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Armenia, The CSTO And Collective Security

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  • Armenia, The CSTO And Collective Security

    ARMENIA, THE CSTO AND COLLECTIVE SECURITY

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/63541
    May 23, 2011 - 4:24pm, by Joshua Kucera

    Would the Collective Security Treaty Organization come to Armenia's
    aid in the event of a war with Azerbaijan over Nagorno Karabakh? It's
    a question that has been the matter of speculation for some time. And
    last week Armenia's defense minister said yes, the CSTO would support
    Armenia. Via AFP:

    "Given Armenia's membership in the CSTO, we can count on an appropriate
    response and the support of our allies in the organization, who have
    specific responsibilities to each other and the ability to react
    adequately to potential aggression," Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian
    told a security conference in Yerevan.

    Of course, what "an appropriate response" entails could be very much
    up to interpretation. And much depends on whether the war would involve
    only Karabakh -- which is de jure part of Azerbaijan -- or Armenia. If
    the former, the CSTO would be less likely to get involved, since it
    wouldn't involve an attack on a member nation. In a piece called
    "Kazakhstan dashes Armenia's collective security hopes," News.az
    quotes a couple of Kazakh security experts saying making that point:

    "If a military conflict began in Nagorno-Karabakh, this would not be
    an attack by Azerbaijan on Armenia", [Murat] Laumulin [senior fellow
    at the Kazakh president's Strategic Research Institute] said. "This
    issue is Azerbaijan's internal affair, because Nagorno-Karabakh is
    a part of Azerbaijan's administrative territory...."

    The director for analysis and consulting at Kazakhstan's Institute
    of Political Solutions, Rustam Burnashev, shares Laumulin's view.

    He said that the Nagorno Karabakh conflict was an internal Azerbaijani
    affair: "What's most important is how much Armenia itself would
    raise this issue and how much Azerbaijan would bring it before the
    international community."

    "The interpretation of the Karabakh conflict by Azerbaijan and Armenia
    does not envisage a direct clash between them," Burnashev said.

    But both of those comments imply that an attack on Armenia could
    trigger the collective security obligation of the CSTO, which
    would still be a substantial advantage for Armenia should war over
    Karabakh break out. It would mean that Armenia could attack targets in
    Azerbaijan proper (like oil facilities in Baku, for example) without
    escalating the conflict, while Azerbaijan couldn't do the same (i.e.
    attack Armenia) without getting the CSTO involved.

    Then again, if a war started, legal questions might be thrown out
    the window and CSTO member states -- particularly Russia -- would
    make political/strategic decisions about whether or how much to get
    involved. And then, frankly, it's much harder to imagine Moscow
    calculating in favor of intervening on behalf of Armenia against
    Azerbaijan. But let's hope it doesn't come to that.

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