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  • Surrender of territories to Azerbaijan: strategic consequences for A

    David Simonyan: Surrender of territories to Azerbaijan: strategic
    consequences for Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh

    Regnum, Russia
    July 27, 2006

    REGNUM publishes the article of security expert David Simonyan
    (Yerevan), which reflects his vision of the future of the Karabakh
    conflict. The article is published in the author's wording.

    In the light of the continuing discourse on how to preserve the
    "favorable window of opportunities" in the Karabakh peace process,
    people in Armenia keep actively talking about the settlement
    principles that have reportedly been presented to the Armenian
    and Azeri presidents for discussion and possible signing. These
    principles stipulate that Armenian troops be withdrawn from the
    liberated territories and the territories, except for the Lachin
    corridor, be given back to Azerbaijan.

    The article is about the importance the liberated territory has for
    ensuring the key element of Armenia's national security - its military
    component. When speaking about Armenia, you should keep in mind two
    states, the Republic of Armenia and the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
    (NKR), who are fully integrated in military and economic terms. As
    you may know, military security is a condition of a state that allows
    it to exclude any damage to its vital interests that can be caused
    by threat or practical armed violence.

    The given analysis is based on an axiom that is generally accepted
    among experts: for ensuring national security one should be ready
    for the worst scenario. And now, let's more thoroughly consider the
    significance the liberated territory has for ensuring the military
    security of Armenia (RA and NKR).

    The military conflict of 1991-1994 has improved the quality of the
    following elements of the military-strategic position of the Armenian
    states:

    1. Frontline configuration

    The present configuration of the frontline is optimal for the
    Armenian side. The southern flank of the Artsakh front is shielded
    by the Iranian border, the northern flank - by the hard-to-access
    Mrav mountain range. In the east - from the mountains of Mrav to the
    river Arax - the Armenian side has a well-fortified multi-echelon
    defense line.

    Should the Armenian side give back the territories of six districts
    and keep only Lachin, the total frontline of the two Armenian states
    with Azerbaijan, including Nakhichevan, will get 450 km longer to 1,100
    km. The frontline between Artsakh and Azerbaijan will lengthen by 150
    km to 360 km. For you to have the full picture of how long a border
    Armenia will have with its conflicting neighbors, we should remind
    you that Armenia also has a poorly protected 268 km border with Turkey.

    In order to effectively fortify the extended frontline the Armenian
    side will have to mobilize substantial human and financial resources.

    First, the Armenian side will have to increase its army personnel (the
    Armed Forces of Armenia and the Defense Army of Artsakh (Karabakh))
    and, therefore, to prolong the compulsory service term for privates
    and to enroll contract officers.

    Second, after withdrawing troops, the Armenian side will have to
    undertake big expenses to create new defense lines. To carry out the
    above measures, the Armenian side will have to augment its military
    budget, but to do this, it will have to further curtail its scarce
    social financing and to face the ensuing negative consequences.

    2. Depth of defense

    The liberated territories have allowed the Armenian side to ensure
    the minimum defense depth and to solve several important strategic
    problems:

    First, the present depth of defense has allowed the Armenian side to
    form a multi-echelon defense line. Should the first line be broken, the
    Armenian side will be able to resist on the following ones and to keep
    the enemy outside Artsakh until additional troops come from Armenia.

    Second, the central densely-populated areas of Artsakh, including
    its capital, Stepanakert, as well as the settlements of the Goris,
    Kapan and Meghri districts of Armenia have become inaccessible for
    shelling by Azeri artillery and multiple rocket launching systems
    (BM-21 "Grad").

    Third, by liberating the Zangelan, Jebrail and Fizuli districts
    and moving the frontline over 100 km eastward, the Armenian side
    has liquidated the threat to the vulnerable, just 40 km wide Meghri
    district of the Republic of Armenia.

    If the six districts are given back to the enemy and the frontline is
    moved back to the former administrative border of Nagorno-Karabakh
    Autonomous Region, the Armenian side will lose the necessary depth
    for effective defense and will face bigger difficulties in defending
    Artsakh should a new war begin.

    The new frontline will run just 5 km away from the district centers of
    Mardakert, Askeran and Hadrut and 18 km away from Stepanakert. If the
    Armenian side gives back the Karvachar (formerly Kelbajar) district
    too, the Martakert district will get vulnerable to possible military
    attacks from three sides.

    Even fortified to the maximum, the new defense line will not be a
    reliable guarantor of Artsakh's military security. As we know from
    military history, any well-fortified defense line (Mannerheim line,
    Siegfried line, Bar-Lev line) can be broken by the attacker, and only
    sufficient depth of defense can allow the defender to organize new
    resistance lines and by wearing the enemy out to stop his attack. For
    example, during the Yom Kippur War (1973), when the Egyptian troops
    overran the 157.5 km long and 15 km deep Bar-Lev line in Sinai in just
    six hours, it was exactly the depth of the line that allowed Israel
    to stop the Egyptian troops, to prevent them from going deep into
    its territory, to mobilize new forces and to turn around the situation.

    Besides, if the border is moved, most of the settlements of Artsakh
    and the Sunik region of Armenia, first of all, Stepanakert, Kapan and
    Goris, will find themselves unprotected in the face of possible massive
    shelling by the enemy. If a new war starts, a sudden massive bombing
    of towns, district centers and villages by artillery and "Grads"
    will cause big casualties among civilians and heavy in destruction
    in Artsakh and Sunik. This may result in a mass exodus of people from
    the area.

    3. Military communications

    Efficient military communications, well-trained and equipped mobile
    troops, timely supply of arms, hardware, ammunition, fuel and other
    stuff and quick evacuation are really crucial in modern war. For
    the Armenian side, regular military communications would be really
    indispensable, should the enemy get big superiority during the first
    days of the war.

    Let's see in detail what military communications each side has:

    Azerbaijan

    The densely-populated areas of Azerbaijan are connected with the
    Artsakh front by two railroads: Baku-Yevlakh and Baku-Horadiz station
    and several motor roads: Baku-Shemakha-Yevlakh, Baku-Kurdamir-Yevlakh
    and Baku-Birmai-Bailakan (Zhdanovsk) as well as belt road
    Yevlakh-Barda-Agjabedy-Bailakan - quite a convenient road running
    along the frontline. All running via steppe, these roads will allow
    the enemy to quickly send mobilized troops to the Artsakh front and
    to get multiple superiority in personnel and hardware before the
    approach of the Armenian troops.

    Artsakh

    With the present frontline configuration, there are four motor roads
    connecting Armenia with Artsakh and the frontline: Vardenis-Mardakert,
    Goris-Stepanakert-Askeran-Agda m, Kapan-Zangelan-Jebrail and
    Meghri-Mijavan-Horadiz. If the war resumes, these roads will allow
    the Armenian sides to bring up quite big troops from Armenia to the
    Artsakh front in just a few days.

    So-called belt roads - communications running along the frontline
    - are crucial for the frontline resistive capacity. They allow
    to quickly redeploy troops to wherever there is a danger of
    breach. At present the Artsakh Defense Army has two belt roads:
    Mardakert-Agdam-Fizuli-Jebrail and the North-South highway project
    to connect Mardakert-Stepanakert-Red Bazar-Hadrut.

    If the six liberated districts are surrendered, the Armenian armed
    forces will control only one belt road - Mardakert-Hadrut and
    only one road connecting mainland Armenia with Sunik and Artsakh -
    Yerevan-Goris-Stepanakert. This road runs through a highly mountainous
    area with many passes.

    If a new war starts, the Armenians will find it extremely difficult
    to keep the narrow Lachin corridor from the enemy's two-side strikes,
    but even if they retain Lachin, the enemy will use its artillery and
    aviation to make it as hard as possible for Armenia to quickly transfer
    big military forces and material and medical assistance to Artsakh.

    Meanwhile, the fate of Artsakh will depend exactly on how quickly
    Armenia will supply it with troops as the Defense Army of Artsakh
    may prove not strong enough to resist the onslaught of the greatly
    prevalent enemy.

    Thus, you clearly see that the liberated territory is extremely
    important for keeping the military balance between the conflicting
    sides, while its surrender by the Armenian side will break
    it to Azerbaijan's advantage and will strongly aggravate the
    military-strategic situation of the Armenian states - something
    neither peace agreements nor international peacekeepers will compensate
    for. This is especially dangerous as Azerbaijan is heavily swelling its
    military potential, particularly, by redoubling its military budget
    in 2006 - from $300 mln to $600 mln - while Armenia will hardly be
    able to keep pace in the coming years for the following reasons:

    1. The state budget of Armenia is 3.5 times smaller than the
    state budget of Azerbaijan ($1 bln against $3.5bln) and this gap
    will continue to grow as Azerbaijan will increase its oil exports.
    Meanwhile, Armenia's economic potential will not allow this country
    to allot as much money to the military as to keep the military parity
    with Azerbaijan.

    2. Armenia can no longer hope for the big free military hardware
    supplies that it got from Russia in the mid 1990s and that helped it
    to keep military balance with Azerbaijan for the last decade. The key
    military partner of Armenia, Russia has begun to show more pragmatic
    policy in the last years, with no political or economic preferences.

    Hence, only by retaining the liberated territory, carrying out military
    reforms and improving the state administration system as a whole will
    the Armenian side be able to offset the growing military potential
    of the enemy and, thereby, to keep the Azeri side from temptation to
    resume military actions.

    Given the continuing variance of the sides concerning the status of
    Artsakh, any change in the present configuration of the contact line
    will not stop the conflict but will simply create another, much more
    conflict-prone situation in the sphere of security.

    Should Azerbaijan, whose leadership keeps saying that it will never
    put up with the loss of Karabakh, agree to sign peace agreements, but
    will later prove not content with the return of just six districts
    and will make up its mind to get back the whole Artsakh by war,
    Armenia will get in a serious danger.

    Turning to advantage the change in the military balance and the
    consequent vulnerability of Artsakh's whole defense system, Azerbaijan
    may use some convenient political moment to launch a blitzkrieg attack
    and to occupy Artsakh. In order to break the frontline, the Azeris
    will quickly concentrate strongly prevalent forces for one main
    blow - not a hard thing to do for them given the big quantitative
    and technical prevalence of the Azeri Army over the Defense Army
    of Artsakh and the facts that 70% of Azeri troops are deployed near
    the frontline and that Azerbaijan has better capacities for quickly
    deploying mobilized troops to the Artsakh front. The outcome of the
    war will greatly depend on its very first days, particularly, on the
    ability of the Defense Army of Artsakh to keep the frontline intact,
    which may prove quite a hard job.

    Armenia will have very limited capacities to help Artsakh: it will
    not be able to use the vulnerable Lachin corridor for transferring
    big military contingents. If the frontline is broken and the Armenian
    troops fail to stop the enemy at Stepanakert, the Armenian side may
    lose not only Artsakh but also Sunik. If Azerbaijan occupies Artsakh,
    Turkey will certainly encourage it to try to make true the Pan-Turkic
    dream: to seize the Meghri district, thereby, linking Azerbaijan with
    Turkey and cutting Armenia from Iran. To this end, the enemy may strike
    from two sides - from Zangelan and Nakhichevan. After losing Artsakh,
    it will be extremely hard for the Armenian side to keep Meghri:
    the district is very narrow and lacks the necessary defense depth,
    while the motor roads connecting it with the rest of Armenia are
    quite vulnerable.

    The liquidation of Serbian Krajina in Croatia in 1995 is one example
    of how real this scenario can be: Croatia broke earlier cease-fire
    agreements, mobilized its armed forces and suddenly attacked
    Serbian Krajina. In some few days they broke the frontline and
    occupied the region. As a result, Serbian Krajina stopped to exist
    and half million of Serbs were forced to leave their homeland and
    become refugees. This tragedy happened in the center of Europe in
    the presence of thousands-strong UN peacekeeping contingent and led
    to no sanctions against the aggressor side.

    Conclusions:

    1. One of the key factors keeping the military balance between Armenia
    and Artsakh, from the one side, and Azerbaijan, from the other, and
    compensating for Azerbaijan's personnel and hardware superiority and
    capacity to increase its military potential is the present optimal
    configuration of the Artsakh frontline.

    2. The existing military balance rather than the cease-fire agreement
    of 1994 is keeping Azerbaijan back from resuming large-scale military
    actions.

    3. By giving back any part of the liberated territory, the Armenian
    side will give Azerbaijan a military advantage and will reduce its
    own military security. This may inspire the enemy - should there be
    convenient moment - to solve the Karabakh problem by war. That's why
    it is absolutely inadmissible to surrender the liberated territory
    to the enemy.

    4. Given the aggressive and genocide-prone Azeri-Turkish alliance,
    with its overwhelming military prevalence and open desire to destroy
    the Armenian statehood, the key security guarantee for Armenia and
    Artsakh must be the Armenian Army and the present territory of the
    Armenian states (42,000 sq. km.)
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