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Artsakh and President Aliyev's Dilemma Revisited

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  • Artsakh and President Aliyev's Dilemma Revisited

    Artsakh and President Aliyev's Dilemma Revisited

    By Michael Mensoian
    on August 30, 2014

    Azeri incursions along the Line of Contact (LoC) during the past several
    weeks have escalated significantly

    in frequency and intensity. As would be expected, the Artsakh defenders
    have been more than
    able to protect their homeland against these blatant violations of the
    ceasefire agreement. The escalation occurring just prior to Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliyev's meeting with Armenian President Serge Sarkisian

    and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Sochi, Russia, seemed
    counterproductive.

    Border violations or not, no worthwhile result for Artsakh and Armenia
    could be expected to come out of the Sochi meeting or any subsequent
    meetings for obvious reasons. Sarkisian is concerned with the de jure
    recognition of Artsakh's independence while Aliyev, ignoring Artsakh's de
    facto independence, is determined to brand Armenia as an aggressor
    illegally occupying Azeri territory. How can negotiations produce any
    meaningful results when there is no agreement on the conflict that must be
    resolved? For too long we have allowed Azerbaijan to frame the issue in its
    favor. Unfortunately for us, the European Union and the United States have
    bought into this fiction, to the detriment of Armenia and Artsakh. The
    impossibility of reconciling the Azeri claim of territorial integrity with
    Artsakh's rightful claim to independence based on the principle of
    self-determination should be obvious. It must be one or the other (see
    "Artsakh:
    A Zero Sum Solution Weighted in Favor of Azerbaijan
    ").

    Russia, as the third member of the Minsk Group (with the United States and
    the European Union) charged with monitoring the negotiations, is pleased
    with the present impasse, which facilitates Putin's policy of playing both
    sides against the middle. How bizarre, even in the Machiavellian world of
    international politics, to have your treaty ally selling up-to-date
    military hardware to your enemy. Unfortunately we must suffer an ally who
    enjoys playing the alternating role of good friend-bad friend at our
    expense. And with respect to Armenia's less than voluntary agreement to
    join the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU), President Putin allowed Kazakhstani
    President Nursultan Nazarbayev to support Aliyev's claim against Armenia by
    chiding Sarkisian that Armenia's accession to the EEU must be based on its
    officially recognized borders.

    Given the sophisticated intelligence-gathering technology available, the
    need for these cross-border violations by Azerbaijan with its loss of life
    are unnecessary. By now each side should be well aware of the number, type,
    disposition, and preparedness of the troops manning the LoC. If these
    cross-border incursions by Azerbaijan are meant to weaken the morale not
    only of our soldiers but the civilian population, most of whom live in
    rather close proximity to the LoC, they have failed. It should be apparent
    to Azerbaijan that these flagrant violations of the ceasefire agreement
    have only increased the preparedness and determination of the Artsakh
    Armenians to protect their rightful claim to independence.

    The second objective that these constant violations seek is to project
    Aliyev as being in control of a situation that seems to escape a successful
    conclusion. Aliyev is a victim of his own making. He has not hesitated to
    proclaim that his military appropriations continually exceed Armenia's
    annual national budget. That his purchase of military equipment has created
    the largest military force in the south Caucasus more than capable of
    retaking Artsakh should negotiations fail. Conveniently overlooked is the
    fact that he is squandering the nation's wealth on these military
    acquisitions and the self-aggrandizement of a favored few to the detriment
    of a socioeconomically impovished population. How much longer can his bellicose
    statements ring
    true when rhetoric fails to match results? A dictator that is perceived as
    a toothless tiger should begin to worry about his ability to remain in
    power.

    No doubt Aliyev is fully cognizant of this dilemma as well as the
    constraints on his oft-repeated threat to use military force, if necessary,
    to retake Artsakh if negotiations fail. Whether or not there is support by
    the three co-chairs of the Minsk Group for Armenia and Artsakh's
    independence, all nations (with the questionable exception of Turkey) that
    have an interest in the south Caucasus abhor the thought of renewed
    hostilities. Russia, Iran, the European Union, the United States, Georgia,
    and the United Nations would immediately pressure Azerbaijan to enter into
    renewed negotiations or mediation at the first sign that it was preparing
    for a resumption of hostilities. International economic interests would
    raise cautionary flags. Any disruption in the flow of energy resources
    would have global ramifications. However, the more worrisome development
    would be the range of unintended political consequences that might unfold.

    Can it be anticipated what the response by Russia and Iran might be if
    Ankara decided to augment its forces along the Armenian frontier or to a
    friendly occupation of Nakhitchevan on behalf of Azerbaijan? Or just as
    ominous are the possible repercussions if worried Georgian officials
    decided to refuse, restrict, or delay the urgent need by Russia to increase
    its garrison in Gyumri. Russia cannot afford to lose its only anchor in the
    south Caucasus or be unprepared to respond to any likely Turkish
    provocation against Armenia. Any weakening of this vital foothold would not
    only push historic Russian interests back to the northern slopes of the
    Caucasus, but likely reawaken anti-Russian movements within the region's
    already restive Muslim population. It would facilitate Turkish economic and
    political domination of the south Caucasus and its long-sought expansion
    across the Caspian Sea that would compete with Russian interests in Central
    Asia. Multi-ethnic Shi'ite Iran neither needs nor wants a strong Sunni
    Turkish-Azeri alliance along its northern and northwestern borders that
    would accompany a weakened Armenia if it lost Artsakh.

    We do have our limitations. However, when we factor in our strategic
    location (Armenia-Artsakh) that politically benefits Russian interests and
    economically benefits Iranian interests, we are not without some leverage.
    We do play an important role in limiting Turkish expansion in the southern
    Caucasus. Knowing this, we cannot allow our efforts to be circumscribed
    either by the uncertainty of success or the possibility of failure.

    The unthinkable loss of Artsakh would be a catastrophic blow not only to
    Armenia, but to *Hai Tahd*and the morale of those of the younger generation
    who must continue to seek the justice that has eluded those of the passing
    generations. Recep Tayyip Erdogan has just won a convincing victory as
    president
    of
    Turkey that should keep him in power for another five years. Facing a
    weakened Armenia will only stiffen his resistance to genocide recognition
    and a host of other issues that have remained dormant for the past century.
    The likelihood of Ankara bowing to either domestic or international
    pressure is highly questionable for the foreseeable future. Can it be
    expected that a weakened Armenia will encourage the xenophobic leaders of
    Georgia to implement much-needed and promised programs and policies to
    improve the onerous political, economic, and cultural environments within
    which the *Javakhahayer* must live? And of greater significance is the fate
    of our brothers and sisters in Artsakh, whose sacrifices to live on our
    historic lands as free and independent Armenians would have been in vain.

    The continuation of the status quo for Artsakh is reasonably certain,
    especially when the interests of the European Union and the United States
    do not coincide with Russia's. However, passive reliance on this fact alone
    cannot guarantee ultimate victory. It is vital that we implement a
    well-thought-out plan properly funded to accelerate a constant annual
    increase in Artsakh's population as well as its strategic distribution.
    Land without people has seldom been a winning combination. To facilitate
    this need for a significant increase in population, economic development
    must also be accelerated not only to attract repatriates, but to develop a
    positive attitude that Artsakh is permanently ours. It is not an easy task,
    but it is a vital task that cannot be delayed or sold short. The future of
    Armenia and Artsakh is inextricably linked, as is the creditability of *Hai
    Tahd* which hangs in the balance.

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2014/08/30/artsakh-president-aliyevs-dilemma-revisited/

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