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  • Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict Risks Rising

    Risk WatchDog
    Sept 28 2012


    Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict Risks Rising

    Fri Sep 28, 2012 10:50 BST


    Tensions are once again rising between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the
    disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, which lies in Azerbaijan but
    is ruled by Armenians. Polit

    ical temperatures have been raised substantially by Azerbaijan's
    decision in early September 2012 to pardon an Azeri soldier who
    murdered an Armenian soldier in Hungary in 2004, while the two were
    attending a NATO-sponsored training session. That the Azeri was
    repatriated to Azerbaijan, pardoned, promoted, and given back-pay for
    his imprisonment in Hungary infuriated Armenians and prompted
    criticism from NATO's secretary-general.

    Going forward, Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian and Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliyev both have an interest in tapping nationalist
    sentiment, as they face re-election in February and October 2013,
    respectively. The real war risk stems from an unintentional escalation
    of fighting as a result of a low-level skirmish, if one side responds
    disproportionately against the other. This could result in `only' a
    limited war. However, there would be a risk that Azerbaijan, sensing a
    `now or never' moment to reclaim Nagorno-Karabakh, decides to expand
    the conflict to a more vigorous level. Baku generally has more
    interest than Yerevan in changing the status quo.

    If there is a new war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the stakes would
    be much higher than their war in 1991-1994, because both sides are
    much more heavily armed, and because key pipelines from the Caspian
    Sea to Europe now pass through Azerbaijan. In addition, Russia,
    Armenia's main ally and security guarantor, is much more assertive now
    than in the early 1990s, and could intervene to preserve the status
    quo. Meanwhile, Azerbaijan's security pact with Turkey - a member of
    NATO - means that Ankara could get dragged into the conflict, which
    could quickly become a Russia-West proxy war. Although we would expect
    intense diplomacy by the major powers to restrain Armenia and
    Azerbaijan, we cannot preclude a return to fighting.

    Further coverage of the politics and economy of the Caucasus,
    including Georgia's forthcoming parliamentary election, is available
    to subscribers at Business Monitor Online.

    This Week's Trivia Question

    Last week, we asked, `what late 1990s Hollywood film so impressed the
    then-Chinese president, Jiang Zemin, in 1998, that he urged his fellow
    Politburo members to see it?' The answer is, of course, Titanic.

    This week, something a little tougher: which two European republics
    have seen the re-emergence of an old border dispute since August 2012?
    And what incident connects the leader of one of these republics with
    the British singer James Blunt?

    http://www.riskwatchdog.com/2012/09/28/armenia-azerbaijan-conflict-risks-rising/

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