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The South Caucasus: A Demilitarization Of Regional Security

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  • The South Caucasus: A Demilitarization Of Regional Security

    THE SOUTH CAUCASUS: A DEMILITARIZATION OF REGIONAL SECURITY

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    June 14 2013

    Susanna Petrosyan, Yerevan. Exclusively to Vestnik Kavkaza

    Yerevan hosted the international conference "The Caucasus-2012"
    organized by the Institute of the Caucasus, the embassy of Poland in
    Armenia, and the Academic Swiss Caucasus Net (ASCN).

    Scientists, journalists, and social activists from Armenia,
    Azerbaijan, Georgia, Russia, and some European countries took part
    in the conference which touched on major political trends of 2012 in
    the South and North Caucasus, policy by Europe, the USA, and Russia
    in the Caucasus in 2012, ethnic-political conflicts in the Caucasus,
    and problems of regional security.

    Experts focused on election processes which took place in the South
    Caucasus: the parliamentary elections in Armenia on May 12, 2012, and
    in Georgia on October, 2012, the presidential elections in Armenia on
    February 18, 2013, and the coming presidential elections in Georgia
    and Azerbaijan.

    A lot of attention was paid to influence of foreign players in the
    Caucasus - the USA, Russia, and the European Union. According to
    the head of the Regional Studies Center, Richard Giragosyan, who
    spoke about activities of the West in the South Caucasus in 2012, a
    serious transformation in the EU's attitude to the South Caucasus took
    place: from certain indifference to involvement into very important
    problems, including the economic sphere. The expert said that this
    intensification made Russia be indignant. Giragosyan stated that the
    US and the EU had a division of labour in the South Caucasus: the EU
    was focused on preservation of economic stability in the region, while
    the United States was concentrated on security problems and energy.

    The participants of the conference believe that the most significant
    event for the West in the region, which played a big role last year
    and will remain acute in a long prospect, are works on organization
    of military transit, i.e. withdrawal of American and NATO troops from
    Afghanistan through the territory of Georgia and Azerbaijan.

    As for the policy of Russia in the South Caucaus, Alan Kasayev, the
    head of a department in Moscow Linguistic University, says that a lot
    of negative moments can be stated about Moscow's policy in the South
    Caucasus and almost all of them will be true: "Strategic mismatches can
    be seen between the status of the great power which Russia wants to be
    and its actual lag in some aspects, absence of prediction and desire
    to take a risk. At the same time, we cannot deny that Russia has a
    right to think that in the near future there will be no independent
    reasons for unexpected radical changes which would demand quick and
    tough reaction in the region." Kasayev thinks that Moscow's position
    toward the region is adequate, but some steps are made too late.

    According to the participants of the conference, the moderate policy
    of Moscow in the South Caucasus in 2012 was caused by careful steps of
    Washington in the region. It can be compared with Russia's reaction
    at the USA activity in Central Asia: the position of Russia was much
    stricter than in the South Caucasus.

    One of the most significant events of 2012 was military training
    of the CSTO which took place in September and involved armies of
    almost all countries-members of the CSTO. These were the largest
    military maneuvers of the CSTO in Armenia for the whole history of
    the post-Soviet space.

    Participants of the conference emphasized that despite constant
    escalation at the front line of the Nagorno-Karabakh, the results of
    2012 showed that there will be no war between Armenia and Azerbaijan
    in the near future.

    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/politics/41438.html


    From: Baghdasarian
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