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TOL: Taking Command In Karabakh

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  • TOL: Taking Command In Karabakh

    TAKING COMMAND IN KARABAKH

    Transitions Online, Czech Republic
    Aug 3 2007

    A peaceful resolution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is long
    overdue. Europe needs to step in and take charge of negotiations.

    By most standards, the recent presidential election in the disputed
    region of Nagorno-Karabakh was a success: the campaigning among five
    candidates was vigorous, 78 percent of registered voters cast ballots,
    and outside monitors were generally impressed.

    But this was not a typical election, nor - in the eyes of the
    international players trying to bring peace to this region - a welcome
    exercise in democracy.

    In the first place, no one except Armenia recognizes the government
    of this self-declared Caucasian republic, whose status sparked a
    destructive conflict in the 1980s and 1990s between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan. Negotiators fear that July's election is fueling more
    resentment in Azerbaijan and will undermine already tenuous peace
    talks.

    The second reason for concern is that the election in Nagorno-Karabakh,
    a mountainous region of 130,000 people, is a harbinger for presidential
    elections scheduled next year in both Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    Politicians in these former Soviet republics routinely use the
    Nagorno-Karabakh war to rhetorical and political advantage. Like other
    post-communist conflicts in the Balkans and the Caucasus, such bluster
    can only worsen the distrust, ethnic hatreds, and nationalist fervor -
    and derail efforts to find common ground in negotiations.

    BEATING THE WAR DRUMS

    So far this summer, the scene has not been pretty. Azeri President
    Ilham Aliev declared that his nation was living in a "state of war" and
    called for increased defense spending. Across the militarized border,
    the favorite to succeed Armenian President Robert Kocharian is Prime
    Minister Serge Sarkisian, until recently the defense minister. Both
    men were leaders in the Nagorno-Karabakh separatist movement.

    Frequent news reports about sniping along the frontier and political
    bombast have complicated efforts by the Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe to end the conflict and move toward a
    normalization of relations.

    It has been a tough haul since a cease-fire was declared in 1994. And
    some analysts wonder whether the OSCE even has the muscle needed to
    win a breakthrough.

    The roots of this feud go back to the earliest days of the Soviet
    Union. Through a policy of divide and conquer, Nagorno-Karabakh and
    its ethnic Armenian majority were given limited autonomy within the
    Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic. Christian Armenians and mostly
    Muslim Azeris lived in relative harmony under Soviet hegemony for
    more than 60 years. But as the Soviet Union began to unravel, Armenia
    staked its claim to Nagorno-Karabakh, enraging Azeri authorities.

    Soviet troops first attempted to intervene; later, Soviet military
    hardware fueled the fighting. Since then, voters and the separatist
    leaders of Nagorno-Karabakh have pursued their independence.

    The war killed 30,000 people, creating a refugee crisis of epic
    proportions, and contributed to the dire economic problems that
    followed the Soviet collapse.

    BOXED IN

    Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh militias won a strategic victory, seizing
    one-sixth of Azeri territory. But victory came at tremendous cost to
    this young nation's potential. Today, Armenia is boxed in on two sides
    by avowed foes - Azerbaijan and Turkey. It retains close economic,
    energy, and military ties with Russia, but dividing them along the
    Caucasian spine is anti-Moscow Georgia. Armenia has trade and energy
    deals with neighboring Iran, yet is ever careful to balance these
    relations so as not to offend an important benefactor - the United
    States.

    In Nagorno-Karabakh itself, Stepanakert is a handsome seat of
    government, a valley city surrounded by a stunning landscape of
    farmland and mountains. But there are few jobs for young people, and
    the former capital, Susha, is a desperate mountain town of rubble and
    bombed-out buildings. The enclave relies almost exclusively on Armenia
    and the diaspora for survival, and it has almost no international
    sympathy for independence.

    Both Armenia and Azerbaijan may one day wake up and see that they
    have far more to gain from working together than prolonging their
    hatred. Armenia needs energy and trade to sustain its economy;
    Azerbaijan has plenty of oil and natural gas to sell, and by living
    in harmony with its neighbor, it would gain a direct overland route
    to Nakhichevan, a part of its territory that is cut off by southern
    Armenia.

    NEW COMMANDER NEEDED

    The OSCE has been able to keep the two sides talking (sometimes). But
    that's about it. Achieving a breakthrough settlement will take greater
    statesmanship on the part of the Armenian and Azeri leaders than either
    has shown, and more diplomatic weight than what the OSCE can offer.

    So far, the European Union has observed from a distance, prompting
    the respected International Crisis Group to urge it to take a more
    commanding role. The Brussels-based conflict-monitoring organization
    has warned that Nagorno-Karabakh and two other regional conflicts,
    in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, "have the potential to ignite into
    full-fledged wars in Europe's neighborhood" if the EU does not take
    the lead.

    Brussels has the financial, political, and economic wherewithal that
    the OSCE doesn't have. The EU, for example, could set strict benchmarks
    for the Azeris and Armenians, both of whom are earnestly competing
    for stronger ties to Western institutions. Europe, working with NATO,
    could use their concerted influence to seek normalized relations
    between Armenia and Turkey, which has close ethnic and economic ties
    with the Azeris. If the peace process progresses, Brussels could
    offer economic incentives, such as rebuilding the rail and transport
    networks between Armenia and Azerbaijan to facilitate trade.

    An end to the frozen conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh is long overdue.

    Renewed hostilities in the Caucasus would bring more human suffering,
    wreck economic progress made in both countries, and threaten vital
    Caspian energy supplies and Caucasus pipelines. The EU has a vested
    interest in helping this region; it should start by taking command
    of the peace process.
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