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Azerbaijan-Armenia War Could Trigger Regional Conflict

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  • Azerbaijan-Armenia War Could Trigger Regional Conflict

    AZERBAIJAN-ARMENIA WAR COULD TRIGGER REGIONAL CONFLICT
    By Timothy Heritage and Francesco Guarascio

    http://hetq.am/eng/articles/18460/azerbaijan-armenia-war-could-trigger-regional-conflict.html
    21:23, September 11, 2012

    LINE OF CONTACT, Azerbaijan, Sept 11 (Reuters) - A dusty trench,
    interrupted every few metres by lookout posts and gun positions,
    winds its way as far as the eye can see.

    "Put your head above the trench and they'll shoot you," says a young
    ethnic Armenian soldier, peering through a narrow slit in a concrete
    watchtower at Azeri lines 400 metres away where he says snipers lie
    in wait.

    The bullets fly both ways. On the other side of the minefields, Khosrov
    Shukurov's daughter was recently shot in the arm. The 70-year-old
    Azeri farmer keeps his cows on leashes to stop them straying beyond
    the wall built to protect his village.

    Sporadic firefights have intensified along the front line around
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous enclave within Azerbaijan in the
    South Caucasus controlled by ethnic Armenians since a war in the
    early 1990s that killed about 30,000 people.

    Azerbaijan has stepped up threats to take the region back and its
    decision to give a hero's welcome to a soldier convicted of hacking
    an Armenian to death on a NATO course has highlighted the risk of a
    war that could draw in Turkey, Russia and Iran.

    When the ethnic Armenian majority in Nagorno-Karabakh declared
    independence as the Soviet Union collapsed, and took over more Azeri
    territory outside the region than within it, Christian Armenia avoided
    direct war with Muslim Azerbaijan.

    It now says it would not stand aside if the enclave it helped establish
    was attacked.

    Both it and Azerbaijan have more powerful weapons than two decades
    ago and if pipelines taking Azeri oil and gas to Europe via Turkey
    or Armenia's nuclear power station were threatened, war could spread.

    Armenia has a collective security agreement with its regional ally
    Russia, while Azerbaijan has one with Turkey, itself a member of NATO
    for which an attack on one member state is an attack on all 28.

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned of a "much broader
    conflict" when she visited Armenia in June and NATO Secretary General
    Anders Fogh Rasmussen said on Friday he was "deeply concerned" by
    the Azeri soldier's pardon last month.

    UPHILL BATTLE

    Political and military analysts say war is not inevitable, and that
    the potential for destruction and a regional war serve as a deterrent.

    But they are increasingly discussing how a conflict between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan might play out.

    The most likely trigger is seen as a particularly deadly skirmish on
    the line of contact between Nagorno-Karabakh-held territory and the
    rest of Azerbaijan or on the Azerbaijan-Armenia border. Nine people
    died in clashes in June.

    "At some moment the crossfire will not be limited to the use of
    small weapons. One side will hit the other with heavy weapons," said
    Rasim Musabayov, an independent member of parliament in Azerbaijan's
    capital, Baku.

    "Then you can see a scenario in which the other side responds with
    air power and then it all goes from there."

    Less likely would be a political decision to go to war - despite
    Azerbaijan's threats to regain control of Nagorno-Karabakh - or a
    pre-emptive strike by Armenia or Nagorno-Karabakh if an attack by
    Azerbaijan seemed imminent.

    If a conflict did break out, Azerbaijan would likely try to besiege
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a region of about 160,000 people linked to Armenia
    by a narrow land corridor, since the enclave's troops dominate the
    high ground and have mined elsewhere.

    "A key factor is the topography, the extent to which Nagorno-Karabakh
    has created defences in depth. This could make the lower land killing
    fields. Progress would come at a high cost," said Wayne Merry,
    a former U.S diplomat and an expert on the region at the American
    Foreign Policy Council in Washington.

    The Azeris could also attack the towns of Jebrail and Fuzuli to the
    south and southeast, outside the enclave before the 1991-94 war but
    part of the 20 percent of Azerbiajan under ethnic Armenian control
    since.

    "SPASMS OF MUTUAL DESTRUCTION"

    Azerbaijan's annual defence spending is more than Armenia's entire
    budget, but Armenia has warned of an "asymmetrical" response to any
    attack, threatening what Merry called a "spasm of mutual destruction"
    fuelled by bitterness from the last war.

    Abbas Aliyev, 66, was forced out of Fuzuli as it was seized by ethnic
    Armenian troops and settled with his wife and four children in the
    cramped basement of an apartment bloc in Baku where one toilet is
    shared by 16 families.

    He is one of hundreds of thousands of refugees, most of them Azeris,
    who cannot return home until the conflict is resolved. "I want to
    breathe the fresh air of my region again," he said.

    Ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh use similar words to explain
    why they would not give the region up.

    "I got all the paperwork I needed to go to the United States but
    decided not to go. It's marvellous here. Look around you, breathe the
    air," said Samvel Gabrielyan, an artist in Stepanakert, a quiet city
    of nearly 57,000 in the mountains.

    Smart new apartment blocs stand on the rubble of buildings destroyed
    there during the war. A few still have bullet marks.

    "We'd be ready to fight again if we had to. Otherwise what did all
    those deaths in the last war mean?" Gabrielyan said.

    Such passions, and a belief on both sides that they can win a war,
    risk encouraging the politicians and military.

    Thomas de Waal, a Caucasus expert at the Carnegie Endowment for
    International Peace in Washington, said a war now would be much more
    destructive than the low-tech conflict of the 1990s.

    "It would be much more bloody and become a full state-state conflict
    with unpredictable consequences."

    Obvious targets in Azerbaijan would be the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum (BTE)
    natural gas pipeline and the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) crude oil
    pipeline. Both are in northwest Azerbaijan, within range of Armenian
    forces, and have a role in Europe's attempts to reduce its reliance
    on Russia for energy supplies.

    A consortium of Western oil companies operates the Azeri, Chirag and
    Guneshli oilfields in the Azeri sector of the Caspian Sea, as well
    as Azerbaijan's large Shah Deniz gas field.

    Led by British Petroleum and including Norway's Statoil and two U.S.

    companies, Chevron and ExxonMobil, it has plenty to lose if war
    breaks out.

    Each side can hit the other's capital, and Armenia's, Yerevan, is
    only 30 km (19 km) from its Metsamor nuclear power plant. Northwest
    Azerbaijan contains a water reservoir and power station as well as
    an international highway and railway.

    REGIONAL ALLIANCES

    "We think that if hostilities resume, they could not be limited
    to a local or regional framework. I think they would have a wider
    geographical spread," Bako Sahakyan, the self-styled president of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, said in an interview.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in a gesture of solidarity with
    ethnic kin in Azerbaijan during the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and
    rejects Armenia's insistence it recognise the killing of Armenians
    in Ottoman Turkey during World War One as genocide.

    Russia has a military base at Gyumri in northwest Armenia.

    Neither, however, would want to rush into a war that would damage
    their own, fragile relationship and Russia would not want to upset
    its efforts to deepen ties with Baku.

    Iran, another regional force, was neutral during the 1991-94 war and
    would be likely to remain so. But its relationship with Azerbaijan
    has soured, especially since Baku started buying arms from Israel,
    and it might be sucked into a conflict if it allowed goods to keep
    flowing through its border with Armenia.

    Efforts to find a political solution led by the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), have had little success,
    and political concessions are hard for leaders who would risk losing
    power if they looked weak.

    "Nagorno-Karabakh is an integral part of Armenia. This is how ordinary
    people see it," said Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan, the Armenian
    Apostolic Church's senior official in the enclave, which is still
    part of Azerbaijan under international law.

    "We will do everything to save our land."

    On the other side of the line of conflict, farmer Shukurov will not
    move from the village of Ciragli, despite his daughter's injury and
    the bullet holes riddling his house. "That is what the Armenians want,
    but I will not give up," he said.

    Diplomats and analysts say that if another war breaks out, it is
    likely to end in stalemate. "The Azeris can't retake Karabakh now.

    They are militarily incapable of doing it," said Matthew Bryza,
    a former U.S. ambassador to Azerbaijan.

    "I don't think they could dislodge the Armenian forces from the high
    ground. I think that's extremely difficult."

    Yusif Agayev, an Azeri military expert and veteran of the war, said
    there was no mood for a protracted fight.

    "I think it would be a month or two, that is the amount of time our
    armed forces could fight for. If it drags on longer then it will become
    a war that society will have to participate in, not just the army,"
    he said. "I don't think the society of my country is ready for war."

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