Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Nagorno-Karabakh's Future: Some Progress Is Being Made, But Many Obs

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

  • Nagorno-Karabakh's Future: Some Progress Is Being Made, But Many Obs

    NAGORNO-KARABAKH'S FUTURE: SOME PROGRESS IS BEING MADE, BUT MANY OBSTACLES TO PEACE REMAIN

    http://www.economist.com/node/18867879?story_id=18867879
    Jun 23rd 2011 | from the print edition

    THE Soviet Union had three years left when rumbles hinting at its
    imminent collapse began to reverberate in the Caucasus. In 1988
    leaders of Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory populated mainly by ethnic
    Armenians, demanded a transfer from Soviet Azerbaijan to Soviet
    Armenia. The Kremlin refused and a nasty war between Azeris and
    Armenians followed. As Thomas de Waal, an author on the Caucasus,
    writes, "it was the first stone in an avalanche that swept away the
    entire multinational construction of the Soviet Union." Some 20,000
    people died in the war and over a million became refugees. Armenia won,
    gaining control over seven Azerbaijani regions next to Karabakh.

    A ceasefire came in 1994. Pipelines sprang up to ship oil and gas
    from Azerbaijan. Karabakh has gained some features of a state, but
    is the most combustive spot in the region.

    Worryingly, Azerbaijan has poured energy revenues into its army-it
    spends $3 billion a year (5% of GDP). It makes menacing noises
    about reconquest. A new war would risk Azerbaijan's petro-wealth,
    but irrational behaviour is all too common in the Caucasus. A renewed
    conflict in a region that includes Turkey, Iran, Russia and Georgia
    is the stuff of nightmares.

    Russia's president, Dmitry Medvedev, is the latest mediator. This
    weekend he will sit with his counterparts, Azerbaijan's Ilham Aliev and
    Armenia's Serzh Sargsyan, in the Russian city of Kazan to cajole them
    into accepting some basic principles first drafted in 2007. The idea is
    that Armenia should withdraw from Azerbaijani regions outside Karabakh
    and that the disputed territory should win "interim status", giving it
    some international legitimacy but falling short of full independence.

    Mr Medvedev has invested time and effort in what will be his fifth
    trilateral meeting. Yet many experts who have watched these peace talks
    fail repeatedly remain sceptical. The two countries' semi-authoritarian
    leaders seem to prefer process to results and have done nothing to
    prepare people for peace. They may negotiate compromises in private,
    but they make fiery "no surrender" speeches in public.

    There are doubts over Russia's motives. A benevolent explanation
    is that it has leverage over its ally, Armenia. Helping to resolve
    a complex conflict would win Mr Medvedev kudos. Grigory Shvedov,
    editor of Caucasian Knot, an online news agency, argues that Russia's
    strategic goal is to increase its political and economic influence in
    the Caucasus. Dominating negotiations, he says, may be more important
    than a solution that increases Turkey's influence.

    Turkey would indeed benefit from a peace deal, but its sway over
    Azerbaijan is limited despite its big Azeri population. In a typical
    case of tail wagging dog, says Mr de Waal, Azerbaijan sabotaged moves
    to reopen the border between Turkey and Armenia in 2009. Yet he sees
    Mr Medvedev's initiative as the best chance for peace. The Armenians
    are signalling that they accept the draft. Azerbaijan has not rejected
    it but has not hinted at its agreement either.

    The Americans and French, the other two mediating powers with Russia,
    are increasing the pressure. At the recent G8 summit in France,
    all three presidents stated that "further delay would only call into
    question the commitment of the sides to reach an agreement." If the
    two leaders agree in Kazan, it will be a big step, even if it leaves
    room for new disputes. Were Armenia to withdraw from its "security
    zone", the question arises of who would replace it. Russia may hope
    its role would give it an edge for providing peacekeepers, but that
    may not appeal after the August 2008 war in Georgia. Any notion of
    involving NATO troops would be fiercely resisted by Russia and Iran.

    One thing is certain: making peace in Nagorno-Karabakh requires the
    skill of walking over a minefield.

Working...
X