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  • Moscow In The Middle

    MOSCOW IN THE MIDDLE
    By Justin Lyle

    RussiaProfile.org
    http://www.russiaprofile.org/page.php?pageid=International&articleid=a128923912 2
    Nov 8 2010

    Is Moscow's Involvement in Mediating the Escalating Conflict Between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan Helping or Hurting the Peace-Building Process?

    The conflict over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which is
    populated by ethnic Armenians and, although located within Azerbaijan,
    has been beyond Baku's control for two decades, shows no signs of
    abating. On the contrary, recent months have seen an intensification
    of both skirmishes along the ceasefire line and bellicose rhetoric
    from Baku and Yerevan. The intransigence of the two adversaries is
    making finding a solution difficult, while the strategic calculations
    of both sides and the modalities of the abortive peace process are
    increasingly influenced by Russia's growing predominance in this
    strategic area of the post-Soviet space.

    In a joint declaration issued by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev
    and his Armenian counterpart Serzh Sargsyan at Russian-mediated talks
    in Astrakhan on October 27, the parties agreed to begin exchanging
    prisoners and repatriating the dead from the Karabakh conflict. This
    small public step is intended to alleviate the heightening tension,
    which is threatening to break the fragile peace that has held since
    the 1994 ceasefire agreement. The full-scale war that broke out in
    this former autonomous region of the Soviet Union in 1991 resulted in
    the death of over 20,000 people and the displacement of more than a
    million. It has remained an open wound in relations between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan ever since.

    Moscow's success in drawing this limited and largely symbolic
    humanitarian concession from the two sides marks a contrast to the
    conspicuous failure of recent OSCE negotiations. Importantly, the
    stalled talks overseen by the OSCE's Minsk Group, which Russia also
    co-chairs alongside the United States and France, have not elicited
    commitment from the parties to a 2007 Basic Principles document. The
    principles call for the return of Armenian-occupied territories
    surrounding Karabakh to Azerbaijan, in exchange for provisional
    self-governance guarantees for the breakaway region. They also
    foresee the return of refugees and internally displaced persons,
    the introduction of an international peacekeeping force and the final
    resolution of the dispute through a legally binding status vote.

    Far from engaging in a substantive structured dialogue, Baku
    and Yerevan seem increasingly caught up in a spiraling exchange
    of provocations, which has onlookers fearful of a new outbreak of
    conflict in the region. Small-scale incidents in the ceasefire zone are
    on the rise: of the more than 20 soldiers reported killed this year,
    roughly half have died in the last two months. Yerevan has stated that
    recognition of Karabakh's independence is the only possibility for a
    peaceful resolution of the conflict, and Baku is clearly dissatisfied
    with the continuation of the status quo. The current situation plays
    in favor of the Armenians, as the passing of time only cements their
    hold on the occupied territories.

    The recent escalation centers on Baku's decision to double its military
    spending in 2011, fulfilling president Aliyev's 2007 prediction that
    the latter would soon outstrip the entire Armenian state budget. The
    military budget approved by Parliament on October 22 amounts to
    $3.12 billion, a sum made possible by Azerbaijan's great oil and gas
    wealth. Armenia, by contrast, does not boast similar energy resources
    and relies chiefly on Russia for security guarantees.

    Yerevan has responded to Baku's provocative move by stating its
    willingness to bomb energy pipelines in Azerbaijan in the event of war.

    This belligerent rhetoric and the possibility of rash action on either
    side have alerted some observers to the risk of a new war, similar
    to the conflict in South Ossetia in August 2008, which likewise
    followed a cycle of provocations. "The current dynamic is worrying
    because it could lead to major powers getting drawn into a conflict,"
    cautioned Lawrence Sheets of International Crisis Group. As a fellow
    CSTO member, Armenia enjoys a security guarantee from Russia, which
    might force Moscow to intervene in the case of conflict even against
    its better judgement.

    While these aggressive developments are driven by the staunch
    attitudes and frustrations of the countries' leaders, Moscow's steps to
    advance its own interests in the region have done little to ease the
    tension. On August 20 Russian and Armenian defense ministers signed
    a protocol extending Russia's lease on the military base at Gyumri,
    120 kilometers north of Yerevan, until 2044. To assuage Baku's concerns
    about a possible shift in the strategic balance toward Armenia, Russian
    President Dmitry Medvedev visited Aliyev two weeks later. Shortly
    thereafter, Gazprom - Russia's majority state-owned gas supplier -
    signed a deal doubling its purchases from Azerbaijan starting in 2011,
    which will bring Baku a useful $5 billion per year.

    In securing these sought-after geopolitical advantages, Moscow has
    thus also provided the means for the escalation of the conflict.

    But even if Russia is in this sense supporting the armament of
    both sides, this does not necessarily make large-scale conflict
    more likely. Crucially, war would be disastrous to Baku's hopes of
    diversifying its energy partnerships through the EU's proposed Nabucco
    pipeline project. Aware of the international community's desire to
    avoid another South Caucasus war, Aliyev may be issuing international
    onlookers a firm signal of his dissatisfaction with the present
    situation. Reminding major players such as the United States and the EU
    of the imminent potential for full-scale war could stimulate supportive
    responses for Baku. Azerbaijan has been particularly irritated by
    its traditional ally Turkey's recent steps toward rapprochement with
    Armenia, which have conspicuously sidestepped the Karabakh issue. The
    decisive factor, however, is likely to be Moscow's engagement.

    Medvedev's recent activities have proved Moscow's influence on the
    countries' military capacities. As Archil Gegeshidze, a senior analyst
    at the Georgian Foundation for Strategic and International Studies,
    suggests, Russia's geopolitical aims in what it considers its "sphere
    of privileged interests" are best served by a continued stalemate.

    "Armenia is hostage to the Karabakh issue, as it relies on Russia for
    its hard security guarantees. Russia is not sure that Armenia would
    remain pro-Russian without competition over Karabakh," he noted.

    As the Astrakhan meeting demonstrated, an important difference between
    the current stand-off and the build-up to the 2008 South Ossetia war
    lies in the positioning of major powers around the conflict. Russia's
    success in bringing the leaders together for even that limited
    gesture of cooperation illustrated Moscow's centrality not only
    to the strategic calculus of the parties, but also to mediation of
    the negotiations themselves. In the absence of similar achievements
    through the stalled OSCE talks, Moscow seems to have the developments
    in its grasp.

    The ongoing struggle over questions of responsibility and entitlement
    in this contested corridor of the post-Soviet space thus seems to
    be playing out in Russia's favor. In light of recent rhetoric and
    the long-standing centrality of Karabakh in the neighbors' fraught
    relations, however, Moscow must take care not to underestimate the
    possibility of spontaneous conflict between these staunch rivals. If
    the Kremlin fails to do so, it could find itself in the eye of
    the storm.




    From: A. Papazian
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