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The Nagorno-Karabakh Dispute: Then And Now - Stratfor

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  • The Nagorno-Karabakh Dispute: Then And Now - Stratfor

    THE NAGORNO-KARABAKH DISPUTE: THEN AND NOW - STRATFOR

    12:20 * 15.07.14

    Below is Stratfor's latest report regarding the land dispute over
    Nagorno-Karabakh

    Summary

    There has been a burst of diplomatic activity in recent months over
    the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, which Armenia and Azerbaijan have
    disputed for decades. Russia, the strongest power in the Caucasus,
    has become more engaged in the issue in light of Azerbaijan's growing
    leverage in the region, raising the possibility of a shift in this
    conflict. It is the changing positions of larger regional players such
    as Russia,Turkey, Iran and the United States, more so than Azerbaijan
    and Armenia themselves, that will drive the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    in the months and years to come.

    Analysis

    As Russia and the West continue their confrontation over Ukraine,
    there is a subtler yet potentially equally significant competition
    occurring in the Caucasus. While Georgia attempts to move closer
    to the West andArmenia strengthens ties with Russia, Azerbaijan has
    attempted to maintain a careful balance between the two sides.

    Azerbaijan thus serves as the pivot of the Caucasus, and the dispute
    over Nagorno-Karabakh is a crucial aspect in shaping Baku's role.

    The Historical Backdrop for the Conflict

    Nagorno-Karabakh is a small yet strategic piece of territory located
    in the center of the South Caucasus region. Despite its small size
    (4,400 square kilometers, or about 1,700 square miles) and population
    (fewer than 150,000 people), Nagorno-Karabakh historically has been
    an ethnically and religiously mixed region because of its mountainous
    terrain and location at a crossroads between continents, although
    the population now is over 95 percent Armenian.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, along with much of the rest of the Caucasus, was
    contested by the Ottoman Turks and Persians for hundreds of years. The
    emergence of the Russian Empire as a major player in the Caucasus
    during the 18th century culminated in Russia's annexation of the
    region, including Nagorno-Karabakh, in the early 19th century. The
    Russian Empire would be the dominant power in the region until the
    Russian Revolution of 1905 weakened the empire and the subsequent
    revolution of 1917 brought about its collapse.

    Both of these periods marked significant turbulence in the Caucasus
    culminating in a war over control of Nagorno-Karabakh and the
    wider region in the midst of a vacuum created by Russian weakness
    and distraction. By 1921, the Bolsheviks had taken over the entire
    region, and the Caucasus was incorporated into the Soviet Union as the
    Transcaucasian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic in 1922. The Soviet
    republic was then reorganized in 1923 into three separate republics:
    Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan. Nagorno-Karabakh was placed under
    the jurisdiction of the Azerbaijani Soviet Republic by then-Soviet
    Nationalities Commissioner Josef Stalin. This redrawing of borders and
    territorial lines, which were designed to create territorial disputes
    among the republics in order to keep them weak, set in motion the
    conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.

    With the introduction of the glasnost and perestroika movements in the
    late Soviet period and the easing of public discourse and political
    participation, Nagorno-Karabakh became one of the first and highest
    profile issues to come under dispute. Starting in February 1988,
    numerous public demonstrations were held in the Armenian capital
    of Yerevan supporting the incorporation of the majority-Armenian
    Nagorno-Karabakh into the Soviet Republic of Armenia. Next, the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Oblast Committee of the Communist Party held an
    unprecedented unofficial referendum to rejoin Armenia. Azerbaijan
    appealed to Moscow to condemn such actions, but when Moscow's response
    was slow and not to Baku's liking, ethnic violence erupted against
    Armenians in Azerbaijan and against Azerbaijanis in Armenia.

    This violence quickly spread into a full-scale military confrontation
    in which all Azerbaijanis were expelled from Nagorno-Karabakh, leading
    to the territory's current Armenian-dominated ethnic balance. Armenian
    forces decisively defeated Azerbaijan in the conflict, leading to
    the de facto independence of Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenian control
    of several provinces abutting Nagorno-Karabakh as a corridor into the
    region. After mediation by numerous external players including Russia,
    Turkey and Iran, a cease-fire was reached to end the conflict in 1994.

    Geopolitical Alignments and the Elusiveness of Peace

    With an end to the war, a formal peace process was launched by the
    Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe in 1994, with
    Russia, the United States and France serving as co-chairs along with
    Armenia and Azerbaijan. However, 20 years and countless meetings
    and summits later, there has been no substantial progress made on
    a diplomatic solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. There are
    fundamental geopolitical drivers for why this is the case.

    First and foremost is the participation and influence of regional
    power players in the conflict. Russia, Turkey and Iran have competed
    in the Caucasus for centuries, and this continues to be the case. The
    participation of these countries, with their entrenched and often
    competing strategic interests, has been a significant component to
    the protracted dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh.

    During the war in the 1980s, each country played complicated and
    sometimes contradictory roles. Both Armenia and Azerbaijan employed
    mercenaries during the Nagorno-Karabakh war, with fighters from Russia
    (including Chechnya), Turkey and Iran participating on both sides of
    the conflict. These countries also become involved in a more official
    capacity, with Turkey and Iran supplying personnel for training the
    Azerbaijani military, while Russia provided weapons, supplies and
    training for both sides. Notably, the war began while the Soviet Union
    was still nominally intact, putting Moscow in a very complex position.

    Soviet leaders initially responded to the conflict between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan in a law enforcement capacity as a means of restoring
    order, but the Soviet Union's internal weaknesses and divisions
    prevented definitive action from being taken to ameliorate tensions
    or overwhelmingly support either side.

    The result was sporadic Soviet assistance to both sides, whether
    weapons for Armenia or tactical training for Azerbaijani soldiers.

    However, Moscow's support of Armenia grew once the Soviet Union had
    officially ceased to exist and the Russian Federation emerged.

    Moscow's support of Yerevan intensified further as the Armenian side
    gained the upper hand in the conflict. In the meantime, Turkey and
    Iran increased their assistance to Azerbaijan. Turkey closed its
    border with Armenia, and Iran created a protection zone within its
    borders for tens of thousands of displaced Azerbaijanis. Once Armenia
    captured Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding provinces, Yerevan came
    under increasing pressure from Turkey and Iran. Russia helped negotiate
    the cease-fire in 1994, but by then Armenia had decisively won the war.

    Since then, the conflict has shifted to the diplomatic realm, with the
    Organization for Security and Co-operation's Minsk Group providing the
    official framework for political negotiations over Nagorno-Karabakh
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The United States became involved
    in the negotiations, and the best chance for a settlement emerged
    in the early post-Soviet period, when Russia was still weak and
    ties between Moscow and Washington were relatively warm. Indeed,
    Armenian President Levon Ter-Petrosian endorsed the Organization for
    Security and Co-operation talks, which advocated a phased approach
    to the settlement, including staged land swaps for political and
    economic concessions, in 1997. However, this was an unpopular move
    within Armenia and eventually led to Ter-Petrosian's resignation
    in an illustration of the degree of political polarization over
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Since then, attitudes within Armenia and Azerbaijan
    have only grown stronger. Armenia's last two presidents hailed from
    Nagorno-Karabakh and participated in the war.

    For the next 12 years, negotiations continued over Nagorno-Karabakh,
    but very little progress was made. Sporadic attacks continued on the
    line of contact between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and the two sides could
    not agree on even basic conditions for fruitful talks. However, the
    regional climate changed in 2009, whenTurkey attempted to normalize
    ties with Armenia in exchange for an agreement between Yerevan and
    Baku over the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. But because Turkey did not seek
    to establish an agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan before talks
    on opening the Turkish-Armenian border began, Turkey's move strained
    ties between Ankara and Baku. This benefited Russia, whose position
    improved as a result of the increased tensions between Azerbaijan and
    Turkey and because Armenia strengthened its ties with Moscow once the
    Turkish rapprochement failed. Meanwhile, Iran saw tensions rise with
    Azerbaijan due to Baku's growing relationship with Israel. Iran has
    maintained a working relationship with Armenia, though Tehran has
    been relegated to a background role in the Nagorno-Karabakh issue
    because its primary interests are in the Middle Eastern theater.

    Despite Moscow's leading role in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace talks,
    it has long been in Russia's interest to maintain the status quo
    of hostilities between the two countries. Since the war concluded,
    Russia has been in a strategic alignment with Armenia, including
    the presence of 5,000 Russian troops in Armenian territory. Russia
    also has a military presence in neighboring Georgia in the breakaway
    territories of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The one country in the
    Caucasus that has remained outside Russia's orbit has been Azerbaijan,
    which has been able to use its sizable energy resources and diplomatic
    maneuvering within the region to create a balance-of-power strategy.

    But Russia's support of Armenia, including its de facto support of
    Yerevan's position on Nagorno-Karabakh, has kept Azerbaijan in check.

    Despite Azerbaijan's claims of being able to forcibly retake
    Nagorno-Karabakh and Baku's security buildup in this regard, Azerbaijan
    does not have the capability to confront Russia militarily over
    the territory.

    The Future of the Dispute

    This is not to say that the current state of the dispute
    over Nagorno-Karabakh will last forever. As history has shown,
    Nagorno-Karabakh has tended to flare up at times of major upheaval
    in the wider region, particularly during periods of Russian weakness.

    This aspect is worth considering, especially as Russia is again
    experiencing major challenges in the former Soviet periphery, as can be
    seen in the crisis in Ukraine. Though Russia is on the defensive when
    it comes to Ukraine, this by no means marks an impending collapse
    of the Russian Federation. Moscow retains significant economic,
    political and energy leverage over Ukraine -- and the same can be
    said for other former Soviet countries being contested by the West,
    including Moldova and Georgia. Russia also still boasts a network
    of loyal allies within the former Soviet space, including Belarus,
    Kazakhstan and Armenia.

    However, Russia does face serious long-term challenges to retaining its
    powerful position in the former Soviet Union, particularly compared
    to its period of re-emergence as a regional power over the past few
    years. One country that could pose a particularly substantial challenge
    for Russia is Azerbaijan, which has positioned itself as a significant
    alternative energy provider to Europe via the strategic Southern
    Corridor route. Azerbaijan has also expanded political and security
    ties with the likes of Turkey, Israel and (still in a nascent form) the
    United States, increasing Baku's leverage in its dealings with Russia.

    It is in this context that Russia has become more engaged on the
    Nagorno-Karabakh issue than it has in years, with Russian officials
    holding numerous meetings with officials from Azerbaijan and
    Armenia on the issue in recent months, indicating a possible shift
    in Moscow's position. But in order for Moscow to truly change its
    stance on Nagorno-Karabakh, Russia would need to weaken considerably,
    or Azerbaijan would need to become so vital to Russian interests that
    Moscow would change allegiances and confront Armenia, an unlikely
    prospect at this point.

    However, the fate of Nagorno-Karabakh does not solely depend
    on Russia. Turkey's role is also important, especially as Ankara
    continues to court Baku into an informal alliance while continuing
    efforts to normalize ties with Armenia in a bid to boost its standing
    in the region. Turkey is not in as strong a position as Russia,
    but the United States' backing of Ankara's efforts could reshape
    regional dynamics. The extent to which Turkey's relationship with
    Azerbaijan grows, and to which both countries are supported by the
    United States, could change the way Nagorno-Karabakh is addressed,
    at least on a political level.

    In a similar vein, the ongoing nuclear and broader political
    negotiations between the United States and Iran could give Tehran a
    freer and stronger hand to engage in the region. Iran has been the
    least influential of the regional players in the Nagorno-Karabakh
    dispute over the past few years, but this could change if the current
    adversarial relationship between Tehran and Washington improves.

    Certainly with the changes occurring in the Middle East, this is not
    out of the realm of possibility.

    http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/07/15/stratfo-on-ng-conflict/

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