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Nagorno-Karabakh's Referendum

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  • Nagorno-Karabakh's Referendum

    NAGORNO-KARABAKH'S REFERENDUM
    Shaun Walker
    Daria Vaisman

    Open Democracy, UK
    Dec 14 2006

    The Armenian enclave inside Azerbaijan remains poised between peace
    and war even after a decisive vote for independence, report Daria
    Vaisman & Shaun Walker.

    It was all a bit of an anticlimax. The contested territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh was voting on 10 December 2006 for a new constitution
    - after twelve years of de facto independence from Azerbaijan, it
    was meant to be the final stage on its path to statehood. Yet on
    the streets of its capital Stepanakert, no one seemed particularly
    excited. Two lonely posters and one small banner advertised the
    referendum. While all the major international papers covered a similar
    referendum in breakaway South Ossetia on 12 October, here only one
    of the wires showed up.

    This is surprising, considering that Karabakh has been the bloodiest,
    highest profile, and most intractable of the frozen conflicts in
    the region. But the neglect was less evidence of indifference to
    independence than of a feeling that Karabakh is further down the line
    to recognition than its breakaway counterparts; the referendum was
    merely confirming its independence, rather than agitating for it.

    Nagorno-Karabakh has a special history. The Armenians call it a centre
    of their ancient civilisation; the Azeris point to their famous
    Karabakh poets and musicians. The spectacular mountains and green
    valleys give a dramatic backdrop to a region infused with Persian,
    Turkish and Russian influences. Though the region's ethnic groups
    collided over the centuries, Stalin's nationalities policies in
    the early Soviet period exacerbated the tensions. Karabakh, though
    always majority Armenian, was attached to the newly created republic
    of Azerbaijan in 1921.

    Though there were desultory cries for greater control from the Armenian
    population of Karabakh throughout the Soviet period, their demands
    grew stronger as the union collapsed. Azeri and Armenian friends
    and neighbours turned against each other, fuelled by nationalism and
    Armenian Karabakh's irresistible drive for independence.

    A still-standing but shaky ceasefire agreement was signed in 1994,
    after six years of fighting. The results were dire: more than 700,000
    Azeris and 400,000 Armenians were displaced from their homes, and
    Karabakh is now a monoethnic shadow of its cosmopolitan past. The
    status of Karabakh has been discussed and contested over the decade
    since, but with each failed peace talk, the chance for compromise on
    either side fades further. With its symbolic importance and its value
    as a cause around which political elites can harness public sentiment,
    it is the region's Jerusalem.

    A frozen status quo

    The Karabakh border with Azerbaijan is a frontline. In fact, the actual
    line of control, where nervous young Karabakh conscripts train rifles
    at Azerbaijan from clumsily dug trenches, is well outside the borders
    of Karabakh proper, in territory occupied as a buffer zone.

    With this border closed, Karabakh is only accessible by a single
    major road that wends through the mountains from Armenia.

    There is no way of knowing where Armenia ends and Karabakh begins -
    no visible signs mark the border, and a barely noticeable checkpoint
    intermittently stops cars with a friendly request to register in
    Stepanakert. Armenia funds approximately half of Karabakh's state
    budget, and trains its military. This makes true independence for
    Nagorno-Karabakh difficult to imagine.

    Even less likely, however, is a return to Azerbaijan. By the
    territorial-integrity standards applied to the other breakaway states,
    Azerbaijan should keep Karabakh, as it was part of their territory
    during the Soviet period, just as South Ossetia and Abkhazia were parts
    of Georgia. Azerbaijan has promised the "highest level" of autonomy,
    but Armenian Karabakh is understandably sceptical.

    A comparison is sometimes made to the Aland Islands - an archipelago
    with a Swedish population that was given to Finland in 1921. Decades
    of broad autonomy under Finnish rule left a contented population and an
    example that this kind of dispute can be solved peacefully. In 1993, a
    mediation group brought the three sides in the Karabakh dispute to the
    islands, and suggested a similar arrangement. The Karabakh Armenians,
    so goes the apocryphal tale, surprised everyone by agreeing to the
    idea. "Yes," they said, "we're happy to be ruled by Finland."

    The peace process

    The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk
    group, a multilateral group led by Russia, the United States and
    France, has been charged with negotiating a solution to the conflict.

    A series of summits have been unsuccessful, including most recently
    at Rambouillet earlier in 2006 despite widespread expectation of a
    breakthrough. While the sides have been close to agreement on many
    issues, the recurring problem has been the most fundamental one: the
    status of Karabakh. As with Jerusalem, there is no status acceptable
    to both sides.

    With Karabakh's independence already a de facto achievement, the
    Armenian side already has a disproportionate share of what it wants.

    True, the situation is far from ideal for Karabakh - the regime is
    concerned about an attack from Azerbaijan, and lacks the investments
    and political status that come with international recognition. But
    the imperfect status quo seems more appealing to the Armenian side
    than other options on the table, particularly those which seek to
    reunite the region with Azerbaijan.

    This stumbling-block has led many to advocate a "step-by-step"
    approach to resolving the conflict, rather than a "package deal"
    to solve the conflict all at once. The idea is to build up trust
    first while negotiating on less contentious issues, such as troop
    withdrawal from occupied Azerbaijani territories, and then deal with
    Karabakh's status at a later date. But even this approach has failed
    to yield results so far.

    The regional powers

    The United States sees the Caucasus as a strategic energy corridor that
    bypasses both Iran and Russia. With the newly built Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    pipeline, which will soon be pumping a million barrels of oil per
    day from the Caspian to the Mediterranean, the US is worried that
    regional conflict would jeopardise its sizeable energy investments.

    Iran, which borders Armenia and Azerbaijan, has helped both sides at
    different times. During the height of the conflict, Iran supported
    Christian Armenia against its fellow Shi'a state Azerbaijan. With
    much of northern Iran populated by increasingly anti-government
    ethnic Azeris with ties to Azerbaijan, it's in Iran's interests to
    keep Azerbaijan occupied with Karabakh.

    Despite support for Armenia during the conflict, Russia in recent
    years has tried not to take sides, maintaining good relations with
    both parties. Karabakh officials remain cool on relations with
    Russia, however, and are keen to avoid being lumped in with the
    other breakaway states. As one Karabakh official put it, "Of course
    we're very interested in hearing from the others as the status of
    Nato-controlled Kosovo's independence nears. But we have bilateral not
    multilateral ties with them." The fear is that Russia is using the
    breakaway states as an anti-western policy instrument, and Karabakh
    has no interest in taking part.

    There is a sense even among the other breakaways that they would
    prefer a guarantor other than Russia if they had a choice. Karabakh
    does - in large part due to the powerful Armenian diaspora. This is
    evident even before arriving; the road between Armenia and Karabakh
    is perhaps the best in the Caucasus, and was funded by $25 million of
    diaspora money. Maps, tourist brochures and websites about Karabakh
    are glossy and professional.

    Masis Mayilian, Karabakh's deputy foreign minister, asked us in
    flawless English if we wanted to see the text of a lecture he had
    delivered at a university in the United States. It was worlds away
    from South Ossetian or Transdniestrian officials - Russian-speaking
    and suspicious of anything and anyone western.

    While these regions have no voice in western capitals, the Armenian
    diaspora acts as an international lobbying group. "The moral and
    political support is more important than the investments; they can
    lobby our interests in the US Congress," said Mayilian. In October
    2005, fifty-nine members of congress sent a letter to President
    George W Bush calling Karabakh an independent country of "proud
    citizens committed to the values of freedom, democracy and respect
    for human rights."

    The Azeri factor

    There is one thing that may shift the balance in the medium term:
    Azerbaijan's oil windfall, estimated by President Ilham Aliyev to be
    about $140 billion in the next twenty years. A good amount of this is
    being spent on updating the Azerbaijani military, and with nearly a
    million internally-displaced people (IDPs) in Azerbaijan as a result
    of the Karabakh conflict, regaining lost territory is a huge priority
    among the populace and elites. While an all-out military attack might
    be unlikely, having the capability to launch it might shift the balance
    at the negotiating table, and give some force to Azerbaijan's demands.

    The Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents met again on 28 November,
    at the CIS summit in Minsk, and again no progress was made. If and
    when progress does come in the negotiations, it will be a long time
    before Karabakh returns to any kind of normalcy. If Azerbaijan recovers
    control of some or all of the territory occupied as a buffer-zone,
    it will take years of investment to make it habitable again. Walking
    around a destroyed Azeri town like Fizuli is rather like visiting ruins
    from ancient Rome - all the evidence of former civilisation is there,
    but the devastation is so complete that it is difficult to imagine
    it as a living community.

    Despite the fact that more than a million people remain displaced from
    their homes, both Azerbaijan and Armenia have too much to lose from a
    new conflict. While a breakthrough in negotiations seems unlikely in
    the near future, so does further bloodshed. Instead, the most likely
    scenario is more of the same - a fragile status somewhere between
    peace and war.

    http://www.opendemocracy.net/democracy-cauca sus/Nagorno_Karabakh_4182.jsp
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