations in a decade. Although both sides have
    pledged to observe an agreement on the cease-fire, shootings continue
    to occur, and reports from March 10 indicate that one more soldier
    from each side has died.

    Both the U.S. State Department and the current chairman of the
    Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, Finnish
    Foreign Minister Ilkka Kanerva, have expressed deep concerns about
    this unusual outbreak of cease-fire violations. The Armenian and
    Azerbaijani sides blame each other for starting the fight. Armenian
    Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian told a press conference that "We
    condemn the acts of the Azerbaijani army, which wanted to utilize
    the right moment, capture some territories" (Armeninfo, March 4.)
    Azerbaijani officials have reacted in a similar manner. "The leadership
    of Armenia is utilizing provocations in order to distract attention
    from its domestic problems," said Ali Hasanov, the chief of the
    political department in the President's Office.

    Anar Mammadkhanov and Asim Mollazadeh, members of Azerbaijan's
    parliament, as well as political scientists Rasim Musabeyov, Alimammad
    Nuriyev, Akif Nagi, and Mubariz Ahmadoglu all put the blame on Armenian
    President Robert Kocharian and Prime Minister Serge Sarkisian, who
    won the disputed vote. "Kocharian and Sarkisian, who have butchered
    their own people in the streets of Yerevan, badly needed a provocation
    on the front line," said Mammadkhanov (Day.az, March 4.)

    While Azerbaijanis are convinced that the cease-fire violation was
    linked to the bloodshed, political chaos, and turmoil in post-election
    Armenia, many now wonder what the implications will be.

    In a March 6 interview with ANS Radio, Eldar Sabiroglu,
    the press secretary of the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan,
    rhetorically asked, "What were the soldiers from Armenia doing in
    Nagorno-Karabakh?" Political scientist Vugar Seidov, in an op-ed for
    Day.az on March 6, continued the similar theme, stating, "The fact
    that Kocharian created a provocation in the front line in order to
    divert attention from domestic affairs proves that Armenia is directly
    involved in the conflict."

    The situation presents a very dangerous precedent. Although cease-fire
    violations are a regular occurrence along the front line in Karabakh,
    most of the incidents in the past were minor and not linked to
    political events in a particular country. This latest case, however,
    shows that the stability in the Caucasus is very fragile and how the
    domestic developments and needs of a particular country can shake
    the seemingly solid balance of power in the front line.

    Azerbaijanis blame the international community for once again applying
    double standards toward both the incident and the overall election
    situation in Armenia. The soft criticism from the OSCE, Council of
    Europe, and U.S. Department of State to the brutal crackdown against
    the peaceful protestors in Yerevan - the official death toll is eight
    persons - has shocked Baku. A well-known diplomat, who preferred to
    speak to Jamestown on the condition of anonymity says, "Just imagine
    the reaction if something like that happens in Azerbaijan. What
    would happen if our police brought out tanks, shot eight people, and
    introduced emergency rule, including open official censorship?! The
    West's sudden warm attitude toward pro-Russian former warlord Sarkisian
    is surprising. Many in Azerbaijan have already made up their minds
    that the only reason why Armenia's authorities are being treated
    so mildly is the Armenians' ethnicity and religion. This strongly
    undermines any credibility of the OSCE and Western observers in case
    of future criticisms of Azerbaijan. Moreover, this plays directly
    into Moscow's hands, where talk about the West's insincerity is at
    the top of Kremlin's talking points. Ironically, Azerbaijan did not
    support Moscow's effort, by the way endorsed by Yerevan, to end OSCE
    election and democracy monitoring in the region."

    There are also analysts who believe that the cease-fire violation
    was caused by broader geopolitical games unfolding in the Caucasus.

    Independent political analysts Ilgar Mammadov told Day.az on March
    6 that the "cease-fire violation has allowed Moscow to scare off
    the potential consumers of the Azeri and Turkmen gas." Previously
    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev traveled to Hungary and expressed
    Azerbaijan's interest in joining the Nabucco gas pipeline project,
    which is designed to deliver Caspian gas to European markets. Gudrat
    Hassanguliyev, a member of the Azerbaijani parliament, went even
    further in his thinking regarding the cease-fire violation, by
    informing journalists that "it was an attempt by Moscow to show to
    the participants of the NATO Rose-Roth seminar in Baku who is in
    charge of security issues in the region."

    Observers may never know if Russia was directly involved into
    this cease-fire violation or not. But the double-standards from
    the West and the clear provocation from Yerevan are increasingly
    pushing Azerbaijanis more and more toward a military solution to the
    long-running conflict.
Working...
X