Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Azerbaijan And Armenia: A Brewing Proxy War?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Azerbaijan And Armenia: A Brewing Proxy War?

    AZERBAIJAN AND ARMENIA: A BREWING PROXY WAR?

    Mint Press News
    Jan 13 2015

    By Catherine Shakdam | January 13, 2015

    With Russia to the north and Iran to the south, the small republic of
    Azerbaijan sits at a geostrategic crossroads between Eastern Europe
    and Western Asia.

    Although often overlooked, Azerbaijan remains nevertheless an important
    cog in the Eurasian machine, key to regional stability and to a
    greater extent world security. Its energy resources and geography
    have long attracted the interests of extra-regional actors, making
    this one country of the Caucasus an invaluable asset and political
    pressure point.

    In his book, "The Grand Chessboard," Zbigniew Kazimierz Brzezinski,
    U.S. National Security Adviser under the Carter administration,
    describes Azerbaijan as one of the most significant "geopolitical
    pivots of Eurasia and key to U.S. security interests." Thus, though
    small in size, the country emits a notable political gravitational
    pull.

    Also an emissary to Azerbaijan for the Clinton administration,
    Brzezinski long advocated strong ties with Baku, asserting that as
    a country holding rich energy resources and having deep ties to the
    international powers along its borders, Baku is uniquely situated
    to play a pivotal role in regional affairs. Although his assessment
    was made some 16 years ago, regional realities vis a vis the United
    States remain as relevant as ever, especially in light of the U.S.

    government's negative stance toward Russia and Iran.

    "Due to its geography, Azerbaijan has a sensitive location that
    presents itself as a defensive shield for the Caspian Sea: it opens
    or blocks the access to many significant extra-regional actors, oil
    and gas thirsty," said Inessa Baban, a specialist on post-Soviet
    countries with a strategic military research institute under the
    French defense ministry, to MintPress News.

    "Baku has a pair of keys to the rich energetic Caspian Sea region,
    whose place in the global geopolitics of energy is increasing
    proportionally to the degree of instability in the Middle East."

    Sometimes compared to Afghanistan in that events in Azerbaijan are
    seldom confined to its territorial borders and carry implications
    that ripple beyond the region, political developments in Baku have
    been subject to much international scrutiny of late, as tensions with
    Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region have devolved into calls
    for war.

    The butterfly effect

    A group of Azerbaijanis walks between a pair of Soviet tanks in Baku,
    capital of Azerbaijan on Saturday, Jan. 28, 1990. The Soviet army
    invaded the republic earlier this month to quell ethnic violence and
    to put down a growing nationalist movement. Photo: AP

    A state of the Soviet Union until Oct. 18, 1991, Azerbaijan was once
    an axis of Moscow's energy policy strategy, the Kremlin's jewel in
    the Caucasus. In fact, Baku's energy potential and its opening onto
    the Caspian Sea prompted Soviet Russia to invade this small state in
    the first place.

    Back in 1920, at a time when Moscow sought to assert communism as
    the new political regional paradigm, Vladimir Lenin understood the
    crucial role that Azerbaijan would come to play in securing Soviet
    Russia's economic and energy independence. Later, Adolf Hitler, too,
    would come to covet the Caucasus, acutely aware that whichever power
    would bring this region to heed would have its thumb on one of the
    coronary arteries of the world and thus exert unparalleled territorial
    and political control.

    In an interview with the Chicago Policy Review, Elin Suleymanov,
    a former Azerbaijani ambassador to the U.S., recalled the following
    historical anecdote:

    "There is a 1943 video of Hitler in which one of his generals gave him
    a cake of the map of Russia and asked him to cut out a piece of his
    favorite part. He cut out Baku, Azerbaijan. He wanted the oil. Ever
    since the internal combustion engine, Europeans and the world have
    looked to Azerbaijan as an important energy provider."

    An important cog in the world's geostrategic machine, decisions made
    in Baku ripple far beyond Azerbaijan's borders. As Fariz Ismailzade, a
    political analyst based in Baku, explained to MintPress, "Azerbaijan's
    policies ultimately carry broad regional repercussions, especially
    when it comes to its decades' long territorial dispute with Armenia,
    its regional arch-enemy."

    The Caucasus' very own Pandora's box, the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute
    holds such sway over the greater region that it could set wheels in
    motion on the global arena, in much the same way that the assassination
    of Archduke Franz Ferdinand sent dominoes falling across Europe in
    the lead-up to World War I.

    "This particular territorial dispute is merely the reflection of
    an overlapping of interests and political wills within the greater
    region. It was never just about Azerbaijan reclaiming sovereignty
    over its land," Russian-based analyst Alireza Noori told MintPress.

    Noori explained that resolutions passed by the United Nations
    Security Council calling for the withdrawal of Armenian troops from
    the Nagorno-Karabakh region were little more than ink on paper.

    "The fact that the U.N.S.C. [United Nations Security Council] was
    unable to enforce the immediate withdrawal of all Armenian troops from
    the Nagorno-Karabakh stands testimony to the supra-regional character
    of this conflict. Yerevan and Baku's rivalries have been played up to
    serve others' agendas. It is so much about why Azerbaijan and Armenia
    cannot reached an acceptable truce, but more about why haven't they
    been allowed to broker a peace agreement," Noori added.

    Indeed, while Azerbaijan's territorial dispute resembles that of
    many others -- Eritrea and Somalia, Sudan and South Sudan, Israel
    and Palestine, for example -- the influence Azerbaijan has on world
    dynamics and the manner in which it has leveraged its positions and
    resources vis a vis international players, mean that Baku's troubles
    are no longer just its own.

    With powers such as Turkey, the U.S., Russia and Iran looking in,
    Azerbaijan's territorial claims against Armenia could lead to a
    dangerous political and diplomatic unravelling, putting much more
    than the future of the Caucasus in the line of fire.

    Territorial integrity and national sovereignty

    At dangerous odds with each other since 1988, when Armenia staked
    territorial claims on the Nagorno-Karabakh region, a province of
    Azerbaijan, on the basis that the region is majority Armenian, Baku
    and Yerevan have been in a state of a semi-permanent war, always
    tittering on the edge of a knife in the name of national sovereignty
    and territorial integrity.

    Azerbaijan and Armenia's territorial dispute dates back to 1918,
    following the disintegration of the Transcaucasian Federation, when
    both states laid claims to territories they respectively understood
    as ethnically and historically theirs.

    Inter-ethnic clashes first broke out in 1988, after the parliament
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO) in Azerbaijan voted
    to unify the region with Armenia on Feb. 20, 1988, leveraging the
    Soviet Union's military withdrawal in Afghanistan and the fall of
    communism across Eastern Europe to its advantage. With Moscow losing
    its grip over the Caucasus, Armenian separatists seized a historical
    opportunity, exploiting Azerbaijan's weakness in order to occupy its
    land. In 1994, following brutal and bloody clashes, Armenia managed to
    seize control over 16 percent of Azerbaijan's territories, including
    the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

    Traumatized by years of intense ethnic conflict, Azerbaijan has yet
    to come to terms with what it perceives as Armenia's unwarranted and
    unlawful aggression against its people and its land. An estimated
    30,000 people, mostly civilians, were killed in Azerbaijan and over
    a million were displaced prior to the 1994 cease fire.

    With emotions still running high in Baku over allegations that Armenia
    systematically targeted Azerbaijani nationals on account of their
    ethnicity and religious affiliations to serve its hegemonic ambitions
    -- Armenia is majority Christian, while Azerbaijan is majority Muslim
    -- Baku is still waiting for the international community to make good
    on U.N. Security Council Resolutions 822, 853, 874, and 884.

    In March 2008 the Security Council called for the unequivocal
    withdrawal of all Armenian armed forces from Azerbaijan, including
    the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    An open wound on the young republic's history, Azerbaijan's territorial
    integrity has driven Baku's foreign and national policies since the
    late 1990s, pulling the narrative back toward war as foreign powers
    have proven either unable or unwilling to commit to more than words
    on paper.

    Renewed tensions could set the tinderbox alight

    In this Saturday, Aug. 2, 2014, photo a convoy of Azerbaijan's Army
    tanks moves in the direction of Agdam, Azerbaijan. Recent months have
    seen a sharp escalation in fighting between Azerbaijan and Armenia
    around a tense line of control around Nagorno-Karabakh. Photo:
    Abbas Atilay/AP

    ________________________________

    Following a period of relative calm, Baku warned in late November that
    it would no longer tolerate Armenia's encroachment on its territories,
    even if that means an all-out war.

    In the wake of a series of attacks against civilian population
    in Azerbaijan, Azerbaijan's defense ministry issued an official
    statement on Nov. 28 to condemn Armenia's actions against Baku,
    emphasizing that Armenian troops targeted Azerbaijan's territories
    on 51 separate instances in less than 24 hours -- a clear violation
    of the long-standing cease fire agreement.

    Days after the defense ministry published such strong warnings against
    Yerevan, Azerbaijan's Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov echoed the
    state's veiled warnings of military retaliation at the Organization
    for Security and Co-operation in Europe's 21st Ministerial Council,
    held in Basel, Switzerland, on Dec. 4.

    "Azerbaijan has repeatedly stated that presence of Armenia's armed
    forces on the occupied territories is major destabilizing factor
    with the potential for escalation at any time with unpredictable
    consequences," Mammadyarov told the council.

    "Unfortunately, after recent presidential meetings of Armenian and
    Azerbaijani presidents in Russian resort city of Sochi, Newport
    city in Wales and last round of talks in Paris, the armed forces
    of Armenia held provocative large-scale military exercises on the
    occupied territories of Azerbaijan."

    Baku has yet to engage Armenia on the ground, but its officials have
    made its abundantly clear in recent weeks that any further acts of
    aggression will be met with speed and resolution.

    With tensions and resentment running high between the two opposing
    states, the entire region stands to go up in smoke.

    "What we see today is the manifestation of foreign powers' failure to
    promote peace and regional cooperation in the former Soviet bloc. An
    opportunity for peace was missed in the 1990s and today we are paying
    the price for this failure," political analyst Murad Ismayilov told
    MintPress.

    In "The Grand Chessboard," Brzezinski warned:

    "A power that dominates Eurasia would control two of the world's three
    most advanced and economically productive regions. A mere glance at the
    map also suggests that control over Eurasia would almost automatically
    entail Africa's subordination, rendering the Western Hemisphere and
    Oceania (Australia) geopolitically peripheral to the world's central
    continent. About 75 per cent of the world's people live in Eurasia,
    and most of the world's physical wealth is there as well, both in
    its enterprises and underneath its soil. Eurasia accounts for about
    three-fourths of the world's known energy resources."

    This tug of war in the Caucasus, heightened by conflicting foreign
    agendas, has fueled the fires that burn between Azerbaijan and Armenia,
    acting as a catalyst for opposing regional agendas. With Russia and
    Iran both hardening their tones toward the West as their interests in
    the Middle East clash with that of the U.S. and the European Union,
    Eurasia could well become a new geopolitical faultline.

    http://www.mintpressnews.com/azerbaijan-and-armenia-a-brewing-proxy-war/200705/

Working...
X