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U.S. New Role for Armenia

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  • U.S. New Role for Armenia

    U.S. New Role for Armenia

    Igor Muradyan, Political Analyst
    Comments - 14 February 2015, 14:12


    Russia finds that it has lost a lot of the Caucasian policy in the war
    in Ossetia and is trying to rearrange its steps and priorities in the
    region.

    The United States fully controls Georgia and Azerbaijan, primarily
    their system of communications, and Russia has practically isolated
    itself in the region.

    Different groups of politicians and policy makers have formed in
    Moscow who handle the interests of Russia and its companies in the
    South Caucasus in the context of group and corporate interests, not
    national interests. It certainly supposes strengthening of Russia's
    activities in the Azerbaijani direction.

    The Russian political leadership is trying to change the nature of the
    Russian-Azerbaijani relations and settle down in Azerbaijan through
    changes in geo-economic projects, preventing its involvement in
    anti-Russian policy of certain world centers of power.

    At the same time, Russia understands very well in what a deadlocked
    and vulnerable situation Azerbaijan has appeared, and perceives its
    "new policy" as forced steps determined by Baku's frustration.

    It would be a mistake to link Azerbaijan's goals and objectives on
    building new relations with Russia with the settlement of the Karabakh
    issue. The Azerbaijani elite understands that in the existing
    international situation Russia cannot be a director of the Caucasian
    policy and is no longer capable of handing Karabakh to Azerbaijan.

    Russia's attempts to put the Karabakh issue onto its track of politics
    have always failed, strengthening the doubts of Armenia and the
    Armenian society about Russia's reliability as a partner.

    Even the present government of Armenia is not capable of providing
    such services to Moscow. Of course, the Karabakh issue remains among
    Azerbaijan's priorities but relations with Russia which Azerbaijan is
    allegedly trying to revise must be viewed as an argument in the
    general chart of Baku's foreign policy.

    At this stage Russia is focused on its priorities relating to the
    Karabakh theme and the Armenian-Azerbaijani relations. This scheme and
    logic are very simply, and apparently the specific activities are not
    going to be complicated.

    Russia is ready to develop relations with Azerbaijan in different
    spheres but to the extent that Armenia will remain its partner in the
    current format. The scheme drafted by the jugglers of Muscovite
    politics has no alternative.

    Apparently, Armenia has underestimated the circumstance how concerned
    Moscow is with attempts to normalize Armenian-Turkish relations. It
    may not understand this logic, as well as the extent of lack of
    confidence of Russian politicians in Turkey and Azerbaijan in
    political matters.

    Russia is not worried that Armenia may appear in the orbit of Turkish
    politics and economy, nor is it worried that the United States, not
    Russia becomes the leading guarantor of security of Armenia against
    Turkish threats.

    Setting up new relations in the South Caucasus mostly determined the
    new role of the United States for Armenia, transformation of Armenia
    to a new Israel when the "Armenian factor" of pressure on Turkey will
    be strengthened. In addition, the role of Armenia will become
    significant in thwarting the plans of forming any Turkish-Russian
    alliance.

    Moscow thinks the plans to maintain control over the Black Sea and the
    South Caucasus are possible only through deepening partnership with
    Turkey. In other words, Moscow views this region as an area which
    Russia and Turkey must divide.

    These two states have appeared in international isolation initiated
    and organized by its partners in the Unites States and NATO, with the
    participation of Arab states and Iran. Now the question is which
    states of the Black Sea-Caucasus and the Balkans are ready to
    participate in this strategy in one way or another.

    Some states are fully ready but on one condition - to what extent is
    the Euro-Atlantic community ready for the long-term policy of collapse
    of Turkey and Russia?


    http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/comments/view/33635#sthash.kNXBdQxc.dpuf

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