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Today Is Shushi Liberation Day (Video)

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  • Today Is Shushi Liberation Day (Video)

    TODAY IS SHUSHI LIBERATION DAY (VIDEO)

    http://lurer.com/?p=98691&l=en
    2013-05-08 09:22:01

    Exactly 21 years ago, on the night of May 9, the Armenian forces
    launched an operation to liberate Shushi.

    The Capture of Shushi, referred to as the Liberation of Shushi
    by Armenians and Occupation of Shushi by Azerbaijanis was the
    first significant military victory by Armenian forces during the
    Nagorno-Karabakh War. The battle took place in the strategically
    important mountain town of Shushi on the evening of May 8, 1992,
    and fighting swiftly concluded the following day after Armenian
    forces captured and drove out the defending Azeris. Armenian military
    commanders based in Nagorno-Karabakh's capital of Stepanakert had been
    contemplating the capture of the town after a hail of Azeri military
    bombardment had begun shelling that city.

    The seizure of the town proved decisive. Shushi was the most important
    military stronghold that Azerbaijan held in Nagorno-Karabakh -
    its loss marked a turning point in the war, and led to a series of
    military victories by Armenian forces in the course of the conflict.

    However some of the shelling was, according to the accounts of former
    residents, either indiscriminate or intentionally aimed at civilian
    targets.

    In February 1988, Nagorno-Karabakh had been an autonomous oblast for
    over seventy years inside the borders of the Azerbaijan SSR. Following
    its government's decision to secede from Azerbaijan and unify with
    Armenia, the conflict erupted into a larger scale ethnic feud between
    Armenians and Azeris living in the Soviet Union. After the Soviet
    Union collapsed in 1991, the Armenians and Azeris vied to take control
    of Karabakh with full scale battles taking place in the winter of
    1992. By then, the enclave had declared its independence and set up
    an unrecognized, though self-functioning government.

    The advanced weaponry of tanks, armored fighting vehicles, fighter
    jets and helicopter gunships bought and used by both sides illustrated
    the aftereffects of the free-for-all weapons vacuum created upon the
    disintegration of the Soviet Union. A large scale population shift
    had also been in effect since the conflict began with most of the
    Armenians living in Azerbaijan and Azeris in Armenia trading places.

    The battle was preceded by the controversial capture of the town and
    the location of Karabakh's only airport in Khojaly by Armenians in
    February 1992. With the loss of Khojaly, Azeri commanders had been
    redirecting the rest of their firepower upon Stepanakert from the
    ridge on Shushi.

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