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  • Clashes Intensify Between Armenia and Azerbaijan Over Disputed Land

    New York Times
    Jan 31 2015

    Clashes Intensify Between Armenia and Azerbaijan Over Disputed Land

    By DAVID M. HERSZENHORNJAN. 31, 2015


    AGDAM, Azerbaijan -- Overshadowed by the fighting in Ukraine, another
    armed conflict in the former Soviet Union -- between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan over the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh -- has escalated with
    deadly ferocity in recent months, killing dozens of soldiers on each
    side and pushing the countries perilously close to open war.

    The month of January was heavily stained by blood, with repeated gun
    battles and volleys of artillery and rocket fire. Two Armenian
    soldiers were killed and several wounded in a fierce gunfight on Jan.
    23 along the conflict's northern front. That set off a weekend of
    violence including grenade and mortar attacks that killed at least
    three Azerbaijani soldiers.

    The most recent clashes prompted an unusually pointed rebuke by
    international mediators who met on Monday in Krakow, Poland, with the
    Azerbaijani foreign minister, Elmar Mammadyarov.

    "The rise in violence that began last year must stop," the mediators,
    from France, Russia and the United States, said in a joint statement,
    adding, "We called on Azerbaijan to observe its commitments to a
    peaceful resolution of the conflict. We also called on Armenia to take
    all measures to reduce tensions."

    Instead, the violence has continued.

    On Thursday, the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said it had shot down a
    drone not far from Agdam, an Azerbaijani city that was once home to
    more than 40,000 people but has been a ghost town for more than 20
    years since its occupation by Armenian forces.

    Tensions are expected to grow even further this year as Armenia
    prepares to commemorate in April the 100th anniversary of the genocide
    against Armenians in Turkey.

    While the fighting here often seems to be an isolated dispute over a
    mountainous patch of land that no one else wants -- roughly midway
    between the Armenian capital, Yerevan, and the Azerbaijani capital,
    Baku -- the conflict poses an ever-present danger by threatening to
    draw in bigger powers, including Russia, Turkey and Iran.

    It also provides a chilling warning of what could be in store for
    Ukraine, where many fear Russia is intent on turning the eastern
    regions of Donetsk and Luhansk into a similar permanent war zone.

    The recent flare in fighting has been fueled by a quiet arms race, in
    which both countries -- but especially oil-rich Azerbaijan -- have built
    up arsenals of ever more powerful weapons.

    Russia is the main supplier to each side, even as it claims a
    leadership role in international peace negotiations, known as the
    Minsk Group process, which it chairs with the United States and
    France.

    In recent weeks, President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan has upped the
    ante, demanding that the Minsk Group leaders take steps to force
    Armenia to withdraw from Azerbaijani lands -- nearly one-fifth of
    Azerbaijan's internationally-recognized territory -- that it has
    occupied since a truce was signed in 1994.

    "Measures must be taken," Mr. Aliyev said in a speech to government
    ministers in January. "The truth is that the continued occupation of
    our lands is not just the work of Armenia. Armenia is a powerless and
    poor country. It is in a helpless state. Of course, if it didn't have
    major patrons in various capitals, the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict would
    have been resolved fairly long ago."

    Continue reading the main story

    In his speech, Mr. Aliyev warned darkly that Azerbaijan, which has an
    economy seven times larger than Armenia's, planned this year to spend
    more than double Armenia's entire annual budget of $2.7 billion on
    strengthening its military.

    President Serzh Sargsyan has responded with his own threats. "The
    hotheads should expect surprises," Mr. Sargsyan said at a recent
    military ceremony.

    The dangerous consequences of the arms buildup were on full display in
    November as Azerbaijan shot down an Mi-24 attack helicopter as it flew
    just north of Agdam along the cease-fire line, killing three Armenian
    soldiers on board.

    The wreckage fell in the region near Agdam that has served as a buffer
    zone since the 1994 truce, and for days the three bodies lay in the
    open as Armenian forces seeking to recover their fallen comrades were
    repelled by gunfire.

    "This is as bad as it has got since the cease-fire," said Thomas de
    Waal, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International
    Peace in Washington, whose book "Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan
    Through Peace and War" is widely regarded as the most authoritative
    account of the Karabakh conflict.

    "Fifteen years ago it was still bad but it was just a bunch of
    trenches with a bunch of soldiers leaning over them with some guns,"
    Mr. de Waal said. "Now, you have this massive heavy weaponry on either
    side, sometimes only 100 yards from each other, with these drones and
    so forth."

    He added, "The stakes get higher every year, and the chances of
    miscalculation get higher as well."

    With tensions mounting, visits to each side of the front line, and
    interviews with senior government and military officials, as well as
    conversations with dozens of residents, refugees, war veterans,
    soldiers, local officials, academics, civic activists and even
    schoolchildren, found the two sides bracing for war, and neither
    expecting nor prepared for peace.

    "We have a saying," said Col. Abdulla Qurbani, a senior official in
    the Azerbaijan Defense Ministry, while on a tour of the Azerbaijan
    side of the line of contact. "When water mixes with earth, this is
    mud. When blood mixes with earth, this is motherland."

    Across the line in Shushi, a city whose Azerbaijani residents were
    forced to flee during the war, an Armenian woman, Anaida Gabrielyan,
    said: "Our land is soaked in blood. Every millimeter is soaked in
    grief."

    Since fighting began in the late 1980s, it has killed tens of
    thousands of people and displaced more than a million, many of whom
    have been living as refugees for more than 20 years.

    The increased firepower is not the only reason the conflict has grown
    more dangerous and more intractable.

    The fight is rooted in religious hatreds -- real and imagined -- between
    Christian Armenia and predominantly Muslim Azerbaijan.

    And a new generation of Armenians and Azerbaijanis, including the
    soldiers now serving on the front line, cannot remember when their
    parents and grandparents lived peacefully as neighbors -- before
    Armenians were purged from Azerbaijan and Azerbaijanis were forced
    from the areas now occupied by Armenia.

    Continue reading the main story Continue reading the main story
    Continue reading the main story

    Residents of Nagorno-Karabakh, where the majority Armenian population
    declared an independent republic after the collapse of the Soviet
    Union, are hamstrung by their unrecognized status, which prohibits
    most international trade.

    The republic is largely viewed as a puppet extension of Armenia, with
    its residents traveling abroad on Armenian passports and many Armenian
    officials, including President Sargsyan, having been born in
    Nagorno-Karabakh and having previously held government posts there.

    In casual conversations, it was not uncommon for Azerbaijanis to deny
    that the Armenian genocide occurred, or for Armenians to insist that
    Azerbaijanis were not a real nation and had no legitimate ties to
    lands they had lived on for centuries.

    "This is our land, our homeland, and we will always protect it," said
    Gayane Gevorgyan, an Armenian and the mother of two young children who
    now lives in Shushi, a city that before the war had a majority
    Azerbaijani population. "We will do it for our children. We have no
    place else to go."

    Although the long history of Azerbaijani residents in Shushi is well
    documented, and the city contains two famous mosques, Ms. Gevorgyan
    said that Azerbaijanis expelled during the war had no right to return.

    "We were part of greater Armenia even before Christ," she said in an
    interview at the State Historical Museum, where she works as a guide.
    "Shushi is not their homeland, so they don't have any right to come
    back."

    In Azerbaijan, there is a city government-in-exile with a
    single-minded focus on reclaiming the city, called Shusha in
    Azerbaijani. "Our only goal is to come back," said Bayram A. Safarov,
    the head of the administration in exile. "I know every stone there."

    The hardened views in the public mind make it even more difficult to
    broker an accord, despite Presidents Aliyev and Sargsyan's having met
    three times last year.


    "The reality is after 20 years of inflammatory rhetoric, both
    presidents will admit to you that the people of the two countries are
    just not ready," said one Western official who has met both men, and
    who requested anonymity to discuss private conversations on sensitive
    diplomatic issues.

    In Azerbaijan, tens of thousands of refugees live in substandard
    housing. In some cases, families have lived for years in individual
    college dormitory rooms, sharing a bathroom on the hall.

    Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh are hamstrung by their
    unrecognized status, which prohibits most international trade.

    The region's capital, called Stepanakert in Armenian and Xankendi in
    Azerbaijani, has no functioning airport. And officials there do not
    have a formal role in the peace process.

    Irina Khachaturyan, who sells trinkets from a stall in the central
    market in Stepanakert, is Armenian but said she dreamed of returning
    to Baku, the Azerbaijani capital where she lived before the war.

    "It was my motherland; I was born there, lived there, studied there,"
    Ms. Khachaturyan said.

    Although she lives among fellow Armenians, she said Stepanakert never
    became home.

    "I never found my place," she said. "These 25 years, I have been
    living like on needles."


    Alexandra Odynova contributed reporting.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/01/world/asia/clashes-intensify-between-armenia-and-azerbaijan-over-disputed-land.html



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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