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The Coming Russian Defeat in the Caucasus

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  • The Coming Russian Defeat in the Caucasus

    http://hetq.am/en/society/16593/

    HETQ ONLINE

    September 28, 2009
    The Coming Russian Defeat in the Caucasus

    By David Boyajian


    Russia will be well along the road to total defeat by the US and NATO
    in the Caucasus and beyond if the recently proposed Armenian - Turkish
    `Protocols' are ratified.

    Within two months after ratification, Turkey would be required to open
    its border with Armenia. Subsequently, or perhaps simultaneously, the
    Azerbaijani - Armenian border will open if, as appears increasingly
    possible, an Artsakh (Karabagh) peace agreement is signed.

    Regardless of whether the Azeri border opens, a fully open Turkish -
    Armenian border would inevitably result in US and NATO penetration and
    subjugation of Armenia.

    Let us look at US and Russian policy in the Caucasus, both past and
    present.


    The West's Goal: Domination

    For two decades, the West, as well as Israel, has dreamt of dominating
    the Caucasus, which is the gateway from Europe and Turkey into the oil
    and gas-rich Caspian Sea region. To do so required ripping the
    Caucasus' three ex-Soviet countries - Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia
    - from the Russian bear's claws.

    The US and NATO have largely succeeded in doing so. The West has
    already built two major gas and oil pipelines - BTE and BTC - from
    Azerbaijan's Caspian coast, through Georgia and Turkey. The US
    insists that all pipelines bypass Russia and Iran.

    Though Georgia and Azerbaijan are under continual Russian pressure,
    both are NATO candidates and have aligned themselves with the US.

    That left Armenia, perhaps Russia's only real ally in the world, as
    the sole obstacle to total American domination of the western land
    route into the Caspian.

    By coaxing Turkey to open its border, Washington is now trying to lure
    Armenia away from Russia and into the infinitely richer and more
    modern, attractive, and democratic Western/NATO bloc.

    Wealthier, stronger, and about thirty times larger and more populous
    than its small, besieged eastern neighbor, Turkey has been picked for
    the lead role in the West's seduction of Armenia.


    Armenia's Importance to US Strategy

    Until last year's Georgian - Russian war, the US had been silently
    pleased with Turkey's blockade of Armenia. Washington hoped the
    blockade, imposed mostly due to the Artsakh war, would create economic
    pressure on Armenians to resolve that conflict.

    Note that only an Artsakh peace agreement could fully pry open the
    Azeri-Armenian-Turkish corridor that NATO and Washington craved. [See
    the author's `Why Artsakh Matters to the West and Russia' on
    Armeniapedia.org.]

    But the war in Georgia cast doubt on that country's ability to
    continue hosting western-bound pipelines. For the US, the only
    alternative to unstable Georgia is Armenia. This explains why
    Washington has been dramatically stepping up pressure - and the
    `Protocols' are part of that pressure - on Turkey, Armenia, and
    Azerbaijan to resolve their differences and thereby create a new
    American path into the Caspian.

    How does Russia feel about Armenia's border issues?


    Russia's Fatal Mistakes

    The Kremlin had long been silently pleased with the closed Turkish -
    Armenian border and the Artsakh stalemate. After all, these prevented
    the US from penetrating Armenia and dominating all three Caucasus
    countries.

    Now, however, confidential and other sources indicate that Moscow
    favors both the Turkish-Armenian `Protocols' and an Artsakh peace
    agreement.

    Russia reportedly hopes that trade across the Turkish - Armenian
    border would enable it to profit from its ownership of Armenian
    industry, particularly electricity production and transportation.

    However, given Armenia's small economy and size, the extra revenue for
    Russia would not be considerable.

    The Kremlin is also reportedly worried that a new Russian - Georgian
    war would hurt Armenia's economy since most Armenian imports/exports
    must now go through Georgia.

    Thus, Russia allegedly hopes that an open Turkish - Armenian border
    would give its Armenia ally an alternative import/export route in case
    of a war. Yet, given its alliance with Georgia, Turkey might well
    close its border with Armenia in such an eventuality. Conversely,
    were the Turkish-Armenia-Azeri corridor to remain open, this would
    partly defeat the very purpose of a Russian attack on Georgia.

    Moscow and Ankara have developed significant economic and political
    relations in recent years. And Russia supplies most of Turkey's
    natural gas. Thus, the Kremlin apparently believes that it can
    dictate to Ankara. The Kremlin is wrong. Regardless of how friendly
    it becomes with Russia, Turkey will stay within NATO, its only
    protection against its historic, nuclear-armed Russian enemy.

    Moreover, Turkey - and Georgia, which also depends on Russian gas -
    will eventually develop alternative energy sources and no longer be
    vulnerable to Russia pressure. In the meantime, Russia will lose
    Armenia to the West.

    Russia is also trying to buy up future production from Azerbaijan's
    oil and gas fields in hopes that, in so doing, the West will lose
    interest in Azerbaijan. In return, Russia is apparently pressuring
    Armenia to, in effect, hand Artsakh to Azerbaijan.

    This is a grave error. Historically, Azeris have betrayed Russia, as
    happened in WW I when they sided with Turkey, and will do so again. In
    the meantime, Armenian anger at Russia for selling out Artsakh,
    combined with the lure of Western wealth, will permanently drive
    Armenia away from Russia. Only a true Russian alliance with, not
    economic and military bullying of, Armenia, will keep Armenia as a
    friend. Armenia's fear of Turkey is not enough.


    Russian Policy Blunders

    Russia has a long history of disastrous policies. In the space of 75
    years, Russia lost two empires - Czarist and Soviet - and the Cold
    War. Russia allowed false prophets - Bolsheviks - to impose the
    inefficient and inhumane political and economic system of Communism
    upon it. Russians let a deranged Georgian, Josef Stalin, maim and
    murder countless millions of them. Even today, most of Russia's
    wealth comes not from human productivity but courtesy of Mother
    Nature: oil and gas.

    Recent Kremlin policy has been deeply influenced by Aleksandr Dugin,
    an extreme nationalist ideologue. His political philosophy,
    Neo-Eurasianism, advocates a Russian led alliance of Asian and Slavic
    countries. Like most Russian analysts, Dugin saw Armenia as a barrier
    against Turkey, Russia's historic enemy. Dugin then changed his mind.
    He now thinks that Turkey is a Russian ally. This is a clear sign of
    Neo-Eurasianism's immaturity.

    The Kremlin - this time with Medvedev and Putin at the helm - is once
    again listening to false prophets. Turkey's arm can indeed be
    twisted, but not broken, by Russia. Moreover, Turkey is tougher than
    Russia. During the Cold War, genocidal Turkey would have annihilated
    Russia had it, rather than the Soviets, possessed nuclear weapons.

    While Turks make Russians think they've become friends, Russians
    foolishly throw their only ally, Armenia, to the Turkish wolf. Russia
    will lose Armenia but will not win Turkey over. Pan-Turkism will
    continue, pushed by the West for its own purposes.

    Moreover, as I noted two years ago, once NATO enters the Caucasus, it
    `could then jump across the Caspian Sea and march straight into Muslim
    Central Asia, posing a possibly mortal threat to Russia.'


    Reject the Dangerous Protocols

    Armenians must openly reject the `Protocols.' Besides abrogating
    long-standing Armenian rights vis-à-vis its genocidal neighbor, they
    are a formula for Turkish hegemony over Armenia.

    If the Turkish - Armenian border is to open, it must be in a way that
    does not permit Turks to infiltrate, buy up, Ottomanize, and
    eventually control Armenia.

    Armenians must now publicly and bluntly emphasize to their Russian
    ally that the `Protocols' will result in Russia's being surrounded by
    NATO and ultimately, along with Armenia, destroyed.



    The author is an Armenian American freelance writer. Many of his
    articles are archived at Armeniapedia.org.
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