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Russia's Crimea Move Could Reignite Karabakh Conflict: Analysts

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  • Russia's Crimea Move Could Reignite Karabakh Conflict: Analysts

    RUSSIA'S CRIMEA MOVE COULD REIGNITE KARABAKH CONFLICT: ANALYSTS

    Agence France Presse
    May 6, 2014 Tuesday 3:23 PM GMT

    BAKU, May 06 2014

    Russia's annexation of Crimea could reignite an unresolved dispute
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Nagorny Karabakh region two
    decades after a deadly war, analysts say.

    Armenian separatists backed by Yerevan seized Nagorny Karabakh from
    Azerbaijan in a 1990s conflict that claimed some 30,000 lives.

    The two sides agreed a temporary ceasefire in the bitter dispute in
    1994, but Baku still claims the region, and international attempts
    to resolve the conflict have proved fruitless.

    Experts fear Moscow's takeover of the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine
    -- which has led to the worst standoff between Russia and the West
    since the Cold War -- may give fresh impetus to the simmering conflict.

    "There's no doubt that the events in Ukraine, the rising tensions
    between the West and Russia, and the return to a Cold War-type
    mentality will affect the Karabakh conflict's settlement," said Tatul
    Hakobyan, an independent analyst in Yerevan.

    Exchanges of gunfire are still frequent between the armies of Armenia
    and energy-rich Azerbaijan -- whose defence spending exceeds its
    rival's entire national budget. Baku has repeatedly vowed to retake
    the region militarily.

    Moscow ally Armenia openly supported Russia's actions in Ukraine,
    which independent Armenian analyst Manvel Sarkisian said could bolster
    its Karabakh claims.

    "When Armenia supported Crimea's joining Russia, it effectively
    supported the principle of nations' self-determination," which it
    applies to Karabakh, he said.

    Meanwhile, Azerbaijan fears that an emboldened Kremlin may step up
    the pressure with threats to recognise Karabakh's independence.

    "Crimea's occupation by Russia created a dangerous precedent and
    Azerbaijan watches this with fear," said Elkhan Shahinoglu, an
    independent analyst with the Baku-based Atlas thinktank.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin "has cited nations' right for
    self-determination to justify the occupation of Crimea. Under the very
    same pretext, Moscow could blackmail Baku with threats to recognise
    Karabakh," Shahinoglu said.

    "One can't rule out that after Ukraine, Azerbaijan will be Russia's
    next target."

    - Conflict risk 'high' -

    Since the May 5, 1994, ceasefire, no tangible progress has been
    achieved at negotiations mediated by France, Russia and the United
    States, the so-called Minsk Group, under the umbrella of the
    Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

    Analysts in both countries agree it would not take much to kindle a
    new conflict.

    "International mediators' efforts have proved fruitless and the risk
    of a fresh armed conflict remains high," Shahinoglu said.

    In justifying their positions, Baku and Yerevan appeal to two somewhat
    conflicting norms of international law.

    While Azerbaijan cites the principle of territorial integrity of
    states, Armenia insists the right of self-determination of peoples
    provided a legal basis for the ethnic-Armenian majority to proclaim
    Karabakh's secession from Azerbaijan in 1991.

    "Events in Crimea show that post-Soviet states' borders are
    disputable," Sarkisian said.

    "Russia opted to prioritise the principle of nations'
    self-determination over the principle of territorial integrity
    of states.

    "The move will undoubtedly have some consequences for Karabakh."

    The Soviet Union's collapse in 1991 ushered in a period of political
    turmoil and separatist conflicts in many newly independent states.

    Analysts said the Kremlin was inciting conflicts between and within
    the ex-Soviet republics to maintain influence over its former vassals
    and prevent them from forging closer ties with the West.

    "Russia wants to reassert its dominance in the post-Soviet space and
    sponsors separatist conflicts there," said independent Azerbaijani
    analyst Rasim Musabekov.

    "Karabakh is occupied by Armenia, but it's no secret that Russia is
    behind the scenes."

    eg-mkh-im/am/cc-gd




    From: A. Papazian
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