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Azerbaijan pursues short-term goals by provoking tension

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  • Azerbaijan pursues short-term goals by provoking tension

    Azerbaijan pursues short-term goals by provoking tension

    12:04 * 09.01.15


    By provoking tensions along its state border with Armenia and the Line
    of Contact surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan is actually
    pursuing short-term goals intended for the domestic audience,
    according Armenian analysts.

    Commenting on the border skirmishes which have intensified since
    August, Ruben Mehrabyan, an expert at the Armenian Center for National
    International Studies, and Karen Vrtanesyan, a coordinator of the
    military news website Razminfo, said they believe that the country is
    thus reiterating its old propaganda thesis in an attempt to urge
    Armenia to cede the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

    It comes after Azerbaijan's Defense Minister Zakir Hasanov said in his
    New Year address that the country would not leave Armenia in peace in
    201.

    Karen Vrtanesyan said he knows that Azerbaijan's top leadership
    repeatedly voices statements of the kind to demand the handover of
    Karabakh as a precondition of peace. "This message is often heard in
    the statements by [Azerbaijani President Ilham] Aliyev and the Foreign
    Ministry," the Razminfo coordinator noted.

    He described Azerbaijan's blatantly belligerent rhetoric as an attempt
    to keep Armenia under psychological pressure. The analyst said further
    he doesn't think such violations of international law are something
    new for the country. "What's even more, the experience showed that the
    Ilham Aliyev regime can give a slap even to the United States in the
    face of public by detaining a journalist of an US radio station's
    (Radio FreeEurope/Radio Liberty) branch and ultimately closing down
    its office in Baku. And the US authorities, which are under the
    influence of those lobbyist groups, will calmly digest those slaps,"
    Vrtanesyan said.

    As for the US authorities' somewhat passive stance, he said it is a
    good signal for Armenia to rely only on its own potentials in trying
    to settle affairs with Azerbaijan.

    Asked what position the Armenian authorities and Armed Forces should
    have in the current circumstances, Vrtanesyan replied, "This is
    probably the most complicated question ... Symmetric punitive measures -
    even if taken at a 1:3 'exchange rate' - offer practically no solution
    to the problem given that Azerbaijan almost ceased publishing reports
    about its losses after the August events. Hence, the Azerbaijani
    public is largely in the dark about its losses, while any loss by the
    Armenian side is excessively drummed by the Azerbaijani media," he
    said.

    Vrtanesyan said he finds that the Armenian side has to take a
    symmetric reaction in the current situation, changing its policies to
    a certain degree. But he personally did not point out to a specific
    direction.


    Ruben Mehrabyan also admitted that Azerbaijan in this way keeps
    maintaining tension along the border in an attempt to solve domestic
    problems. According to him, the Aliyev regime is thus trying to direct
    the pointer to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to mitigate the existing
    social tensions in the country.

    "No need to look for any causes here; the cycle of incidents is going
    on as it always has. Hence Azerbaijan continues its policies. But
    through border tensions, the authorities are resolving just current
    problems, and the Karabakh issues creates quite a convenient
    background for that," he added.

    Mehrabyan said he sees that the Azerbaijani authorities are laying the
    blame on Armenia in an effort ease the wave of public anger caused by
    falling oil prices (which deteriorates the economic situation).

    "All that is being done to maintain the regime's unwaveringness," he
    said, pointing out to Azerbaijan's policies of blackmail.

    "When the West tells Azerbaijan that human rights are violated in the
    country, the raise the question of territories. Let us not forget that
    Azerbaijan itself refuses to withdraw snipers, and it itself prevents
    confidence building efforts across the border," Mehrabyan added.


    http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/01/09/vrtanesyan-mehrabyan/1553841

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