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  • Caucasus Stability Under Threat as Kocharian Faces Opposition, etc.

    Caucasus Stability Under Threat as Armenia's Kocharian Faces Opposition,
    Azerbaijan's Aliyev Issues Fighting Talk

    WMRC Daily Analysis (World Markets Research Centre Limited)
    April 15, 2004

    By Dario Thuburn, WMRC Perspective

    Significance

    President Robert Kocharian's government in Armenia is looking in trouble
    and the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan
    increasingly fragile.

    Implications

    Domestic political pressure at home may push Kocharian's government
    into a more confrontational attitude towards Azerbaijan, with a
    pre-emptive attack against an increasingly threatening enemy a
    possible worst-case scenario. Azerbaijan's Aliyev will also seek to
    escalate tensions in the fragile stand-off as a way of putting
    pressure on Turkey not to lift its blockade on Armenia.

    Outlook

    If Turkey lifts its blockade on Armenia, Russia's leverage over the
    country will be seriously diminished and regional economic development
    will be boosted but this is only likely to happen over the
    medium-term.

    The question of what effects Georgia's 'rose revolution' in November
    2003 and the sweeping changes that have taken place in that country
    will have on Georgia's neighbours Armenia and Azerbaijan is fast
    rising in prominence. In Armenia, the opposition has consolidated and
    has made clear its specific intent of toppling President Robert
    Kocharian's strong-arm rule through a series of relatively large-scale
    demonstrations that are ongoing. In Azerbaijan, newly installed and
    relatively inexperienced President Ilham Aliyev has softened some
    aspects of the authoritarian system in place but also signalled a more
    nationalistic and tough attitude towards Armenia over the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. The region as a whole has come under the
    international spotlight because of its rising importance as a source
    and transit route for oil and gas from the Caspian sea.

    Political Pressure

    After international criticism of a crackdown on opposition
    demonstrations by the Armenian authorities, most notably from the US
    and the Council of Europe, Armenian President Robert Kocharian
    yesterday said he was prepared to talk to opposition leaders who have
    vowed to oust him from power. The opposition is questioning the result
    of Kocharian's re-election in March, which was deemed flawed by
    international observers. So far they have limited their protest action
    to recourse to the country's Constitutional Court and boycotts of the
    country's parliament but, most probably inspired by the 'rose
    revolution' in neighbouring Georgia, they have now embarked on a more
    confrontational strategy, bringing thousands of disaffected people out
    into the streets of the Armenian capital Yerevan. Police used water
    cannons to break up an anti-government demonstration earlier this week
    and dozens of police and protesters were reported injured, with
    several opposition activists detained.

    International Influence

    The stand-off between government and opposition in Armenia is clearly
    not only an issue limited to the country's borders. The revolution in
    Georgia could not have taken place without the implicit backing of the
    international community, particularly the US, for opposition leaders
    against President Eduard Shevardnadze. Then Russian Foreign Minister
    Igor Ivanov tried and failed to broker a last-minute compromise
    between Shevardnadze and his pro-Western opponents. Despite the
    rhetoric of strong personal relations between new Georgian President
    Mikhail Saakashvili and Russian President Vladimir Putin it is clear
    that Georgia's orientation is now more firmly pro-Western and the
    country is slipping from Russia's sphere of influence. Russian foreign
    policy hawks are intent that the same should not happen in Armenia,
    which has been traditionally strongly pro-Russian and where Russian
    business plays a major role. Putin today urged Kocharian to uphold
    stability and the rule of law amid the protests - a statement that
    implied backing. The US State Department, on the other hand, expressed
    'concern' and appeared to criticise the Armenian authorities' handling
    of the protests (see Armenia: 14 April 2004: US Criticises Armenian
    Authorities for Demo Crackdown).

    Fragile Peace

    The confrontation could also have a negative impact on the delicate
    'frozen conflict' with Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh
    territory, which is currently occupied by pro-Armenian forces. Open
    armed conflict was brought to an end through international mediation
    in the early 1990s but low-intensity confrontation on the front line
    has been ongoing and there is no formal peace agreement in place
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan, with stability largely ensured by a
    balance of forces on the ground. This balance is now under
    threat. Azerbaijan is due to reap massive financial rewards from the
    oil and gas windfall over the next few years, which it could use to
    increase its military capability. The US, for one, has promised
    defence assistance and Azerbaijan has been receiving training and
    assistance from Turkey for several years now (see Azerbaijan: 6 April
    2004: Azerbaijan is Better Prepared for War, National Television
    Reports and Azerbaijan: 15 March 2004: US Steps Up Military Presence
    in Azerbaijan, Pressures for Reforms).

    Fighting Talk

    Political rhetoric in Azerbaijan, which still faces the socio-economic
    fall out of tens of thousands of internally displaced people from the
    conflict has also been more combative recently, particularly as the
    failure of high-level peace negotiations between Presidents Aliyev and
    Kocharian has become increasingly clear. In an address to the Turkish
    parliament yesterday. Aliyev said 'Azerbaijan will liberate its own
    territory whatever the price'. This is the kind of rhetoric that will
    appeal to domestic populism and hawks in the establishment but it is
    also a warning to Turkey not to lift its blockade on Armenia, which
    has been in place since 1993. For his part, Kocharian in Armenia may
    see the Nagorno-Karabakh issue as a helpful distraction to his
    domestic political troubles, particularly as parts of the defence
    establishment reckon a pre-emptive strike on Azerbaijan, before the
    country has a chance to build up military might, would be beneficial.

    Implications and Outlook

    The dogs of war in the South Caucasus are not yet loose but it is
    clear that the effects of momentous political change in Georgia, a
    groundshift in Turkey's foreign policy and the region's rising
    prominence on the energy map have the potential to undermine
    stability. While it is still difficult to see the Armenian opposition
    coming to power in the short-term, Georgia-style, the potential for an
    escalation of tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan is high. Turkey
    too may change the complex geopolitical map of the region by lifting
    an economic blockade on Armenia as a way of improving its standing
    with the European Union, though this is only likely to happen over the
    medium-term. The regional economic effects will be massive. The World
    Bank estimates that the lifting of both the Azerbaijani and Turkish
    blockades could increase Armenia's GDP by as much as 30-38%. The
    Turkish-Armenian Business Council has estimated that bilateral trade
    could reach US$300m per year with the lifting of the blockade, a
    drastic rise from the current US$70m. It would also lessen Armenia's
    dependence on Russia and therefore the influence of Russian politics
    and business over the country, as well as undermining the mafia
    structures that have profited from limited import routes and smuggling
    over the past decade.

    In the short-term, the ousting of President Robert Kocharian in
    Armenia is possible. This would bring a more youthful, less corrupt,
    but also more populist, leadership to power in a similar way to
    Georgia's new government. The likelihood is lessened however because
    of Russia's far stronger influence in Armenia, the power of mafia
    structures within government, the opposition being less consolidated
    and organised and the country being far less strategic than Georgia
    for the international community. An announcement of the lifting of a
    blockade between Turkey and Armenia is possible, though restrictions
    are likely to be removed only gradually over the medium-term. In any
    case, the risk of renewed conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
    Nagorno-Karabakh is increased.
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