Looking Back At 2012, Ahead To 2013
http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66348
January 1, 2013 - 9:19pm,
by Joshua Kucera
A year ago, The Bug Pit predicted that the two most likely conflicts
in the Caucasus and Central Asia would be between Azerbaijan and
Armenia, or in Tajikistan. The region did escape full-blown conflict
in 2012, but those two situations did get significantly tenser:
Azerbaijan/Armenia over Baku's pardoning of Ramil Safarov, and
Tajikistan during heavy fighting in Khorog over the summer. If we look
ahead at 2013, those would still seem to be the most likely conflicts,
in the still unlikely event that one were to break out in the region.
(The third most likely conflict scenario from a year ago, an
interstate conflict between Uzbekistan and either Kyrgyzstan or
Tajikistan, didn't come to pass, and 2012 did seem to see a decrease
in the number of border skirmishes, troop movements, etc. that raised
tension in 2011.)
A year ago, there seemed to be some possibility of civil unrest, or
worse, in Georgia over the hotly contested elections there in the fall
of 2012. That didn't come to pass and there, too, conflict seems less
likely than it was a year ago, given that the country proved it could
carry out a peaceful transition of political power, and that the
potentially erratic President MIkheil Saakashvili will be kept in
check by an opposition government.
So what will be the issues to watch in 2013 on The Bug Pit's beat?
Armenia and Azerbaijan, as always; Azerbaijani analyst Razi Nurullayev
tweeted that because both countries are holding presidential elections
in 2013, "Armenia & Azerbaijan will prefer war rhetoric this year & no
bilateral negotiations expected on high level." As always, though, the
state of high tension on the line of contact in Nagorno Karabakh,
Azerbaijan's rapid military buildup and war rhetoric create conditions
where a miscalculation or accident could spiral out of control.
And while the risk of conflict in Georgia is diminished, the country
could be going through some geopolitical tumult, as Prime Minister
Bidzina Ivanishvili's hope of maintaining good relations with the U.S.
and NATO while improving ties with Russia is likely to be tested this
year (most likely by the Kremlin). That could provide some fireworks.
The International Crisis Group, as it did last year, lists "Central
Asia" among its "10 Conflicts To Watch in 2013." Under that rubric it
includes Tajikistan, a succession crisis in Uzbekistan, socioeconomic
tension in Kazakhstan and the ethnic divide in Kyrgyzstan. I wouldn't
go as far as ICG in predicting that these could lead to a conflict,
but they are all obviously troubling dynamics.
In Central Asia, the major theme of 2013 will be bracing for 2014,
when U.S. and coalition forces start to withdraw from Afghanistan. No
one quite knows what that is going to look like, but states in the
region are worrying about instability from the south. Most of them
don't have the wherewithal to deal with external threats, however, a
vacuum that Russia is trying to fill with the Collective Security
Treaty Organization. With 2014 looming, this is the year for the CSTO
to prove that it is a legitimate tool to deal with insecurity rather
than, as it's seemed thus far, mainly a talk shop.
In 2012, the region dodged some bullets (literal as well as
figurative), most notably in Tajikistan and between Armenia and
Azerbaijan. Does that prove that these situations, while tense, can
bend without breaking? Or were the events of 2012 instead an addition
to the instability, setting the stage eventually for some catalyst to
start a full-on conflict? Let's hope 2013 isn't the year we find out.
http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66348
January 1, 2013 - 9:19pm,
by Joshua Kucera
A year ago, The Bug Pit predicted that the two most likely conflicts
in the Caucasus and Central Asia would be between Azerbaijan and
Armenia, or in Tajikistan. The region did escape full-blown conflict
in 2012, but those two situations did get significantly tenser:
Azerbaijan/Armenia over Baku's pardoning of Ramil Safarov, and
Tajikistan during heavy fighting in Khorog over the summer. If we look
ahead at 2013, those would still seem to be the most likely conflicts,
in the still unlikely event that one were to break out in the region.
(The third most likely conflict scenario from a year ago, an
interstate conflict between Uzbekistan and either Kyrgyzstan or
Tajikistan, didn't come to pass, and 2012 did seem to see a decrease
in the number of border skirmishes, troop movements, etc. that raised
tension in 2011.)
A year ago, there seemed to be some possibility of civil unrest, or
worse, in Georgia over the hotly contested elections there in the fall
of 2012. That didn't come to pass and there, too, conflict seems less
likely than it was a year ago, given that the country proved it could
carry out a peaceful transition of political power, and that the
potentially erratic President MIkheil Saakashvili will be kept in
check by an opposition government.
So what will be the issues to watch in 2013 on The Bug Pit's beat?
Armenia and Azerbaijan, as always; Azerbaijani analyst Razi Nurullayev
tweeted that because both countries are holding presidential elections
in 2013, "Armenia & Azerbaijan will prefer war rhetoric this year & no
bilateral negotiations expected on high level." As always, though, the
state of high tension on the line of contact in Nagorno Karabakh,
Azerbaijan's rapid military buildup and war rhetoric create conditions
where a miscalculation or accident could spiral out of control.
And while the risk of conflict in Georgia is diminished, the country
could be going through some geopolitical tumult, as Prime Minister
Bidzina Ivanishvili's hope of maintaining good relations with the U.S.
and NATO while improving ties with Russia is likely to be tested this
year (most likely by the Kremlin). That could provide some fireworks.
The International Crisis Group, as it did last year, lists "Central
Asia" among its "10 Conflicts To Watch in 2013." Under that rubric it
includes Tajikistan, a succession crisis in Uzbekistan, socioeconomic
tension in Kazakhstan and the ethnic divide in Kyrgyzstan. I wouldn't
go as far as ICG in predicting that these could lead to a conflict,
but they are all obviously troubling dynamics.
In Central Asia, the major theme of 2013 will be bracing for 2014,
when U.S. and coalition forces start to withdraw from Afghanistan. No
one quite knows what that is going to look like, but states in the
region are worrying about instability from the south. Most of them
don't have the wherewithal to deal with external threats, however, a
vacuum that Russia is trying to fill with the Collective Security
Treaty Organization. With 2014 looming, this is the year for the CSTO
to prove that it is a legitimate tool to deal with insecurity rather
than, as it's seemed thus far, mainly a talk shop.
In 2012, the region dodged some bullets (literal as well as
figurative), most notably in Tajikistan and between Armenia and
Azerbaijan. Does that prove that these situations, while tense, can
bend without breaking? Or were the events of 2012 instead an addition
to the instability, setting the stage eventually for some catalyst to
start a full-on conflict? Let's hope 2013 isn't the year we find out.