Автор: Hakan Yavuz M.   Gunter M.M.  

Теги: history   politics   international relations   karabakh conflict  

ISBN: 978-1-003-26120-9

Год: 2023

Текст
                    
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict This book presents a comprehensive overview of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict, the long-running dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Armenian-majority region of Azerbaijan. It outlines the historical development of the dispute, explores the political and social aspects of the confict, examines the wars over the territory including the war of 2020 which resulted in a signifcant Azerbaijani victory, and discusses the international dimensions. M. Hakan Yavuz is a Professor of Political Science at the University of Utah, USA. Michael M. Gunter is a Professor of Political Science at Tennessee Technological University, USA. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Routledge Contemporary Russia and Eastern Europe Series 98 The Russian Minorities in the Former Soviet Republics Secession, Integration, and Homeland Anna Batta 99 Tatarstan’s Autonomy within Putin’s Russia Minority Elites, Ethnic Mobilization and Sovereignty Deniz Dinç 100 The State and Big Business in Russia Understanding Kremlin–Business Relations in the Early Putin Era Tina Jennings 101 Queering Russian Media and Culture Edited by Galina Miazhevich 102 Shamanism in Siberia Sound and Turbulence in Cursing Practices in Tuva Mally Stelmaszyk 103 Stalin and Soviet Early Cold War Policy Southern Neighbours in the Shadow of Moscow, 1945–1947 Jamil Hasanli 104 Disinformation, Narratives and Memory Politics in Russia and Belarus Edited by Agnieszka Legucka and Robert Kupiecki 105 The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict Historical and Political Perspectives Edited by M. Hakan Yavuz and Michael M. Gunter For more information about this series, please visit: www.routledge.com/ Routledge-Contemporary-Russia-and-Eastern-Europe-Series/book-series/ SE0766 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict Historical and Political Perspectives Edited by M. Hakan Yavuz and Michael M. Gunter Uploaded by S. M. Safi
First published 2023 by Routledge 4 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN and by Routledge 605 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10158 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business © 2023 selection and editorial matter, M. Hakan Yavuz and Michael M. Gunter; individual chapters, the contributors The right of M. Hakan Yavuz and Michael M. Gunter to be identifed as the authors of the editorial material, and of the authors for their individual chapters, has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identifcation and explanation without intent to infringe. British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A catalog record has been requested for this book ISBN: 978-1-032-19856-9 (hbk) ISBN: 978-1-032-19858-3 (pbk) ISBN: 978-1-003-26120-9 (ebk) DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209 Typeset in Times New Roman by codeMantra Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Contents Preface ix Introduction 1 M. H A K A N YAV U Z A N D M IC H A E L M. GU N T E R PART I Conceptual and Historical Origins 13 1 15 Karabakh: Historical Background K A M A L A I M R A N L I - L OW E 2 The Sovietization of Azerbaijan and a Road to Autonomy in Nagorno-Karabakh (1920–1923) 34 JA M I L H A SA N L I 3 Armenian Irredentist Nationalism and Its Transformation into the Mass Karabakh Movement “MIATSUM” (1965–1988) 59 E L DA R A BBA S OV 4 The Orientalizing of Azerbaijanis and the Armenia–Azerbaijan Confict FA R I D SH A F I Y E V Uploaded by S. M. Safi 88
vi Contents PART II The First Karabakh War and the Consequences 5 Self-Determination or Territorial Integrity? International Legal/Political Doctrines in Opposition and Their Implications for Karabakh 113 115 M IC H A E L M. GU N T E R 6 The UN Security Council Resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh: View from Azerbaijan 130 SH A M K H A L A BI L OV A N D C E Y H U N M A H M U DLU 7 The Politics of Ceasefre and the Occupation 150 A R A Z A SL A N L I 8 The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict: International Law Appraisal 168 FA R H A D M I R Z AY E V 9 International Law and the Changes in the Status Quo of the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict in 2020 203 K A M A L M A K I L I -A L I Y E V PART III The Second Karabakh War and the Consequences 221 10 How Do We Explain Victory? The Karabakh Campaign of 2020 223 E DWA R D J. E R IC K S ON 11 The Causes and Consequences of the Second Karabakh War: September 27, 2021–November 10, 2021 A L I A SK E ROV A N D GU BA D I BA D O GH LU Uploaded by S. M. Safi 245
Contents vii PART IV Foreign Policy and the Karabakh War 273 12 Turkish Foreign Policy and the Karabakh Confict 275 M. H A K A N YAV U Z 13 Georgia and the Second Karabakh War 303 E M I L AV DA L I A N I 14 The Role of the United States in the Armenia– Azerbaijan Confict 321 E SM I R A JA FA ROVA 15 Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict 341 OR H A N GA FA R L I 16 Israel’s Foreign Policy toward the Karabakh Confict 366 M IC H A E L B . BI SH KU 17 Iran’s Policies Toward the Karabakh Confict 381 M E SI AGH A M A H A M M A DI A N D VA SI F H USE Y NOV 18 The Arab States and the Karabakh War 402 BR E N D ON J. CA N NON 19 The Nagorno-Karabakh War: Diaspora Politics in Canadian Foreign Policy 420 OZ AY M E H M E T 439 447 Notes on Contributors Index Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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Preface Nagorno-Karabakh constitutes a frozen, controversial, post-Soviet, ethnic confict of great importance for regional and even international politics. As such, it is also susceptible to the perception of bias and the arousal of strong feelings on both sides. Not only should bias be avoided, but so too its mere perception if at all possible. This is diffcult because people, no matter how unbiased, can be perceived by others as being on “one side” or the other. Thus, the editors recognize that this is a subject that gives rise to strong feelings on both sides. They have done all they can to be even handed. Although they recognize that with some people perceptions of bias might still exist, they feel that any such views are ill-founded. Indeed, they believe that this volume will contribute to a better understanding of the entire situation. In preparing the following chapters, the editors also have endeavored to let their accomplished, multi-lingual authors speak for themselves as much as possible instead of trying to standardize their English-language, literary styles. Accordingly, as long as these ensuing analyses were written in readily understandable, objective English, the editors chose to leave them as is, instead of engaging in ceaseless rehashing. This also means that all the chapters do not have the same documentation style as long as they remain consistent in whatever one they employ. Finally, of course, any resulting errors in all this are the fault of the editors alone. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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Introduction M. Hakan Yavuz and Michael M. Gunter The struggle over the Karabakh region of Azerbaijan is about an important, long-running, frozen/unfrozen confict between the Armenians and Turkic Azerbaijanis over a relatively small, but symbolically important area in the Caucasus. Thus, Karabakh has signifcant relevance for ethnic confict studies in general, post-Soviet confict studies in particular, and great power struggles involving Russia, Turkey, Iran, and even further afoot including among others, the United States and the European Union. In addition, the confict involves horrifc problems for refugees and IDPs. Karabakh also has implications for the international oil and gas market transfer from Azerbaijan (rich in oil from time immemorial) to outlets around the world. Continuing confict over Karabakh might damage important international energy markets seeking to operate in, from, and to Baku. As such, the oil and gas market and commerce in general demand a solution to the Karabakh problem since continuation of the confict or even uncertainty regarding it would jeopardize oil and gas transport. The most recent war over Karabakh (September–November 2020) was won by Azerbaijan in part by using drones as a very important weapon. This implies that drones might be a very critical ingredient of fghting future wars. Thus, this interdisciplinary reference on Karabakh will impact many subject areas that are widely taught and researched. This study’s importance also lies in its originality because, in addition to its broad, inter-, and multi-disciplinary purview, it will be the frst one written subsequent to the paradigmatic-changing war fought in September–November 2020. Earlier studies are now more than a decade old, and thus dated in their analyses. This new study will remedy this gap in our knowledge. However, before proceeding any further, let us note that the Caucasus— where Karabakh is situated—lies between the Black and Caspian Seas, athwart Europe, and Asia, at the northern edge of the Middle East, and near one of the ends of the fabled Silk Road where today China’s imaginatively bold Belt and Road Initiative partially traverses. An incredible ethnic and linguistic diversity lie within this rather small, but geographically divided and largely mountainous region. Indeed, depending on how they are counted, there are as many as 50–200 different ethnic groups and 5 different DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-1 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
2 M. Hakan Yavuz and Michael M. Gunter language families including Indo-European (Armenian being one small example) and Altaic (Azerbaijani being a larger representative).1 Karabakh itself is a small, landlocked area of varying sizes, depending on whose precise narrative one hears, in the South Caucasus, now usually referred to as Transcaucasia as distinct from the Russian North Caucasus or Ciscaucasia. Many would divide Karabakh into three areas: Nagorno (Mountainous) Karabakh, Lowland Karabakh to the south, and the eastern slopes of the Zangezur Mountains. Karabakh often is equated with the administrative boundaries of the former Nagorno-Karabakh Russian oblast of 4,400 square kilometers/ 1,700 square miles. However, the area of the entire region comprises some 8,223 square kilometers or 3,175 miles.2 The region has been known as Karabakh (Black Garden) since the thirteenth century. It is the smaller part known today as Nagorno-Karabakh, with its ethnic Armenian majority, that was granted autonomy as an enclave within Turkic-majority Azerbaijan in the early years of the Soviet Union. As long as the Soviet Union remained strong and unifed, this arrangement worked. However, as Ernest Gellner, the renowned scholar of nationalism, warned, “not all nationalisms can be satisfed … because the satisfaction of some spells the frustration of others.”3 When the Soviet Union broke up in 1991 and the Armenians won the ensuing war against Azerbaijan over Karabakh, the unrecognized de facto state that the Armenians eventually carved out not only included the entire area of greater Karabakh, but seven more surrounding districts of Azerbaijan. In fact, the Armenian-occupied area of Nagorno-Karabakh covered 4,400 square kilometers, and with the occupied territories it came to approximately 12,000 square kilometers, representing 14% of Azerbaijan’s total area. Before the First Karabakh War, some 120,000 Armenians lived in the Karabakh region. An estimated 700,000 Azeris were forced from Karabakh and the occupied territories as a consequence of the invasion of the Azerbaijani territories. At the end of the First Karabakh War, Armenian forces completely ethnically cleansed Azerbaijanis from their homes. The same Karabakh confict was the reason that more than 400,000 Armenians from Azerbaijan and 250,000 Azerbaijanis from Armenia were forced to leave their homes. The war resulted in major human sufferings on both sides. The cost of the confict has negatively affected the continuing existence of Armenian communities across Azerbaijan and Azerbaijanis in Armenia. The occupying Armenian forces declared the Republic of Artsakh (refused to use its indigenous name of Karabakh since it was an Azerbaijani name for the region) to deny its Azerbaijani history. Not even the kin-state of Armenia legally recognized this de facto situation whose precedent challenged the territorial integrity of every state on earth including Azerbaijan. Determined to regain its occupied territory, but long stymied not only by its opponents but its own divisions, Azerbaijan fnally recovered its lost territory in the war won in 2020. However, illustrating the most recent deadly results of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Introduction 3 this confict that suddenly unfroze in September–November 2020, Russian President Vladimir Putin declared “there were more than 4,000 killed in both countries … including civilians, 8,000 wounded and thousands driven from their homes.”4 The meanings of the Karabakh region and confict differed signifcantly between Azerbaijanis and Armenians. For Azerbaijan, the earlier loss of Karabakh and the defeat in the frst war signifed their national humiliation, wounded national identity, shattered ideals of territorial integrity, and the failure of their state project. Azerbaijanis had gauged their state and the success of the political leadership against the loss of Karabakh and prior defeat. For Armenians, it symbolized their victory to protect what they saw as a key historical center and to consolidate Armenian national identity and state building. Using a longer historical lens, the Armenians saw the earlier victory as revenge for Armenian massacres, also called “genocide,” at the hands of the Ottoman Turks in the early twentieth century. Armenia’s military victory against Azerbaijan emboldened the ties with the diaspora of Armenian communities. It was an act in which the victim managed to become victimizer. The Karabakh defeat constantly reminded the Azerbaijanis what they had lost, while the Karabakh victory reminded the Armenians what they could achieve as they sought a strategy of “new wars, new territories.” In the prior confict, the victorious Armenian army, fostered an image of becoming the most powerful army in the Caucasus. Yet, this military victory also facilitated a continuing fow of Armenians emigrating to Russia, Europe, and the United States. While Armenia wanted to expand its borders, many Armenians, especially those who were upper-middle class and well educated, left their country for good. The confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan progressed through several stages. The frst concluded with the 1994 ceasefre agreement. Although skirmishes and military movements continued along the contact lines, some experts wrongfully labeled the situation as a “frozen” confict. The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) of the Minsk Group assured the status quo in favor of Armenia for more than a quarter of a century. The main issues with which the Minsk Group was tasked to address, which were identifed and updated as the Madrid Principles of 2007-09, were the return of the occupied territories (surrounding Karabakh); the future status of Nagorno-Karabakh; the return of Azerbaijani refugees; and the status of the “Lachin Corridor” (connecting Karabakh to Armenia). During this period, while Armenia attempted to consolidate its military occupation and aggravate the situation with humiliating rhetoric directed against their enemy, Azerbaijan deployed its resources to prepare for an eventual repeat of the war to liberate their territories and resuscitate their national pride and identity. Azerbaijan cultivated its own rhetoric of humiliation targeting Armenia. In short, Armenia won the war, but not the peace and the confict drained resources from both countries. Neither the mediators not the hegemon, mainly Russia, sought to change the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
4 M. Hakan Yavuz and Michael M. Gunter dynamics of bilateral relations and instead exploited the confict for their own interests by selling weapons or pitting one side against the other. The second stage of the confict was triggered as a result of a confrontation between the two armies on the night of 2 and 3 April 2016. This was the largest confrontation since the 1994 ceasefre and it lasted for four days. Azerbaijan had tried repeatedly to unfreeze the confict. Therefore, a key question to be explored in this book is when and under what conditions do conficts frozen in tension thaw and unleash a new round of military activity? Another is how did Armenia’s negative framing of the Azerbaijanis as lazy, backward, unpatriotic, and corrupt, in turn, shape Armenian military and foreign policies? The Karabakh Confict also has regional implications. Russia and Iran have traditionally supported Armenia, whereas Turkey and Israel have backed Azerbaijan. Zbigniew Brzezinski, among the most prominent geostrategists of the contemporary era, focused on Western dominance at the expense of Russia and China. In his 1997 work The Grand Chessboard: American Primacy and Its Geostrategic Imperatives, he called upon European powers to become involved in the Azeri-Armenian dispute on Baku’s side. He wrote, “Azerbaijan is […] geopolitically critical. […] It can serve as a corridor for Western access to the energy-rich Caspian Sea basin and Central Asia.”5 Therefore, to weaken Russia’s position in the Caucasus, a potent Azerbaijan is the catalyst to direct the debate among Russian’s Turkic populations. Armenia believes that it has no option but to depend on Russia, as the country sustains a deep, ingrained suspicion toward Turkey and Azerbaijan. Russia exploited this animosity and today major industries and public utility frms in Armenia are owned by Russia. Russia protects the borders of Armenia and, in turn, Armenia provides the locations for Russian military bases. Russia would not prefer Armenia to develop closer economic and political ties with the West. The continuation of the Karabakh confict serves Russian interests to control Armenia and Azerbaijan. This explains why Russia will refuse to resolve conclusively the matter of the Karabakh region in its own interests of keeping intact its regional role as a mediator. In addition, the Karabakh confict6 also constitutes the most recent example of the continuing clash between the oft-opposed international legal/political doctrines of self-determination and territorial integrity.7 The United Nations Charter includes specifc references to self-determination in Articles 1(2) and 55, and to territorial integrity in Article 2(4). Put simply, self-determination refers to the right of a people to choose their own form of government (usually independence), while territorial integrity means the right of a state to maintain its existing borders.8 Thus, in the case of Karabakh, Armenia has supported the doctrine of self-determination because the vast majority of its population is ethnic Armenian. On the other hand, Azerbaijan has maintained the doctrine of territorial integrity because Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan.9 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Introduction 5 In this up-to-date, multi-, and inter-disciplinary study, proven, objective experts on the subject analyze it from all the main sides in light of the most recent war over Karabakh that raged from September–November 2020. Although there are past studies, no one has analyzed Karabakh in light of this later war and in such a broad perspective that gives weight to all sides of this confict. As already noted, this is a very appropriate time to reconsider Karabakh in light of its signifcant importance for ethnic confict in general, the post-Soviet Caucasus specifcally, and the most recent war just fought over the area from September–November 2020. This will be a reference book on the historical, social, and political aspects of the Karabakh issue regarding its origins, development, and the current status of the confict subsequent to the war in the autumn of 2020. Thus, the main themes will stress these points as well as the importance of the Karabakh issue for the future by considering its precedents and implications for other secessionist wars, how such wars begin and end, the international legal precedents of self-determination vs. territorial integrity, its implications for post-Soviet developments and conficts, and the latest successful weapons developments lessons from the recent war involving drones, among others. Clearly, this up-to-date collection of chapters on Karabakh has importance in a number of different areas. The following 19 chapters are divided into four parts. The frst part examines the region’s “Conceptual and Historical Origins.” Among the questions highlighted are: What is the historical and political background of Karabakh? How did Sovietization shape the regional identity? What were the aspects of the cultural, demographic, and political development under Soviet rule? How did the Soviet legacy and the nation-state building project shape the Karabakh confict? What were the respective demands of Armenians and Azerbaijanis before and after World War I? Thus, in Chapter 1, Kamala Imranli-Lowe, “Karabakh: Historical Background” presents an outline of the historical and political history of Karabakh. It examines major academic discourses on the subject and provides an insight into the religious, ideological, and ethnic transformations during the medieval and modern period. In Chapter 2, Jamil Hasanli, “The Sovietization of Azerbaijan and a Road to Autonomy in Nagorno-Karabakh (1920–1923)” maintains that the truth regarding this hotly contested subject can easily be recovered from numerous documents in which the military and diplomatic services of the Russian Empire and Soviet Russia carefully registered the facts that prove that the Nagorno-Karabakh region has never been part of Armenia during Soviet times. In Chapter 3, Eldar Abbasov uses insights gained from earning his PhD from Moscow State University and working in the Russian Foreign Ministry to analyze “Armenian Irredendist Nationalism and Its Transformation into the Mass Karabakh Movement, ‘MIATSUM’ (1965–1988).” Abbasov examines the historical process of the emergence and formation of Armenian Soviet irredentist nationalism, the purpose of which was the annexation Uploaded by S. M. Safi
6 M. Hakan Yavuz and Michael M. Gunter of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region and the Nakhichevan ASSR, which are part of the Azerbaijan SSR, to the Armenian SSR. This process began to take shape in the mid-1960s against the background of the preparation and holding of events dedicated to the 50th anniversary of the Armenian massacres in the Ottoman Empire in 1915 at the height of World War I. However, before Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, this process was sluggish and was mainly expressed in appeals sent to the Central Committee of the CPSU by the party leadership of Armenia, and representatives of the scientifc and creative intelligentsia of Armenia. The policy of perestroika and glasnost opened up new opportunities for strengthening Armenian Irredentist Nationalism and turning it into a mass Karabakh movement, or as Armenian historians call it, “Miatsum” – “The Reunifcation of the ancestral Armenian lands.” Chapter 4 by Farid Shafyev, “The Orientalizing of Azerbaijanis and the Armenia-Azerbaijan Confict” investigates the image of Azerbaijanis and Azerbaijan in the context of the Armenia-Azerbaijan confict in the Western English language and Russian media. The author posits that Western and Russian experts and journalists traditionally, beginning from 1905, viewed the confict between Azerbaijanis and Armenians through an Orientalist perspective that manifested certain biases toward Muslims by Western historians, literary experts, and journalists. The second part of this book analyzes “The First Karabakh War and the Consequences.” It asks what were the causes, events, and social, political, and economic consequences of this First Karabakh War that coincided with the collapse of the Soviet Union? Why did four earlier ceasefre attempts fail but the most recent one (1994), before the 2020 war, prevail? How did ideologies and confgurations of domestic politics and the regional system drive the process for peace talks? Why did the international community (e.g., OSCE, Minsk Group) fail to resolve the confict? Did the presence of international mediation actually perpetuate the confict? What should be the role of international intervention in such frozen or dormant conficts? In Chapter 5, Michael M. Gunter, “Self-determination or Territorial Integrity? International Legal/Political Doctrines in Opposition and Their Implications for Karabakh” demonstrates that the long-running, frozen-unfrozen confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Karabakh (Artsakh) constitutes the most recent example of the continuing clash between the oft-opposed international legal/political doctrines of self-determination and territorial integrity. Chapter 6 by Shamkhal Abilov and Ceyhun Mahmudlu, “The UN Security Council Resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh” notes that during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the UN Security Council adopted four resolutions, namely, 822, 853, 874, and 884, as a result of the occupation of Azerbaijani regions that were outside of the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast by Armenian forces. The resolutions condemned the occupation of these Azerbaijani regions and demanded respect for its sovereignty and territorial integrity. Furthermore, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Introduction 7 by these resolutions, the Security Council demanded the immediate cessation of hostilities and hostile acts that endangered peace and security in the region, and the immediate, full, and unconditional withdrawal of all forces from all the occupied territories of Azerbaijan. In Chapter 7, Araz Aslanli, “The Politics of Ceasefre and the Occupation” traces the ceasefre initiatives, agreements, and failures from 1988 to 1994 by focusing on the key political and military actors of the period. The main question the chapter will seek to answer is why so many ceasefre agreements failed and why and how did the 1994 ceasefre last close to three decades? When and under what conditions are ceasefre agreements likely to prevail or fail? Farhad Mirzayev writes in Chapter 8 on the “Nagorno-Karabakh Confict: International Law Appraisal.” Among other points, his chapter deals with the question of the legality of the armed activities and legality of resort to force by Azerbaijan. The analysis tackles this question in the context of international obligations of states to settle international disputes amicably. The central question addressed under this theme is whether Azerbaijan’s commitment to the peace process within the OSCE Minsk Group precluded its right to use force in self-defense. In Chapter 9, Kamal Makili-Aliyev analyzes “International Law and the Changes in the Status Quo of the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict in 2020.” This article reviews general international legal issues of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict, analyzes international law and scholarship regarding the use of force by Azerbaijan during the armed hostilities, and analyzes the new ceasefre agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan from the point of view of international law. While noting the changes that the hostilities brought to the legal questions related to the confict, the study critically reviews the current “use of force” discussion in the scholarship and points to the fact that the aforementioned agreement is actually a treaty under public international law. Among the questions explored in Part III “The Second Karabakh War and the Consequences” are: What were the causes of the recent war? How did the war shape domestic and foreign policies of regional countries? What elements of nationalist rhetoric of both Azerbaijan and Armenia were signifcant in discourse about the Karabakh issue and how did this reignite the confict? What were the failures that blocked fnding a peaceful compromise prior to the latest outbreak of hostilities? How did the Karabakh confict draw in regional powers? In what ways has a peaceful solution of the Karabakh confict been obstructed by local actors and/or regional countries (i.e., Russia, France, Turkey, Iran)? Thus, in Chapter 10, Edward J. Erickson (a retired Professor of Military History from the U.S Department of War Studies at the Marine Corps University) in “How Do We Explain Victory: The Karabakh Campaign of 2020” presents an analysis of the Azerbaijani Army’s successful 2020 campaign to seize geographically and politically important parts of Nagorno-Karabakh from the Armenian Army. Then in Chapter 11, Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoglu in “The Causes and Consequences of the Second Karabakh War” argue that the Second Uploaded by S. M. Safi
8 M. Hakan Yavuz and Michael M. Gunter Karabakh War had several major causes. First, Azerbaijan believed that the situation was ripe to restore its territorial integrity. Azerbaijan had persistently worked to create a power asymmetry in its own favor, and it was the time to change the status quo in the region. The political leadership of Azerbaijan also aimed at gaining stronger national support to consolidate its power in the country. Second, the Armenian leadership totally misread the military and political balance of power between the two countries and had faith in external forces to maintain its occupation. The rhetoric of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was also a factor in destroying any hope for a peaceful solution. Third, even if Russia was not interested in a new war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, it was indifferent to the war because it wanted to facilitate its access to the Near East through new corridors that would result from the war. Moscow also aimed to block the integration of both Armenia and Azerbaijan with the West and keep them within the sphere of its own infuence. In addition, Russian President Vladimir Putin used the Karabakh War to further pull Turkey away from NATO. Finally, Turkey was supportive of the Azerbaijan position because Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan wanted to increase his state’s infuence in the South Caucasus. More importantly, Turkey wanted to provide political and strategic support to Azerbaijan in this historical moment to make up the missed opportunities in the early 1990s. Erdogan’s aspirations to increase his popularity in both Turkey and Azerbaijan also played a role in the confict escalation. Part IV on “Foreign Policy and the Karabakh War” analyzes the foreign-policy roles the United States, Russia, Israel, Iran, Egypt, and Canada played. How have regional actors (Russia, Turkey, and Iran) infuenced the confict? What were the major regional impacts of the war? Did they further lead to fragmentation or remove the obstacles away from possible regional cooperation? What are the prospects of a sustainable peace after the current (2020) ceasefre? Therefore, in Chapter 12, “Turkish Foreign Policy and the Karabakh Confict,” M. Hakan Yavuz examines the evolution of Turkey’s policy toward the Karabakh confict by emphasizing ideational and material factors. Although international media have blamed Turkey for instigating the current confict, Turkey’s role has been limited to the planning of the war, along with diplomatic and moral support. Yet, under Erdogan’s leadership, Turkey has shifted from a passive to a more active, supporting role for the cause of Azerbaijan. Thus, the question is what mix of ideational, domestic political, and external factors of politics and policy arose to drive this shift in Turkey’s role? Yavuz’s chapter focuses on the following factors to explain the shift in Turkey’s foreign policy: (1) the Turks’ view of the Azerbaijanis as ethnic kin whom they are obligated to support; the coalition between Turkey’s nationalists and Erdogan played an important role in Erdogan’s open support for Azerbaijan; (2) the fact that Azerbaijan did not attack another country but sought instead to restore its own territorial integrity—a cause seen by many Turks as morally and legally Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Introduction 9 just; (3) the ingrained and politically motivated feeling among the majority of Turks that Armenia has always been subservient to Europe and Russia in its quest to restore its status as a major power; and, most critically, (4) the role of economic relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan. For example, the Azerbaijani oil company, SOCAR, is the largest foreign investor in Turkey. Moreover, Azerbaijan has been the key source for Turkey’s energy needs. In Chapter 13, Emil Avdaliani, “Georgia and the Second Karabakh War” explains how and why, though a neighbor to Armenia and Azerbaijan, Georgia has traditionally expressed the least geopolitical interest in being involved in the Nagorno-Karabakh confict. However, the 2020 war between Baku and Yerevan changed the way Georgia viewed the confict and the threats emanating from it. In Chapter 14, Esmira Jafarova. “The Role of the United States in the Armenia–Azerbaijan Confict” explains how the United States got the chance to engage with the three Caucasian republics only upon the dissolution of the Soviet Union. The support for the territorial integrity of all regional states has been the mainstream approach of the U.S. policy. However, in the case of the Armenia-Azerbaijan confict, unequivocal U.S. support for Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity was often challenged by the infuence of large Armenian lobby groups on the U.S. Congress and other state institutions, which sometimes introduced “corrections” in the U.S. approach to this confict for balancing purposes such as the imposition of section 907 to the Freedom Support Act in the early 1990s. Chapter 15 by Orhan Gafarli, “The Russian Role in the Karabakh Confict” argues that by constructing the South Caucasus region on the concept of the center-periphery, Russia tries to maintain its regional power through frozen conficts to increase its infuence on both sides. In addition, this chapter focuses on how and why Russian foreign policy changed according to (A) the First Karabakh War, 1991–1994, (B) the four-day war in 2016, and (C) the Second Karabakh War in 2020. The chapter also examines Russia's approaches for the solution of the Karabakh confict by focusing on the “package plan,” “step by step plan,” “common state,” “land swap,” and Madrid and Kazan Principles and what they mean for Russia. In Chapter 16, Michael B. Bishku, “Israeli Foreign Policy toward the Karabakh Confict” recounts how the breakup of the Soviet Union at the end of the Cold War afforded Israel the opportunity of developing relations with newly independent, post-Soviet states. Israel conceived of a new security partnership, which is referred to as “Periphery 2.0,” including Azerbaijan, as the two countries shared concerns regarding Iran. Meanwhile, Israel paid far less attention to Armenia and disturbed that country with its refusal to recognize the tragedy of the Armenians during World War I as a “genocide.” Following the Mavi Marmara incident in 2010, as relations between Israel and Turkey deteriorated, ties between Israel and Azerbaijan continued to thrive as Azerbaijan purchased more armaments from Israel, hoping to regain Karabakh, while the Israelis bought substantial amounts of oil from Azerbaijan. Currently, Israel is very pleased with having close security Uploaded by S. M. Safi
10 M. Hakan Yavuz and Michael M. Gunter ties with a Muslim-populated country like Azerbaijan, while Azerbaijan is able to enhance its relations with the United States through Israel and be able to counter the Armenian lobby in Washington, D.C. Chapter 17, authored by Mesiagha Mahammadi and Vasif Huseynov, “Iran’s Policies toward the Karabakh Confict” analyzes how ethnic kinship and family ties between the Iranian Azerbaijanis and the people of Republic of Azerbaijan, and the advance level of relations between Azerbaijan on the one hand, and Turkey and Israel on the other hand, have been only some of the factors that have affected Iran’s stance and policies toward the Karabakh confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Against the backdrop of these factors, Iran has followed a number of key objectives, such as to prevent any extension of the confict inwards to its territories and to block the intervention of the non-regional global powers such as the United States and Israel in the settlement of the confict. Chapter 18, by Brendon Cannon, “The Arab States and the Karabakh War” argues to date, the connections, actions, and interests of Arab states such as Egypt, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates with the Caucasus region remain tenuous and thus an understudied feld in international politics. With the resumption of the Karabakh confict in 2020, however, certain Arab states showed a keen interest in affecting the outcomes. However, these Arab interests had less to do with the belligerent states and more to do with the role played by neighboring Turkey, and how the confict’s outcomes would affect distributions of power across the Middle East. Finally, in Chapter 19, Ozay Mehmet, “The Nagorno-Karabakh War: Diaspora Politics in Canadian Foreign Policy” critically examines Ottawa's pro-Armenian policy in relation to the war over Nagorno-Karabakh during the fall of 2020, emphasizing that it does not follow the traditional Canadian foreign policy. Rather, this case has been shaped by the Armenian diaspora in Canada. For reasons explained in the chapter, the conduct of Canadian foreign policy in this case is inconsistent with the Canadian reputation as a multicultural model that respects international law and human rights. The chapter also argues that this case fails to promote solidarity within the NATO alliance and violates the UN rules. Notes 1 The ancient and now assimilated Caucasian Albanians and Iberians (modern Georgians), who have nothing to do with their spurious namesakes in Europe to the West, add to the mixed, ethnic confusion. A further hint of the controversy this subject can engender is revealed by the term Caucasian as a synonym for the White race, as scientifcally this meaning is clearly of invalid authenticity. 2 On these fgures, see by Robert H. Hewsen, “The Meliks of Eastern Armenia: A Preliminary Study,” Revue des etudes Armeniennes NS: IX, (1970), p. 288; and Armenia: A Historical Atlas (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2001), p. 264. 3 Ernest Gellner, Nations and Nationalism, 2nd ed. (Ithaca, NY: Blackwell Publishing, 2006), p. 2. In words that seem to have been written precisely for Karabakh, Gellner continues, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Introduction 11 This argument is further and immeasurably strengthened by the fact that very many of the potential nations of this world live … not in compact territorial units but intermixed with each other in complex patterns. It follows that a territorial political unit can only become ethnically homogeneous, in such cases, if it either kills, or expels, or assimilates all non-nationals. Their unwillingness to suffer such fates may make the peaceful implementation of the nationalist principle diffcult. Ibid. 4 “Hundreds of Dead Armenian Soldiers Shown in Nagorno-Karabakh,” Novinite.com (Sofa News Agency), November 13, 2020, https://www.novinite. com/articles/206519/Hundreds+of+Dead+Armenian+Soldiers+Shown+in+ Nagorno-Karabakh, accessed November 14, 2020. 5 Zbigniew Brzezinski, The Grand Chessboard: American Primacy and Its Geostrategic Imperatives (New York: Basic Books, 1997), p. 46. 6 For background on Karabakh, see Svante E. Cornell, The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict, Report no. 46, Department of East European Studies, Uppsala University, Sweden, 1999; Thomas de Waal, Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan through Peace and War (New York: New York University Press, 2003); and Thomas Goltz, Azerbaijan Dairy: A Rogue Reporter’s Adventures in an OilRich, War-Torn, Post-Soviet Republic (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe Press, 1998). More recently, see Michael Kambeck and Sargis Ghazaryan, eds. Europe’s Next Avoidable War: Nagorno-Karabakh (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013); and Arsene Saparov, From Confict to Autonomy in the Caucasus: The Soviet Union and the Making of Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno Karabakh (London and New York: Routledge, 2015), among others. 7 Other recent examples that involve various elements of the inherent contradiction between these two conficting doctrines, but in each case have their unique characteristics it should be noted, include Kosovo, Eritrea, Western Sahara, East Timor (Timor-Leste), Belize, Gibraltar, the Falkland Islands (Malvinas), the Basques, Biafra, Catalonia, Chechnya, Eastern Ukraine, the Kurds, Northern Cyprus, and Scotland, among numerous others. For background on over 40 self-determination conficts including Karabakh outside the colonial context that have appeared virtually impossible to settle, see Marc Weller, “Settling Self-Determination Conficts: Recent Developments,” The European Journal of International Law 20:1 (2009), pp. 111–164. For many further possible examples, see James Minahan, Nations without States: A Historical Dictionary of Contemporary National Movements (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996). 8 The legal doctrines of sovereignty meaning unlimited power or better just independence, and uti possidetis meaning that old administrative colonial boundaries would remain legal international boundaries upon independence are closely related to and tend to reinforce the concept of territorial integrity. In general, see Peter Malanczuk, Akehurst’s Modern Introduction to International Law, 7th revised edition (London and New York; Routledge, 1997), pp. 17–18 and 162, 163. The most comprehensive analysis of statehood creation in international law is arguably James R. Crawford, The Creation of States in International Law, 2nd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006). 9 As Svante Cornell noted when the present confict was still in its earlier stages: “The Armenians invoked the principle of peoples’ right to self-determination, and the Azeris defended the principle of territorial integrity.” Nagorno-Karabakh Confict, p. 25. Thomas de Waal concurred: “A resolution of the issue had to reconcile the competing claims of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and Karabakh’s self-determination (or, in blunter language, de facto secession).” Black Garden, p. 255. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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Part I Conceptual and Historical Origins Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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1 Karabakh Historical Background Kamala Imranli-Lowe Introduction Writing the history of Karabakh is just as diffcult an undertaking as settling its confict involving Armenia and Azerbaijan. It is especially challenging when it comes to imagining the region’s distant past, which relies heavily on extant manuscripts where the originals have been lost. These sources, which have undergone repeated revisions by countless scribes to ft, inter alia, contemporary political, ecclesiastical and ideological demands, have been the major narratives used for (re-)constructions of the history in later periods. The mixture of nationalist agendas connected with nation and state-building with imperialistic ambitions in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries also created favourable grounds for further revisions of the historical sources, bringing them into agreement with contemporary political goals. The appearance of print editions based on the extant manuscripts and their translations, with the aim of raising the respective masses’ awareness of their “historical homeland”, as well as the emergence of new rewritten histories in this period, played an important role in the territorial conficts between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the early twentieth century. The continuation of the Karabakh confict into the present day, on the other hand, has further encouraged the use of history as a political tool. It has also brought about primordialist approaches to historical research, by constructing a historical ethnic link between the region and its population from time immemorial. The confict, and the connected retrospective essentialisation of ethnicity, has made it almost impossible for scholars to agree on a mutually acceptable history of Karabakh, and the issue is likely to remain unresolved. This chapter is an attempt to give an outline of the complicated political history of Karabakh from the classical to the modern period. It draws mainly on scholarly work, as well as offcial sources, but does not discuss historical narratives, given the length of the period in question and of this chapter. Hence, the chapter seeks to provide a brief description of the political aspects of Karabakh’s history up until 1918–1920/1921, since when DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-3 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
16 Kamala Imranli-Lowe the confict has entered state level with the emergence of the frst Azerbaijani and Armenian republics. Ancient and Medieval Karabakh in Academic Discourse “Karabakh” is the term by which is roughly understood the area of the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (province) and the seven surrounding districts of Azerbaijan. Though the current stage of the confict started in the late 1980s, with the Armenian demands regarding the transfer of the oblast from Soviet Azerbaijan to Soviet Armenia, it spread into the adjacent districts in the 1990s. The contemporary understanding of the “Karabakh” notion implies an area smaller than its historical designations in the late medieval and modern periods. As for the ancient and early medieval periods, the area of contemporary Karabakh corresponded to that of Orkhistena (Artsakh1) and partly Otene (Uti), provinces in Caucasian Albania, until the country came under Arab rule in 705. Academic discourse on the boundaries of Albania,2 as it is named in Greco-Latin sources, in this period includes various views which can be grouped as follows: • • • The territory of Albania broadly corresponded to that of modern Azerbaijan, reaching Derbent in the north-east and the modern-day border between Azerbaijan and Georgia in the north-west, the Caspian Sea in the east and the Araz River (Arax/Araxes) in the south (Minorsky 1953a, 504; Mamedova 2005, 273; Barthold 2012). Artsakh and Uti provinces to the south of the Kur River were part of Albania from the ancient to the early medieval periods, except for the second century BCE–fourth century CE, when they were part of Armenia (Hübschman 1904, 266; Eremian 1958a, 310; Trever 1959, 58). Artsakh and Uti were originally parts of Armenia. Only in the late fourth–ffth centuries CE did Albania extend southwards to include the Armenian principalities between the Kur and Araz rivers (Adontz 1970, 173–179; Hewsen 2013, xxxi; Svazian 2015, 48–56). The above-mentioned differences in views can be explained by conficting and unclear information in the extant versions of classical and Armenian sources with numerous interpolations in their manuscript bases, which in their turn date from long after their lost originals. Also, most of the authors were not contemporary to the events narrated, had not visited the places described and relied on unverifed information from other sources. Some authors did not use any written sources, and many narratives contained legends and did not correspond to the realities of the period under consideration. Study of the political history of Albania has also suffered from politically motivated readings of the sources, as well as inconsistencies in reasoning and conficting views by the same scholars on the same subjects. The issue is also complicated by the fact that for a long time historians have Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Karabakh: Historical Background 17 relied predominantly on the Armenian written tradition, while lacking sources in Albanian. However, despite disagreements among scholars on the boundaries of Albania, as explained above, there seems to be unanimous agreement that the country covered the area roughly corresponding to that of modern Azerbaijan in the fourth–ffth centuries CE, and included the area of present-day Karabakh. Albania was mainly populated by Caucasian-speaking Albanians, one of the autochthonous peoples of the Caucasus whose nobility adopted Christianity in the fourth century. Albanians had their own alphabet of 52 phonemes, which was still in use in the thirteenth–fourteenth centuries (Eremian 1958b, 329), and a Bible translated into their language (Gevond 1862, 44; Aleksidze 2003, 100–107). According to contemporary Arab geographers, Albanian or al-Rāniyya was still the dominant language in Albania in the tenth century (Minorsky 1953a, 504; Frye 2012; Vacca 2017, 30). Alongside Albanians, who are today considered to count among the ancestors of modern Azerbaijanis, Albania was also populated by Iranian-speaking Tats, Talysh and Kurds, and Turkic-speaking tribes. The Arab conquest and spread of Islam, followed by the arrival of Islamised Arab, Iranian and Turco-Mongol settlers, resulted in religious and ethno-linguistic transformations in Albania. The fate of the Albanians, especially their correlation with Armenians and Georgians due to their Christian past, has been controversial. The controversies attach, essentially, to the period up to which Albanian people existed as political entities and had their own church. Nicholas Marr (1915, 20–21) considered in his work some of the Christian Albanians assimilated by Armenians and Georgians by the eleventh century. According to Il’ia Petrushevskii (1930, 8), the church in Albania served as a tool for Armenianisation in the country. This became apparent from the early eighth century, after the overthrow of the dyophysite Albanian Catholicos by the monophysite Armenian Catholicos with the help of the Arab caliph. Suren Eremian (1958b, 328) wrote that the population in the Albanian provinces of Artsakh and in most of Uti had already been assimilated by Armenians by the time of the establishment of Arab rule in the early eighth century. However, Eremian (1958c, 534) also referred to “local feudals”, who were permitted by the Arabs to retain lands in the mountains of Karabakh and southern slopes of the Caucasus Mountains, as Udins-Albanians. The historian argued that the part of the Albanian population that was not yet “ethnically and culturally” assimilated by the Armenians and Georgians adopted Islam and was Turkicised by the Turkic tribes, who later settled in its former territory. Thus, the Azerbaijani people was formed (Eremian 1958b, 330). Accordingly, the Albanian Church has been considered part of the Armenian Church since the seventh/early eighth century (Eremian 1958b, 328). Farida Mamedova (2005, 389–390, 616–619) considered that the majority of Albanians living on the lower reaches of the Kur and Araz rivers were Uploaded by S. M. Safi
18 Kamala Imranli-Lowe Islamised after the arrival of Arabs, and assimilated with Turkic-speaking peoples who had been living in Albania since the early centuries CE. Their number was increased by the new arrivals of Turkic tribes over the following centuries. As for the Armenianisation process of the remaining Christian Albanians, this historian is of the view that the process could only start after the liquidation of the independent Albanian Catholicosate in the early nineteenth century. The thesis on the Albanian church being considered as part of the Armenian church since the seventh/early eighth century, and the “ethnic and cultural” assimilation of the Albanians in the medieval period, can be challenged with a great deal of evidence from Armenian and Albanian historical narratives. For example, The Chronicle by Matthew of Edessa (2017, I, 2), an Armenian historian who lived in the eleventh–twelfth centuries, includes interesting data about the Albanian kings and catholicoses of the tenth–eleventh centuries. The historian, inter alia, relates an invitation to the “most praiseworthy Lord Yovhanne’s, kat’oghikos of the land of the Aghuans [Albanians], and forty bishops with him” and “P’illipos, king of the Aghuans, … the son of Goghazgak, son of Vach’agan, [from a line] which had been kings of the land of the Aghuans” to attend the coronation of “Gagik, son of Ashot” as the king of Armenia in the city of Ani in 961. Matthew of Edessa (2017, II, 81) also contrasts the period when there existed simultaneous Armenian catholicoses at the end of the eleventh and early twelfth centuries to the stable situation in the Albanian Catholicosate in the same period, writing that the church in Albania “remained unshaken and secure, with its patriarchate and monarchy to the present [end of the eleventh and early twelfth centuries]”. The frst evidence concerns the period when, as a result of the gradual weakening of the Arab caliphate, various political entities emerged in the territories under Arab rule in the ninth century. They included Armenian polities such as Kars, Ani and Vaspurakan in the territory of present-day Turkey, as well as Albanian ones such as Siunia (Siunik, Siwnik), Khachen-Artsakh and Shaki (Sheki) in the territory of the former Albania. The Christian rulers of these Albanian polities were the descendants of the Mihranid dynasty (Imranli-Lowe 2020, 263). According to some authors, the Mihranids were of Sasanian origin (Kagankatvatsi 1861/Dasxuranci 1961, III, 22; Krymsky 1938, 373; Barthold 1963, 673), while for some, they were of Parthian descent (Minorsky 1958, 12; Vacca 2017, 219). The Mihranids, having adopted Christianity in the seventh century and intermarried with local Albanian nobility, were called an “Albanian national dynasty” by Vasily (also known as Wilhelm) Barthold (1963, 673; Minorsky 1953a, 504–529; Imranli-Lowe 2020, 263). Contemporary Arabic authors referred to Albania as al-Rān (Arran) and gave contradictory defnitions of the term. According to Barthold (2012), as was the case in ancient times for Albania, the name Arran originally referred to the whole region from Darband in the north-east to Tifis in the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Karabakh: Historical Background 19 west and the Araz River in the south and south-west. Richard Frye (2012) applied this notion to the area between the Kur and Araz rivers. Minorsky (1958, 17–18) referred to “the two Arrans” on the northern and the southern banks of the Kur River and mentioned that, in 950–1050, Arran referred to the area south of the Kur River. In 885/6 the Albanian/Arran kingdom was “partly restored” under King Gregor-Hamam, who was descended from lords of two polities: Siunia and Khachen. The boundaries of the kingdom extended from the eastern bank of Lake Sevan in the west to Barda in the east, on the right bank of the Kur River, and also included Kambisena-Shaki (Sheki) on the left bank (Kagankatvatsi 1861/Dasxuranci 1961, III, 21, 22; Krymsky 1938, 374–375; Mamedova 2005, 394–395; Draskhanakertsi 1986, 33, n.11, 136). The important role played by Siunia among the Albanian polities, who provided Albania/Arran with kings, lasted until 1166, when it passed to Khachen-Artsakh. The centre of this polity, which Iosif Orbeli calls “a part of the ancient Albania” and was ruled by Hasan Jalal from 1142, was the basin of Khachenchay and partly that of the Tartar (Minorsky 1953a, 526; Orbeli 1963, 146). These Albanian polities existed either as vassals or as parts of the Muslim states of the Shirvanshahs, Sajids, Salarids, Shaddadids, Seljukids and Khwarazm in the period from the ninth century to the late 1220s. Another Hasan Jalal in the thirteenth century, who was described as the “king of Albania”, “great guardian of borders of Albania”, “lord of Khachen and Arran”, “lord of lords of Khachen” and with other titles on inscriptions dating from 1229 to 1296, declared his obedience to the Mongols in 1238/40. Khachen-Artsakh remained the vassal of the Mongols till the rule of the Timurids in the late fourteenth and early ffteenth centuries (Orbeli 1963, 150–158, 161; ImranliLowe 2020, 269, n.15, 274). According to Frye (2012), under the Mongols Arran and Azerbaijan (in present-day Iran) were joined together and ruled by single governors, and the area between the Kur and Araz rivers came to be called Qarabağ (Karabakh, meaning “black garden”, in Turkic). Mongol and Timurid rule, which was followed by that of the Qara qoyunlu (Black sheep) and Aq qoyunlu (White sheep), the confederations of the Turkic Oghuz tribes from Eastern Anatolia, in the ffteenth century, strengthened the numerical domination of Turkic peoples in the territory of the present-day Azerbaijan Republic (Imranli-Lowe 2020, 269). Karabakh in the Modern Period Karabakh has witnessed important political developments in its modern history. These include the rule of and rivalry between the states of the Turkic Safavids and Ottomans, the domination of the Turkic Afsharid dynasty under Nadir shah of Iran, and short-lived independence under Panah khan of the Turkic Javanshir clan, which was followed by its annexation by Russia. Each of these political changes had implications for the region’s future and Uploaded by S. M. Safi
20 Kamala Imranli-Lowe for the peoples who inhabited it. The frst period of rivalry between the new players, namely, the Safavids and the Ottomans, who entered the political life of the Caucasus by contesting its possession in the sixteenth–eighteenth centuries in a number of wars, did not avoid Karabakh. The region for the most part of this period remained under the rule of the Safavids, with about two decades of Ottoman rule between the Istanbul I (or Ferhat Pasha) Treaty of 1590, when all of the southern Caucasus came under the Ottoman dominion, and Istanbul II (or Nasuh Pasha) of 1612. Under the latter, the Ottomans had to return the recently occupied territories by establishing the borders of the Amasya Treaty of 1555, when most parts of southern Caucasus, including Karabakh, had remained under the rule of the Safavids (Kilic 2001, 77, 131, 145, 167–170, 199). The Safavid administration was organised into thirteen provinces or baylarbayliks (beglarbegliks) governed by baylarbayis (beglarbegis), one of four classes of amirs of the frontiers, of which Tabriz, Chukhur-i Sad, Qarabağ-Ganja (Karabakh-Ganja) and Shirvan – together termed as “Azerbaijan” – covered the territories of present-day Azerbaijan and Armenia, as well as parts of Iran, Turkey, Georgia and Dagestan. One of these four provinces, namely Karabakh-Ganja, included the area between the Kur and Araz rivers in the territory of present-day Azerbaijan, as well as parts of Armenia and Georgia. During and after the time of Safavid Shah Tahmasp I (1524–1576), Karabakh-Ganja baylarbaylik was governed by the Ziyadoghlu family from Turkic Gajarid dynasty, except for a brief period of Ottoman rule at the end of the sixteenth-early seventeenth centuries (Petrushevskii 1949, 122–124; Tadhkirat al-Muluk 1980, 44, 100–102, 164–168; Imranli-Lowe 2020, 271). The situation continued until the 1720s when the province once again came under the Ottoman dominion following the Istanbul Treaty of 1724 between the Ottoman and Russian Empires, which divided the southern Caucasus into Russian and Ottoman spheres. However, this division did not last long, as between 1732 and 1736 the Safavids managed to reclaim the territories lost to the Russians and Ottomans (Butkov 1869, I, 58–62, 110–113, 130–135). In 1736 Nadir khan of the Turkic Afshar tribe and de facto ruler of the Safavid state offcially put an end to the reign of the Safavid dynasty by crowning himself Shah. The power of the Ziyadoghlu family, who were the hereditary governors of the Karabakh-Ganja baylarbaylik, was diminished by Nadir shah, as Ughurlu khan II Ziyadoghlu spoke out for the election of a shah from the Safavid dynasty, although he accepted Nadir as a shah afterwards. Therefore, according to Petrushevskii (1949, 124), Nadir shah transferred the governance of some tribes and fve Albanian melikdoms [counties] in Karabakh from Ughurlu khan II to Ibrahim khan, Nadir’s brother, who was the baylarbayi [governor-general] and commander-in-chief of Azerbaijan, which covered the area of the above-mentioned four baylarbayliks. These melikdoms had emerged in the ffteenth century in the area of the former Khachen-Artsakh principality under Qara qoyunlu ruler Jahan shah Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Karabakh: Historical Background 21 (1438–1467), who had granted the title of melik [count] to the descendants of Hasan Jalal. Nadir shah also subjected some other tribes previously under the rule of Ughurlu khan II to Teymuraz, the vali [governor; viceroy] of Kartli, and thus considerably diminished the area of the former’s rule, leaving behind only the title of baylarbay of Ganja (Petrushevskii 1949, 124). After Nadir shah’s death in 1747, there emerged a multitude of independent and semi-independent entities – the khanates and other smaller principalities, together covering present-day Azerbaijan, Armenia and southern Dagestan. One of these polities was the Karabakh khanate, founded by Panah khan (1747/8–58/9) from the Turkic tribe of Javanshir. Panah khan subjugated the fve Albanian melikdoms of Karabakh, namely Gulustan, Jraberd, Khachen, Varanda and Dizak, as well as enlarging his domain at the expense of the neighbouring khanates of Karadagh, Iravan and Nakhchyvan, and Azerbaijan baylarbaylik. The Karabakh khanate’s frst centre was the Bayat castle built in 1748, from where it moved to Shahbulag castle in 1752. The third and last capital of the khanate was Panahabad, founded by Panah khan in the mid-eighteenth century and named after himself. This was later changed to Shusha, its present name (Mirzə Adıgözəl bəy 1989, n.1, 40–41; Petrushevskii 1949, 136; Imranli [2005] 2006, 6, 11–14). Panah khan was succeeded by his son Ibrahim as khan of Karabakh. Under the Kurakchay Treaty, signed on 14 May 1805 between him and Pavel Tsitsianov, commander-in-chief of the Russian forces in Caucasia, the khanate was annexed by Russia (AKAK 1868, docs.1436–1437, 704–705). This was also reaffrmed by the Gulustan Treaty of 12 October 1813 between Russia and Persia. After the annexation, in 1822, the Karabakh khanate, ruled by Mehdigulu khan (1806–1822) who succeeded his father Ibrahim khan on the basis of the Kurakchay Treaty, was abolished and turned into a province. In 1840 it was turned into the Shusha uezd (district) of the Caspian oblast (province) of the Russian Empire. On the basis of the further administrative changes in 1868 and 1873, Karabakh was divided into four uezds: Javanshir, Shusha, Jabrayil (Garyagin) and the Zangazur uezd of the Elizavetpol guberniia (province) (Mil’man 1966, 67, 113, 156–157). Karabakh, which was a political entity and a natural geographical whole, was thus liquidated and dismembered, while the name itself was removed, as was the case with Ganja, which was renamed Elizavetpol after the occupation of the Ganja khanate by Russia in 1804. The Muslims, who constituted a majority in Karabakh, came to be called Persians, Tatars, Turko-Tatars, Azerbaijani Turks, Azerbaijani Tatars, Turks and, fnally, Azerbaijanis in the period from Russian annexation, through the frst Azerbaijan Republic and Soviet Azerbaijan, to the independent Azerbaijan Republic. Under the preceding Turkic rule of the Caucasus, the Muslim and Christian population of the region, including that of Karabakh, had suffered forced mass evictions, migrations, massacres and land confscations. This also affected those who were suspected of collaborating or sympathising with the Ottomans and were therefore regarded as politically Uploaded by S. M. Safi
22 Kamala Imranli-Lowe unreliable, especially under Safavid Shah Abbas I (1587–1629). The process also continued under Nadir shah (1736–1747) (Petrushevskii 1949, 252–253, 124; Perry 1975, 206–208). The spread of Shi’ism in the southern Caucasus during Safavid rule had also weakened Turkic self-consciousness among the Turkic subjects of the empire. On the other hand, Ottoman and Safavid rule had a signifcant cultural infuence on the region’s diverse population. Many Christians, including Albanians, became Muslim, and the Turkic language was a lingua franca among its inhabitants. Nevertheless, the independent Albanian Catholicosate with its fock on both banks of the Kur River survived until the early nineteenth century. At this time, the southern Caucasus, including Karabakh, came under Christian Russian rule, which had an irreversible impact on the fate of the Christian Albanian population. The Albanian Catholicosate was abolished and turned into a metropolitanate by the Russian authorities in 1815, while its dioceses were subordinated to the Armenian Echmiadzin Catholicosate in 1836. This began the process of the ideological, cultural and ethnic transformation of the Christian Albanians. Church schools, which came under the supervision of Echmiadzin, started indoctrinating Armenian identity into the former fock of the Albanian Catholicosate, which was also facilitated by the transfer of its documents to Echmiadzin in 1836. Albanians came to be called and to identify themselves as Armenians, except for those Udins who continue living in the Gabala and Oghuz districts of Azerbaijan and Zenobiani village in Kakheti, Georgia. Everything related to Albanians came to be viewed and interpreted as part of the “Armenian” nation, and Albanian and Armenian histories were re-written to ft the new realities, thus almost exterminating a whole identity and its past (Imranli [2005] 2006, 31–50; Mamedova 2005, 389–390; Imranli-Lowe 2015, 551–556). Russian aims also included the creation of a Christian buffer zone along its borders through the settlement of the loyal Christian population among the Muslims of the occupied territories, which would separate the Muslims of the southern Caucasus from their co-religionists in the Ottoman Empire and Persia. This aim also found its refection, among other documents, in the rescript dated 12 September 1801 addressed from Russian Emperor Alexander to General-Lieutenant Carl Knorring. According to this document, it was reasonable to attract Armenians to the Russian borders as one of the most reliable means of “establishing the numerical superiority of Christians”, and to that end to “patronise Araratian Patriarchal monastery of Echmiadzin and keep friendly relations with the head of this church” (AKAK 1866, doc.548, 436). The idea found its fnal solution in the Treaty of Turkmanchay of 10 February 1828 between Russia and Persia. Based on Articles XV and XVI of the treaty, General Ivan Paskevich ordered the settlement of Armenians “mainly in the Erevan and Nakhchyvan provinces, and partly in Karabakh” (Enikolopov 1974, 119). According to Russian statistics of 1810, Karabakh consisted of 79% Muslims (9,500 families) and 21% “Christians” (2,500 families), interpreted Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Karabakh: Historical Background 23 as “Armenians” [read: Albanians] in the source (AKAK 1870, doc.37, 38–39). However, owing to the resettlement of the Armenians from the Ottoman Empire and Persia, and Albanians who had been relocated from Karabakh to Persia in the preceding centuries, as well as the exodus of Muslims from Karabakh to Persia after the Russian occupation, the ratio of “Armenians”, who included both Armenianised Albanians and Armenian settlers, increased from 21% in 1810 to 42% in 1916. In contrast, the ratio of Muslims decreased from 79% in 1810 to 56% in 1916 (Butkov 1869, I, 385, II, 142; AKAK 1870, doc.37, 38–39; Shavrov 1911, 59–60; Kavkazskii kalendar’ na 1917 god, 190–197; Imranli [2005] 2006, 17). The implications of Russian rule are also connected with the Karabakh confict itself, and include the construction of the “Nagorno-Karabakh” (mountainous Karabakh) notion. The origins of this construct go back to the conferences initiated by the Caucasian Viceroyalty in 1905–1916, with the intention of establishing local bodies of self-administration. During these conferences Armenian nationalists came up with the idea of separating the mountainous parts of Elizavetpol guberniia from its plains. The plan was later included in the Russian Ministry of Interior’s administrativeterritorial re-division project in the southern Caucasus in July 1917. The idea was an expression both of the Armenian nationalist aim of constructing an Armenian homeland in the region with predominantly Armenian units, and of Russian imperial ambitions. Its aim was, inter alia, to separate the places populated by Armenians in some areas of the mountainous parts of Karabakh in the Javanshir, Shusha, Jabrayil and Zangazur uezds of Elizavetpol guberniia. However, the Armenian-favoured re-division in the southern Caucasus, including the re-division of the predominantly Muslim Elizavetpol guberniia into two new provinces, a Muslim-dominated Elizavetpol and an Armenian-dominated Gandzak (Armenianised form of Ganja) that intended to disrupt the compact neighbourhoods of the Muslim-dominated administrative units and reduce them in number and size, faced opposition from the Muslims. The clash of Armenian interests with those of Muslims over the area of their future autonomies prevented the realisation of the Armenian homeland project in the southern Caucasus, Karabakh being one of its components (Imranli-Lowe 2014). Karabakh Region and Confict in 1918–1921 The Karabakh confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan has been ongoing at state level since 1918, when the two countries were declared republics. At public and popular levels however it predates 1918, with the frst violent clashes taking place in 1905–1906 between Armenians and Azerbaijanis in various parts of the southern Caucasus, including in Karabakh. According to the Azerbaijani Independence Act, declared by the Azerbaijani National Council on 28 May 1918, the area of the Azerbaijani Democratic Republic would cover “Southern and Eastern Transcaucasia [southern Caucasus]”.3 The leaders of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
24 Kamala Imranli-Lowe the main Armenian political party, Hai Heghapokhakan Dashnaktsutiun (the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, commonly referred to as Dashnaktsutiun [Federation]), adopted a decision to proclaim an Armenian republic on 29 May 1918. But on 30 May, the Armenian National Council, declaring itself “the supreme and only administration for the Armenian provinces”, made no mention of independence or of a republic, and did not clarify in geographical or administrative terms what “Armenian provinces” meant. The terms “independence” and “republic” were used publicly only after the signing of the Batumi Treaty with the Ottoman Empire on 4 June 1918 (Hovannisian 1967, 191), which made the Ottoman Empire the frst country to have recognised Armenia as an independent state. During discussion of the territorial issues between the Armenians and the Azerbaijanis at the peace negotiations in Batumi from 11 May to 4 June 1918, the Armenian National Council (represented by Alexander Khatisian (Khatisov), Ovannes Kachaznuni and Mikayel Papajanian) gave up its claims to the Elizavetpol guberniia,4 including Karabakh (Avalov 1924, 57)5; in return, the Azerbaijani National Council (represented by Mahammad Amin Rasulzada and Mammad Hasan Hajynski) gave up its claims to the town of Erevan, the rest of the Erevan and Echmiadzin uezds, which were not under Ottoman control, and the New Bayazid uezd.6 As a result of this agreement, Azerbaijan offcially conceded the town of Erevan to Armenia on 29 May 1918,7 and Armenia’s government moved there on 19 July 1918 (Hovannisian 1967, 210). Alongside the Ottoman Empire, Germany and Bolshevik Russia were directly involved in the regional processes during the emergence of the three republics, the third one being Georgia, which was declared as a republic on 26 May 1918. After the signing of the Armistice of Mudros on 30 October 1918 between the Ottoman Empire and the Allied Powers, and that of Compiègne on 11 November 1918 between Germany and the Allied Powers, the Ottoman Empire and Germany were replaced by Britain8 and to a lesser degree by the United States as the main external actors in the region. Britain, the Allied representative in the southern Caucasus, considered the predominantly Muslim Elizavetpol guberniia, which included Karabakh, part of Azerbaijan in the secret memorandum of the Foreign Offce’s Political Intelligence Department of 1 November 1918, just one day after the Mudros Armistice.9 The recognition of Khosrov bay Sultanov as the governorgeneral of Karabakh in Javanshir, Shusha, Jabrayil and Zangazur uezds by the Allied Command in Baku on 3 April 1919, following his appointment to this post by the Azerbaijani Government on 15 January 1919 (Hovannisian 1971, 170),10 was in line with the offcial British position on the Azerbaijani territories expressed in the above-mentioned secret memorandum. Britain not only recognised Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan, it also played an important role in signing an agreement between the Azerbaijani Government and the Armenians, who populated some areas in mountainous parts of Karabakh in Javanshir, Shusha and Jabrayil uezds, on 22 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Karabakh: Historical Background 25 August 1919. In accordance with this agreement, the Armenian-populated sector of these uezds regarded itself to be within the boundaries of the Azerbaijan Republic and the uezds themselves were organised into a unit of the Karabakh Governor-Generalship. In the Armenian-populated part of this unit an administration of Armenians would be appointed with the rights of all minorities guaranteed. The Armenians would enjoy rights of cultural autonomy. The activities of the Armenian National Council would be regulated by the Government of the Azerbaijan Republic through Armenian intermediaries11 (Hovannisian 1971, 186–187). The reason for the British support of Azerbaijani position on Karabakh was not only connected with the region’s predominantly Muslim population, but also with the British policy, which aimed at achieving the confederation of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia under the British infuence, keeping open for the British the short route to Persia and serving to some extent as a barrier to the southward expansion of Russia. Also, the British Fleet in the Black Sea and the Anatolian Railway wholly or partly depended on Baku oil, which was transported to the Black Sea port of Batumi (Butler and Bury 1962, doc.522, 578–579). Despite the settlement of the problem with the Armenians in these three uezds in Karabakh, the situation on the western half of its fourth Zangazur uezd, where the Ottoman Armenian refugees were gathered, continued to be unresolved. Colonel Claude Stokes, the British political offcer at Baku, blamed France for supporting Armenian claims to Zangazur, linking it to France’s interest in a copper mine in southern Zangazur and the Alat-Julfa railway. Stokes expressed his concern that it seemed, as a result of French and Armenian propaganda, the Allies will give Armenia far more favourable treatment than Georgia or Azerbaijan despite the fact that it has been the misconduct and dishonesty of the Armenians which has prevented those concerned in trying to keep the situation quiet from achieving success. (Butler and Bury 1962, doc.522, 579) The reason for the French support of Armenian claims to Zangazur in Karabakh was that Britain supported the Armenian claims to Cilicia, which was claimed by France, considering it to be a northern part of Syria.12 The clash of interests between Britain and France was also instrumental in the French-advised Armenian opposition to the British-supported idea of confederation of three southern Caucasian countries (Butler and Bury 1962, doc.522, 578–579). Meanwhile, the failure of Denikin’s campaign, the Entente’s ally against Bolshevik Russia, in December 1919, and the growing threat of Bolshevism, compelled the members of the League of Nations to recognise the independence of Azerbaijan and Georgia de facto on 12 January 1920, followed with the recognition of Armenia on 19 January 1920 (Unites States. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
26 Kamala Imranli-Lowe Department of State 1946, 904, 899; Imranli 2006, 133–134). Despite the approaching Bolshevik menace from the north, Azerbaijan had sent its best troops against Armenia in Karabakh, leaving its northern border without enough defence. Olivier Wardrop, head of the British diplomatic mission in the southern Caucasus, referring to Malik-Aslanov, Azerbaijani Minister of Trade and Communications, wrote to Earl Curzon, British Foreign Secretary, on 26 March 1920 that the March troubles in Karabakh were the result of the war supplies that the Allies had sent to Armenia, and begged the Foreign Secretary to “deny this offcially in order to quell anti-Allied agitation” (Butler and Bury 1962, doc.526, 582–583). The Georgian representative to Istanbul, M. Rtzkhiladze, in his meeting with Admiral John de Robeck, Commander of the Allied Mediterranean Fleet and British High Commissioner in Istanbul, on 6 April 1920 also touched upon the March events in Karabakh, mentioning that consequent on the misguided policy of the Erivan Government in the Karabagh district and the oppressive measures carried out against the Tartar [Azerbaijani] population, the Azerbaijani Government had been obliged to transfer troops to that district, and the northern frontiers of the State were, in consequence, not suffciently well guarded for a successful defence to be opposed to any Bolshevik force which might advance south. (Butler and Bury 1962, doc.531, 587) Concern over the escalation of the confict between the two countries was conveyed to Earl Curzon by Wardrop and Admiral de Robeck on 4 and 6 April 1920 respectively (Butler and Bury 1962, doc.530, 586, doc.531, 587). On 8 April, the British Foreign Secretary, in turn, met an Armenian deputation consisting of Bogos Nubar Pasha, Head of the Armenian National Delegation representing the Ottoman Armenians at the Paris Peace Conference, Erevan Archbishop and Avetis Aharonian, Head of the Delegation of the Republic of Armenia at the Paris Peace Conference, and “spoke to them in the strongest possible manner about foolish and indefensible conduct of their compatriots on North-Eastern frontiers of Armenia” (Butler and Bury 1962, doc.533, 589). Curzon continued that the “detailed list of outrages committed since beginning of year by Armenians on one hand and Tartars [Azerbaijanis] on other” showed a “heavy balance against Armenians”, and told them that “we were not at all keen about giving them arms to fght Turks which they would almost certainly use to fght Azerbaijan” (Butler and Bury 1962, doc.533, 589). According to Wardrop’s letter of 12 April, the fghting between Armenia and Azerbaijan proceeded on an extended front and Azerbaijan seemed “to be on the point of pro-Turk-Bolshevik attitude in despair of promised Allied help” (Butler and Bury 1962, doc.536, 591). Here it should be mentioned that based on information given by Fuad Bey, Turkish general and Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Karabakh: Historical Background 27 former Ottoman Under-Secretary of State of War, Wardrop had written to Earl Curzon on 12 March that “Mustapha Kemal has agreement with Lenin to allow Bolsheviks free hand in North Caucasus and Azerbaijan in order to secure free passage of arms for him” (Butler and Bury 1962, doc.515, 573). Although this information was denied by the Azerbaijani Government, Admiral de Robeck was convinced that an understanding existed “if not between two Governments at least between Azerbaijan and Turkish Nationalists” (Butler and Bury 1962, doc.519, 575–576). On 28 April, Soviet rule was declared in Azerbaijan. On 30 April 1920, the Azerbaijani Soviet Government sent a note to the Government of the Armenian Republic demanding to “clear Karabakh13 and Zangazur from your troops”, to “retreat to your own borders” and to “stop international massacre”; otherwise Azerbaijan would consider itself in a situation of war with Armenia (Guliev 1989, 41; Imranli 2006, 139). The note demonstrated the Azerbaijani Soviet government’s position on Karabakh, including Zangazur, which was regarded by Azerbaijan as being within its borders. On 19 June 1920, Sergo Orjonikidze, Head of Kavburo (Kavkazskoe Biuro Tsentral’nogo Komiteta Rossiiskoi Kommunisticheskoi Partii (bol’shevikov) – Caucasian Bureau of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist (Bolshevik) Party), in his letter to Georgii Chicherin, People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the RSFSR, informed that “Soviet rule was declared in Karabakh and Zangazur and above-mentioned territories consider themselves as parts of the Azerbaijani Soviet Republic”.14 (Guliev 1989, 49; Imranli 2006, 140) However, as it appears from the common opinion of Nariman Narimanov, Head of the Azerbaijani Revolutionary Committee, Anastas Mikoian and Viktor Naneishvili, members of the Azerbaijani Communist Party, Budu Mdivani, member of Kavburo, and three representatives of the Revolutionary Military Soviet of the Eleventh Red Army, which was sent to the Central Committee of the Russian Communist (Bolshevik) Party on 10 July 1920, Karabakh, including Zangazur was going to be declared “disputed” by Moscow. The above-mentioned representatives warned against this position: The Muslim masses will consider this an unexpected change to the old and [will regard the] inability of the Soviet power to secure Azerbaijan within its previous borders as treason, Armeniaphilia or weakness on the part of the Soviet power […] We warn the Centre against hesitations in the issue of Karabakh and Zangazur in the interests of not turning Azerbaijan into a bastard in the hands of the Red Army and distributing [it] among the Armenians and Georgians, instead of creating a strong centre and a base for class revolution in the East. (Guliev 1989, 54–56) One month after this warning, namely on 10 August 1920, the day when Armenia signed the Sevres Treaty between Turkey and the Allied Powers, it Uploaded by S. M. Safi
28 Kamala Imranli-Lowe also signed an agreement with Soviet Russia. Notwithstanding Azerbaijani opposition,15 the agreement with Soviet Russia declared Karabakh, including Zangazur “disputed” (Mnatsakanian 1957, doc.270, 384–385). Bolshevik Russia’s stance on the Karabakh issue can be explained with its aims of achieving the Sovietisation of Azerbaijan and Armenia: frst to satisfy the Azerbaijani position on the region in order to achieve its Sovietisation, since the Bolshevik forces were advancing from the East and it was important to capture oil-rich Baku. After fulflment of this goal, it was necessary to Sovietise Armenia, which required the satisfaction of Armenian claims by declaring the territories which it recognised as “undisputed” parts of Azerbaijan as “disputed”. On 26 November 1920, Armenia issued a declaration rejecting the Sevres Treaty, a Turkish prerequisite for the start of the peace negotiations. The reason for this change was that, with the aim of occupying the territories refected in the Sevres Treaty, Armenia had started a large-scale military campaign against the Turks and despite Allied support it was defeated and had to appeal to the Turkish Command with the proposal to start peace negotiations. On 18 November, when the Armenian Government had started peace negotiations with Kemalists, Alexander Khatisian (who was appointed by the Armenian Government to negotiate peace with the Kemalists), in his meeting with Colonel Claude Stokes, the British political offcer at Baku, stated that the Armenian Government realised that it was obliged to make peace either with the Turks or the Bolsheviks. It would be preferable to make peace with the Turks and he inclined to the belief that His Majesty’s Government would also prefer this. It considered such a peace feasible as Armenia would be now content with much less territory than was accorded to her by the Peace Treaty with Turkey. (Butler and Bury 1962, doc.622, 648–649) The peace negotiations were concluded, apparently with the approval of the British Government, with the signing of the Gumru (Alexandropol) Treaty between Kemalist Turkey and the Armenian Republic on 2 December 1920, represented by Dashnak Armenia’s representatives headed by former premier, Khatisian. Under this treaty, Dashnak Armenia declared the Sevres Treaty annulled (Mnatsakanian 1957, doc.294, 438–439; Türkiye Cumhuriyeti’nin anlaşmaları 1992, 3–4; Imranli 2006, 145–146). Meanwhile, after the rejection of the Sevres Treaty by Dashnak Armenia on 26 November, Soviet rule was declared in Armenia on 29 November 1920, and on 2 December, an agreement was signed in Erevan between RSFSR in the person of Boris Legran, plenipotentiary envoy of Soviet Russia in Dashnak Armenia, and the Republic of Armenia in the person of Dashnak Dro Kanaian and Arutiun Terterian. According to this agreement, which declared Armenia an “independent socialist republic”, Russian Soviet Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Karabakh: Historical Background 29 Government “recognised” Zangazur as “undisputed” part of “Socialist Soviet Republic of Armenia” (Klyuchnikov and Sabanin 1928, doc.41, 75– 76; Mnatsakanian 1957, doc.295, 441–442; Imranli 2006, 148). Thus, Zangazur, one of four uezds of Karabakh, was frst recognised as “undisputed” part of Soviet Azerbaijan immediately after Azerbaijan’s Sovietisation by Bolshevik Russia. Then it was declared as “disputed” when the turn came to Sovietise Armenia, and was fnally considered as “undisputed” part of Armenia, when the latter was declared Soviet. Moreover, Muslim-dominated Nakhchyvan was also declared “undisputed” part of Soviet Armenia as was the rest of the Erevan guberniia. Despite the inclusion of Nakhchyvan and Zangazur in Soviet Armenia, the agreement had no mention of other three uezds of Karabakh, namely the Javanshir, Shusha and Jabrayil uezds of Elizavetpol guberniia. Later, on 26 December 1920, Armenia had to give up its claims to Nakhchyvan in the Erevan guberniia, which it confrmed, inter alia, by signing the Kars Treaty on 13 October 1921 with Russia, Turkey, Azerbaijan and Georgia. According to Article 5 of this treaty, the governments of Turkey, Soviet Azerbaijan and Armenia agreed that the Nakhchyvan province was an autonomous territory under the patronage of Azerbaijan (Gaponenko 1960, doc.264, 423, 429; Imranli 2006, 167). Thus, the Soviet rule did not fulfl the territorial expectations of the Armenian nationalists, so on 18 February 1921, Dashnaks headed by Simon Vratzian carried out a coup d’état in Erevan, which lasted until 2 April 1921 when the Dashnaks were driven to Zangazur under Soviet pressure. According to Richard Hovannisian (1996, 405–406), after getting assurance that Zangazur would be “permanently incorporated into Soviet Armenia rather than into Soviet Azerbaijan”, Dashnaks left for Persia on 16 July 1921, which can be considered the date of the beginning of the second Sovietisation of Armenia. Notes 1 The frst time the word “Artsakh” was mentioned in Avesta in the sense of “country, province of winds” (Mamedova 2005, 647). 2 The country is called Ran/Aran/Ardan in Pahlavi (Parthian/Sasanian), Rani in Georgian, Aghuank in Armenian and Arran in Arabic sources. 3 Azərbaycan Respublikası Dövlət Arxivi (State Archive of the Azerbaijan Republic; hereafter ARDA), fn 894, l 10, f 99, 2–3. 4 ARDA, fn 897, l 1, f 11, 236–236op. 5 ARDA, fn 897, l 1, f 11, 236–236op. 6 ARDA, fn 897, l 1, f 11, 246, 256–256op. 7 Azərbaycan Respublikası Prezidentinin İşlər İdarəsinin Siyasi Sənədlər Arxivi (Political Documents Archive of the Administrative Department of the President of Azerbaijan; hereafter ARPİİSSA), fn 970, l 1, f 1, 51. 8 The British military control of the region lasted until 28 August 1919 (it stayed longer in Batumi), when it was replaced by the British diplomatic mission (Foreign Offce, The National Archives, London (hereafter FO), 371/7729, 17–18). Uploaded by S. M. Safi
30 Kamala Imranli-Lowe 9 Cabinet Offce, The National Archives, London (hereafter CAB), 24/69, “The future settlement of Transcaucasia with special regard to British interests”, 1 November 1918, 61 (2). 10 ARDA, fn 970, l 1, f 65, 76. 11 ARDA, fn 897, l 1, f 31, 141–142. 12 FO 608/77, 403; FO 608/78, 550. 13 “Karabakh” here and in other documents to be quoted later refers to Javanshir, Shusha and Jabrayil uezds. 14 ARPİİSSA, fn 1, l 1, f 18, 9op. 15 ARPİİSSA, fn 1, l 1, f 18, 13op. References Archives Azərbaycan Respublikası Dövlət Arxivi (ARDA) [State Archive of the Azerbaijan Republic] Azərbaycan Respublikası Prezidentinin İşlər İdarəsinin Siyasi Sənədlər Arxivi (ARPİİSSA) [Political Documents Archive of the Administrative Department of the President of Azerbaijan] Cabinet Offce, The National Archives, London (CAB) Foreign Offce, The National Archives, London (FO) Publications Adontz, Nicholas. 1970. Armenia in the Period of Justinian: The Political Conditions based on the Naxarar System. Translated with partial revisions, a bibliographical note and appendices by Nina Garsoian. Lisbon: Galouste Gulbenkian Foundation. Akty sobrannye Kavkazskoiu Arkheografcheskoiu Kommissieiu (AKAK). Vol. 1. 1866. Tifis: Tipografia Glavnago Upravleniia Namestnika Kavkazskago. Akty sobrannye Kavkazskoiu Arkheografcheskoiu Kommissieiu (AKAK). Vol. 2. 1868. Tifis: Tipografia Glavnago Upravleniia Namestnika Kavkazskago. Akty sobrannye Kavkazskoiu Arkheografcheskoiu Kommissieiu (AKAK). Vol. 4. 1870. Tifis: Tipografia Glavnago Upravleniia Namestnika Kavkazskago. Aleksidze, Zaza. 2003. Qafqaz albanları dilləndilər. Translation from Georgian into Azerbaijani by N.Nasibov. Tifis: Artanuci. Avalov, Zurab. 1924. Nezavisimost’ Gruzii v mezhdunarodnoi politike 1918–1921 gg. Vospominaniia. Ocherki. Paris. Barthold, V. V. 1963. Mesto prikaspiiskikh oblastei v istorii musul’manskogo mira, Baku, 1925. Vol.2, Part 1 of Sochineniia of V. V. Barthold. Moscow: Izdatel’stvo Vostochnoi Literatury. Barthold, Wilhelm. 2012. “Arran.” In Encyclopaedia of Islam. 1st ed., edited by M. Th. Houtsma. doi:10.1163/2214-871X_ei1_SIM_0855. Butkov, P. G. 1869. Materialy dlia novoi istorii Kavkaza s 1722 po 1803 god. Vols.1–2. Sankt-Petersburg: Tipografia Imperatorskoi Akademii Nauk. Butler, Rohan and Bury, J. P. T., eds. 1962. Documents on British Foreign Policy 1919–1939, First Series, Vol. 12. London: Her Majesty’s Stationery Offce. Dasxuranci, Movses. 1961. The History of the Caucasian Albanians. Translated from Old Armenian by C. J. F. Dowsett. London: Oxford University Press. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Karabakh: Historical Background 31 Draskhanakertsi, Iovannes. 1986. Istoriia Armenii. Translated from Old Armenian by M. Darbinian-Melikian. Erevan: Sovetakan grokh. Enikolopov, Ivan. 1974. Griboedov i Vostok. 2nd rev. ed. Erevan: Izdatel’stvo ‘Ayastan’. Eremian, S. T. 1958a. “Politicheskaia istoriia Albanii III–VII vv.” In Ocherki istorii SSSR, edited by B. A. Rybakov, 310–323. Moscow: Izdatel’stvo Akademii Nauk SSSR. Eremian, S. T. 1958b. “Ideologiia i kul’tura Albanii III–VII vv.” In Ocherki istorii SSSR, edited by B. A. Rybakov, 323–330. Moscow: Izdatel’stvo Akademii Nauk SSSR. Eremian, S. T. 1958c. “Azerbaidzhan (Albaniia) v period arabskogo vladychestva.” In Ocherki istorii SSSR, edited by B. A. Rybakov, 530–536. Moscow: Izdatel’stvo Akademii Nauk SSSR. Frye, R. N. 2012. “Arran.” In Encyclopaedia of Islam. 2nd ed., edited by P. Bearman. doi:10.1163/1573-3912_islam_SIM_0736. Gaponenko, L. S., G. K. Deev, N. N. Kalinin, I. K. Kolosovskiy, G. D. Obichkin, and M. A. Kharlamov, eds. 1960. Dokumenty vneshnei politiki SSSR, Vol.4. Moscow: Gosudarstvennoe izdatel’stvo politicheskoi literatury. Gevond, Vardapet. 1862. Istoriia khalifov. Translated from Old Armenian by K. Patkanian. Sankt-Petersburg: Tipografia Imperatorskoi Akademii Nauk. Guliev, Danil, ed. 1989. K istorii obrazovaniia Nagorno-Karabakhskoi Avtonomnoi Oblasti Azerbaidzhanskoi SSR (1918–1925). Dokumenty i materialy. Baku: Azerbaidzhanskoe Gosudarstvennoe Izdatel’stvo. Hewsen, Robert. 2013. “Editor’s Preface.” In Archbishop Sergius [Sargis] Hasan-Jalaliants. A History of the Land of Artsakh [Karabagh and Ganje, 1722– 1827] (Patmutiun Aghuanits Ashkharkhi). Translated from Old Armenian by Karen Ketendjian. Costa Mesa, CA: Mazda Publishers. Hovannisian, Richard. 1967. Armenia on the Road to Independence, 1918. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. Hovannisian, Richard. 1971. The Republic of Armenia. Vol.1. The First Year, 1918– 1919. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. Hovannisian, Richard. 1996. The Republic of Armenia. Vol.4. Between Crescent and Sickle: Partition and Sovietization. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. Hübschmann, Joseph. 1904. Die Altarmenischen Ortsnamen. Strasbourg: Verlag von Karl J. Trübner. Imranli, Kamala. [2005] 2006. Chernaia sud’ba Chernogo Sada. Moscow: Nauchno-izdatel’skii tsentr ‘Ladomir’. Imranli, Kamala. 2006. Sozdanie armianskogo gosudarstva na Kavkaze: Istoki i posledstviia. Moscow: Nauchno-izdatel’skii tsentr ‘Ladomir’. Imranli-Lowe, Kamala. 2014. “The Provisional Government and the Armenian Homeland Project.” Revolutionary Russia, 27(2): 132–156. Imranli-Lowe, Kamala. 2015. “Reconstruction of the ‘Armenian Homeland’ Notion.” Middle Eastern Studies, 51(4): 540–562. Imranli-Lowe, Kamala. 2020. “The Polities of the Caucasus and the Regional Powers in the Medieval and Early Modern Period.” Caucasus Survey, 8(3): 258–277. Kagankatvatsi, Moisei. 1861. Istoriia agvan. Translated from Old Armenian by K. Patkanov. Sankt-Petersburg: Tipografia Imperatorskoi Akademii Nauk. Kavkazskii kalendar’ na 1917 god. 1916. Tifis: Tipografia Kantseliarii Namestnika Y.I.V. na Kavkaze. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
32 Kamala Imranli-Lowe Kilic, Remzi. 2001. XVI ve XVII yüzyıllarda Osmanlı-İran siyasi antlaşmaları. Istanbul: Tez yayınları. Kliuchnikov, Iu. V., and A. V.Sabanin, eds. 1928. Mezhdunarodnaia politika noveishego vremeni v dogovorakh, notakh i deklaratsiiakh. Vol.1. Ot sniatiia blokady s Sovetskoi Rossii do desiatiletiia Oktiabr’skoi Revoliutsii. No.1. Akty Sovetskoi diplomatii. Moscow: Izdanie Litizdata NKID. Krymsky, Agafangel. 1938. “Stranitsy iz istorii severnogo ili kavkazskogo Azerbaidzhana (klassicheskoi Albanii). Sheki.” In Pamiati akademika N.Ia. Marra (1864–1934), edited by I. I. Meshchaninov, 369–384. Moscow-Leningrad: Izdatel’stvo Akademii Nauk SSSR. Mamedova, Farida. 2005. Kavkazskaia Albaniia i albany. Baku: Tsentr Issledovanii Kavkazkoi Albanii. Marr, Nicholas. 1915. Kavkazskii kul’turnii mir i Armeniia. Petrograd: Senatskaia Tipografia. Matthew of Edessa. 2017. The Chronicle. Translated from Old Armenian by R.Bedrosian. New Jersey. Mil’man, Aron. 1966. Politicheskii stroi Azerbaidzhana v XIX–nachale XX vv. Baku: Azərnəşr. Minorsky, Vladimir. 1953a. “Caucasica IV.” Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 15(3): 504–529. doi:10.1017/S0041977X00111462. Minorsky, Vladimir. 1953b. Studies in Caucasian History. London: Taylor’s Foreign Press. Minorsky, Vladimir. 1958. A History of Sharvan and Darband in the 10th–11th Centuries. Cambridge: W.Heffer and Sons Ltd. Mirzə Adıgözəl bəy. 1989. “Qarabağnamə.” In Qarabağnamələr, edited by Akif Farzaliyev and Nazim Akhundov, 5–102. Baku: Yazıçı. Mnatsakanian, A. N., A. M. Akopian, and G. M. Dallakian, eds. 1957. Velikaia Oktiabr’skaia sotsialisticheskaia revoliutsiia i pobeda sovetskoi vlasti v Armenii (Sbornik dokumentov). Erevan: Aypetrat. Orbeli, I. A. 1963. Izbrannye Trudy. Erevan: Izdatel’stvo Akademii Nauk Armianskoi SSR. Perry, J. R. 1975. “Forced Migration in Iran during the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries.” Iranian Studies, 8(4): 199–215. Petrushevskii, Il’ia. 1930. “O dokhristianskikh verovaniiakh krest’ian Nagornogo Karabakha.” Izvestiia Azerbaidzhanskogo Gosudarstvennogo Nauchno-Issledovatel’skogo Instituta, 1(5): 1–43. Petrushevskii, Il’ia. 1949. Ocherki po istorii feodal’nykh otnoshenii v Azerbaidzhane i Armenii v XVI-nachale XIX vv. Leningrad: Izdatel’stvo Leningradskogo Gosudarstvennogo Universiteta. Shavrov, Nicholas. 1911. Novaia ugroza russkomu delu v Zakavkaz’e: predstoiashchaia rasprodazha Mugani inorodtsam. Saint Petersburg: Tipografia Redaktsii periodicheskikh izdanii Ministerstva Finansov. Svazian, Genrikh. 2015. “Snova o iuzhnoi granitse Albanii (I v. do n.e.–ser. V v.n.e.).” In Albanica Caucasica I, edited by Alikber Аlikberov and Murtazali Gadjiev, 48–56. Moscow: Institute of Oriental Studies RAS. Tadhkirat al-Muluk: A Manual of Safavid Administration (circa 1137/1725). (1943) 1980. Translated and explained by V. Minorsky. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Karabakh: Historical Background 33 Trever, Kamilla. 1959. Ocherki no istorii i kul’ture Kavkazskoi Albanii. IV v. do n.e.– VII v. n.e. Moscow-Leningrad: Izdatel’stvo Akademii Nauk SSSR. Türkiye Cumhuriyeti’nin anlaşmaları. Vol. 1. 1992. Ankara: Türkiye Cumhuriyeti Dışişleri Bakanlığı yayınları. Unites States. Department of State. 1946. Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, Paris Peace Conference, 1919, Vol. 9. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Offce. Vacca, Alison. 2017. Non-Muslim Provinces under Early Islam: Islamic Rule and Iranian Legitimacy in Armenia and Caucasian Albania. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
2 The Sovietization of Azerbaijan and a Road to Autonomy in Nagorno-Karabakh (1920–1923) Jamil Hasanli Introduction The Second Karabakh War and the post-war period rekindled an interest in the history of Nagorno-Karabakh. However, most publications grossly distort both the pre-Soviet history of its unifcation with the Russian Empire and the vicissitudes of Soviet history. The fact that some historians distort or even falsify history cannot but cause concern and regret. I wonder who profts from these distortions? Indeed, who needs history adjusted to the current political context? The truth can easily be recovered from numerous documents in which the military and diplomatic services of the Russian Empire and Soviet Russia carefully registered the facts and which are kept in Russian, Azerbaijan, and Armenian archives. A number of historians and politicians even in the post-war period doubts that Karabakh was part of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic in 1918–1920, while trying to create an alternative story related to the well-known Declaration of Nariman Narimanov of December 1, 1920 and insists that Stalin transferred the mountain part of Karabakh to Azerbaijan in 1921 (which is not true). The Armenians claim to rely on archival documents, but instead of clarifying the issue distort the far from simple circumstances even more. So, what was the historical truth really like? The political destiny of Karabakh was largely shaped by what happened in the 1920s in the Caucasus. In the frst months of the region’s Sovietization, Moscow and its representatives in the Caucasus recognized Nagorno-Karabakh as an inalienable part of Azerbaijan. In the spring of 1921, however, the Bolsheviks decided to fnd a plausible pretext to transfer it to Armenia. With no plausible pretexts at hand, they armed themselves with the formula “autonomy frst, then mobilization of the local Armenians”; in July 1923, the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region (NKAR) was set up as part of the Azerbaijan SSR. The First Steps of Soviet Power in Azerbaijan and Karabakh On April 28, 1920, Soviet troops occupied Baku. Russian troops entered Karabakh a month after they had occupied Baku; Azerbaijan lost its DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-4 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Sovietization of Azerbaijan 35 independence; sometime later this happened to Georgia and Armenia. In this way, in two years, Russia, now Soviet Russia, regained its grip on the South Caucasus. Soviet power detached bits and pieces of Azerbaijan’s territory. In the frst years of Soviet power, when the Center joined primordial Azerbaijani lands to Armenia, Nariman Narimanov, unable to reconcile himself to this injustice, wrote to Lenin to complain that the lands which had, beyond a doubt, been part of Azerbaijan under the Musavat government had become disputed areas under Soviet power. He warned that the common people were aware of all this and were discontented (for more details on a road to autonomy of the Nagorno-Karabakh (1920–1923), see also: Hasanli 2018, 117–157).1 On June 19, 1920, Nariman Narimanov, Budu Mdivani, Anastas Mikoyan, and Avis Nurijanyan sent a telegram to Georgii Chicherin in which they informed him of the Armenian Dashnak army’s onslaught and its success in the Kazakh and Kedabek districts of Soviet Azerbaijan. A copy sent to Grigorii (Sergo) Orjonikidze in Vladikavkaz contained the following telltale passage: The Armenians are in fact in a state of war with Azerbaijan. As for the allegedly disputable Karabakh and Zangezur, which have become part of Soviet Azerbaijan, we categorically state that these places should, without doubt, in the future too, remain within Azerbaijan.2 On June 22, 1920, the People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs, enraged by the fact that the well-known Bolsheviks working in the Caucasus, Baku and, on the whole, Azerbaijan were dead set against the Center’s policy, complained to the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks)—CC RCP (B) about “the lack of discipline among the Baku comrades and the scandalous contradiction between their actions and the line of the CC” He wrote that if the disputed territories captured by Russia were transferred to Azerbaijan, an agreement with Armenia would be impossible.3 People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs Chicherin followed his own, very specifc logic. He went on to explain to Lenin that “so far Russia is not transferring these lands to the Armenians so as not to offend the Tatars. When conditions for the Sovietization of Georgia and Armenia appear, the problems will disappear of their own accord.”4 His numerous explanations and telegrams sent to Lenin, Orjonikidze, and Narimanov make it abundantly clear: Karabakh was nothing but “small change” and bait in the talks with Armenia. Stronger Armenian claims to the mountainous part of Karabakh forced those Bolsheviks who were well known in the Caucasus (Nariman Narimanov, Budu Mdivani, Anastas Mikoyan, and Viktor Naneishvili) and even members of the Military Council of the 11th Army, Iakov Vesnik, Mikhael Levandovskii, and Boris Mikhaylov, to send a letter to the CC RCP (B) which said: Uploaded by S. M. Safi
36 Jamil Hasanli We believe that it is our duty to inform the CC of our concerted opinion about Karabakh and Zangezur; the decision which is planned as intermediate in the talks with Armenia will contradict the interests of the revolution in the Caucasus. Under the Musawat government, the whole of Karabakh was part of Azerbaijan. The inseparable cultural and economic ties between Karabakh and Zangezur and Baku, which employed tens of thousands of workers from these provinces, and the complete isolation of these provinces from Erevan were confrmed in 1919 by the Congress of Armenian Peasants of Karabakh which, even under the Musavat regime (which was insufferable for the Armenians) and despite provocation by Armenian agents, resolutely supported complete unity with Azerbaijan on the condition that a peaceful life be guaranteed for the Armenians. The authors concluded that the Muslim masses would regard Soviet power as perfdious if it proved unable to preserve the old borders of Azerbaijan. They wrote that this would be taken as Armenian-philism or as the weakness of Soviet power and warned against indecision in the question of Karabakh and Zangezur “so as not to turn Azerbaijan into a mongrel supported by the Red Army and handed out to the Armenians and Georgians.”5 In an effort to make Soviet recognition of Armenia look offcial Chicherin tried to convince Orjonikidze that Soviet Russia needed a compromise with the Dashnak government of Armenia: The Azerbaijani government has described as disputable not only Karabakh and Zangezur, but also the Sharur-Daralaghez Uezd. The latter has never been disputed and even the Musawat government always regarded it as Armenian. Without it, Armenia will have practically nothing left. After resisting for a long time, the Armenian delegation at the peace talks agreed to accept Karabakh and Zangezur as disputed territories in the hope of fnally acquiring large chunks of them. The delegation is frm about the Sharur-Daralaghez Uezd. On the other hand, we need an agreement with the Azerbaijani government so that our treaty with Armenia does not contradict the demands of Azerbaijan. We ask you to use your exceptional infuence in Baku to convince the Azerbaijani government to yield on its demand to describe the Sharur-Daralaghez Uezd as a disputed territory and limit it to Karabakh and Zangezur.6 After receiving Chicherin’s ciphered telegram of July 2, 1920 and discussing the issue with newly appointed Envoy Plenipotentiary of Soviet Russia to Armenia Boris Legran and Saak Ter-Gabrielyan, Sergo Orjonikidze informed Moscow directly that Azerbaijan insisted on the immediate and unconditional unifcation of Karabakh and Zangezur. I think this should be done since economically Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Sovietization of Azerbaijan 37 both uezds are attached to Baku and have absolutely no ties with Erivan (renamed Yerevan by a decree of the Central Executive Committee of the Soviet Union on August 17, 1936—J.H.). The Bayazet Turkish Army, which has wedged its way in, has made this especially obvious. According to Comrade Gabrielyan, the Armenian delegation will undoubtedly accept this. In this case, it will be possible to convince Azerbaijan to drop its claims to the other regions. I think that Karabakh and Zangezur should be immediately united with Azerbaijan. I will force Azerbaijan to grant autonomy to these regions; this should be done by Azerbaijan, but in no way should this be mentioned in the treaty.7 By means of another direct communiqué, Orjonikidze informed Lenin, Stalin, and Chicherin in so many words that the Armenian government had deliberately misinformed them: Today Gabrielyan told me that the Armenian delegation will accept immediate unifcation of Karabakh and Zangezur with Azerbaijan if it drops its claims to the Sharur-Daralaghez Uezd and the Nakhchivan Region. We have agreed among ourselves that when we are in Baku, we will talk to Narimanov about this. You can see for yourself that there is no lack of clarity or understanding. I assure you that we are fully aware of our peaceful policy and are sticking to it. I am convinced, and this is my deepest conviction, that to strengthen Soviet power in Azerbaijan and to keep Baku in our control, we must join Nagorno-Karabakh; its valley part is out of the question: it has always been Azeri and part of Zangezur. Azerbaijan has guaranteed safety of the Armenians living there. We shall grant autonomy and organize the Armenian population without moving Muslim armed units there. He deemed it necessary to warn: Any other decision will shatter our position in Azerbaijan and will give us nothing in Armenia. I know that we might need Armenia under certain political circumstances. The decision rests with you; we shall follow suit. Let me tell you that this treatment of Azerbaijan undermines our prestige among the broad masses of Azeris and creates fertile soil for the efforts of our adversaries.8 After the April coup of 1920, Orjonikidze remained for some time on the side of Azerbaijan, which was considered “Soviet power’s frstborn in the Caucasus” in its relations with Georgia and Armenia. Some people in Moscow did not like this; the irritation being especially obvious in the People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs. Georgii Chicherin, who headed this group, blackmailed Orjonikidze, whom he called a latent Orientalist and Uploaded by S. M. Safi
38 Jamil Hasanli lover of the Muslims. Orjonikidze parried the attacks by saying that he had nothing to do with Muslim nationalism and there was not a single Tatar among his ancestors.9 Orjonikidze knew who was stirring up the trouble in the Center and had to go directly to Nadezhda Allilueva, an offcial in the Council of People’s Commissars and Stalin’s wife, with a request to tell Stalin that “Georgii Chicherin and Lev Karakhan (Levon Karakhanyan) pushed me into a tight corner once more.”10 Chicherin was of a different opinion; in a telegram to Orjonikidze dated 8 July, he wrote: We all know that the time will come for Armenia’s Sovietization; it is too early to do this now. The best we can do now is to declare Karabakh and Zangezur disputed areas; to do this we need an agreement from the Azerbaijani government. We badly need this; we should sign an agreement with Armenia. The situation in the world demands this; this can be done if we declare Karabakh and Zangezur, and only them, disputed areas.11 Chicherin and Karakhan pushed the People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs toward cooperation with Armenia at the expense of Azerbaijan. On July 16, Orjonikidze, unable to withstand the pressure, telegraphed Lenin, Stalin, and Chicherin with a request not to enter a peace treaty with Armenia before the Azeri delegation arrived. He wrote: “The local comrades are very concerned about the possibility of peace with Armenia without involving Azerbaijan.”12 Anastas Mikoyan, member of the Central Committee Communist Party of Azerbaijan (Bolsheviks)—CC CPA, was of the same opinion. On June 29, he wrote to Orjonikidze: “We are all enraged by the Center’s policy toward Karabakh and Zangezur. You should also defend our opinion in the Center. We have nothing against peace with Armenia but not at the expense of Karabakh and Zangezur.”13 This shows that, strange as it may seem, Soviet Russia and Dashnakian Armenia were engaged in secret negotiations about Azerbaijan, to which it was not invited and to which it had not agreed. The developments in Armenia copied what had happened with Georgia a month before: a lot of interesting information had traveled in the ciphered parts of the telegram Orjonikidze and Kirov had sent to Lenin and Stalin. They believed that a treaty with Georgia without clarifying the position of Azerbaijan was fraught with failure: “We want to know why we are signing a treaty with Georgia and refusing to sign a treaty with friendly Azerbaijan. If you have different plans for Azerbaijan, why are we being kept in the dark?” In the ciphered part they warned: You should not put forward the name of Karakhan as the author of the Eastern policy. Here the Zakatala scandal (the reference is to the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Sovietization of Azerbaijan 39 promise to transfer the Zakatala District to Georgia under the Moscow Treaty of May 7, 1920.-J.H.) is interpreted as Armenian perfdy.14 Lev Karakhan, who flled the post of Deputy People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs, did play an important role in shaping and realizing the anti-Azeri policy of the People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs of Soviet Russia. The ciphered and open documents of the time directly point to him as the main plotter. Grigorii Orjonikidze wrote in an open letter: “Karabakh is another Zakatala of our Commissariat for Foreign Affairs. An enormous provocation is underway here: it is rumored that this is stirred up by the Armenians in Moscow.”15 Despite the Center’s unprecedented pressure on Azerbaijan, the gap between the Azeri and Armenian positions remained as wide as ever. The talks between Kirov and People’s Commissar Mirza Davud Huseynov and the Armenian representatives in Tifis ended in nothing. On August 6, he wrote to Chicherin that he had only convinced the Azeris to cede the Sharur-Daralaghez Uezd to Armenia; the Azeris regarded the rest, that is, the Nakhchivan Uezd, Ordubad, Julfa, Zangezur, and Karabakh, as decidedly their own. The Armenian representatives were no less determined to claim the regions. The Azeris argued that under the Musawat government these regions had belonged to Azerbaijan and that, therefore, if it ceded them, Soviet power would lose its prestige in the eyes of the Azeris, Iranians, and Turks.16 On August 10, 1920, the talks in Moscow and Irevan ended in a treaty of six articles, four of which dealt with a deliberately fanned territorial dispute with Azerbaijan. Under Art 2, the troops of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) occupied the disputed regions of Karabakh, Zangezur, and Nakhchivan; the Armenian troops remained in a specifed strip. Art 3 said that “the occupation by Soviet troops of the disputed territories did not predetermine the answer to the question about the rights of the Republic of Armenia and the Azerbaijan Socialist Soviet Republic to these territories. The same article further stated that the temporary occupation by the RSFSR of these territories was intended to create conditions conducive to a peaceful resolution of the territorial disputes between Armenia and Azerbaijan; in the future, the issue, said the Treaty, would be settled by means of a comprehensive agreement between the Republic of Armenia and the RSFSR”17 Russia hastened to sign the treaty with Armenia because, the same day, Turkey and the Entente signed the Sevres Treaty, under which Armenia could have gained a lot. The Russian Soviet diplomats feared, with good reason, that Armenia might be tempted and would fall under the infuence of the Entente. Under pressure from Moscow, the half-baked diplomatic document was signed; Armenia was promised the Azeri lands previously transformed by Soviet Russia into disputed territories. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
40 Jamil Hasanli From the very frst days of Soviet power in Azerbaijan, much was done to transform the primordial Azeri lands into disputed territories; this is best illustrated by the Russian-Armenian treaty. On June 19 Narimanov, Mdivani, Mikoian, and Avis Nurijanian sent a telegram to Chicherin, which talked about the advance of the Dashnak army and its success in Gazakh and Gedabey. A copy of this telegram was sent to Orjonikidze in Vladikavkaz: In any case, Azerbaijan cannot survive without Karabakh and Zangezur. I think that we should invite an Azeri representative to Moscow to discuss all the issues related to Azerbaijan and Armenia before the treaty with Armenia is signed; repetition of the Zakatala scandal stirred up by Armenians will undermine our position here.18 Some people placed the stakes on Armenia in the territorial disputes between the two republics; some of the top offcials in Moscow never hesitated to tell lies and never shunned provocations. Long before the treaty was signed, People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs Chicherin wrote in his report to Lenin: The Azeri government has claimed Karabakh, Zangezur, and the Sharur-Daralaghez Uezd along with Nakhchivan, Ordubad, and Julfa… This combination should not be accomplished by Russian hands—this is unacceptable. We should remain objective and unbiased. It would be a fatal mistake for our Eastern policy to rely on one national element against another national element. If we take any lands from Armenia and transfer them to Azerbaijan, our policy in the East will be distorted.19 Georgii Chicherin managed to present at least some of his ideas as offcial and transform them into instructions for the Revolutionary Military Council of the Caucasian Front sent in the name of the CC RCP (B) not to let either Azeri or Armenian offcials into the disputed territories. The territories described as disputed were in fact parts of Azerbaijan and were still controlled by the Azeri authorities. This meant that Chicherin’s instructions were nothing more than a violation of Azerbaijan’s sovereign rights and territorial integrity. The new leaders of Azerbaijan found themselves in a quandary: on the one hand, enticed by revolutionary zeal, Azeri Soviet power imagined that it was close to Soviet Russia; on the other, Soviet Russia, the workers’ and peasants’ ally, detached the lands which had undoubtedly belonged to Azerbaijan under the previous government. This looked ugly, even to the Soviet offcials dispatched from Moscow to Azerbaijan. The injustice was glaring. In a long report to Lenin, Nikolai Soloviev, one such person, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Sovietization of Azerbaijan 41 who flled the post of Chairman of the Council of National Economy of Azerbaijan SSR, wrote: People pinned their hopes on Moscow, but the peace treaties with Georgia and Armenia, under which chunks of Azeri territory with Muslim population were transferred to these republics, shattered, if not killed, these hopes. The Muslim masses concluded that Moscow had not only captured Azerbaijan, but also increased Georgian and Armenian territories at its expense.20 Solovyov added that, the ordinary Muslims were puzzled, while certain members of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan explained that the treaty had been compiled on the instructions of infuential Armenians who flled high posts in the Center and called themselves Communists while being conscious or unconscious nationalists.21 Nariman Narimanov was enraged by Soviet Russia’s arbitrariness toward Azerbaijan; he knew that these provocations had been devised and realized by People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs Chicherin (who since the summer of 1919 had been dead set against Narimanov’s Eastern policy) and his deputy Lev Karakhan. Their posts as heads of the People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs allowed them to shape and realize the foreign, especially Eastern, policy of the Soviets. In his opposition to Chicherin, Narimanov tried to rely on Lenin, who had pronounced many high-sounding words and been lavish with his promises. Still expecting Lenin to be fair and unbiased, he wrote to him in mid-July: Comrade Chicherin’s telegram shows that you are receiving biased information or that the Center has succumbed to those who are still cooperating with what remains of Denikin’s crowd against Soviet power in Azerbaijan. If the Center wants to sacrifce Azerbaijan and keep Baku and its oil and renounce its Eastern policy, it is free to do this.22 Narimanov warned Lenin in a very clear form that, you will not be able to keep Baku separated from the rest of Azerbaijan with the perfdious Dashnaks and Georgian Mensheviks as your neighbors. On the other hand, I would like to fnd out what the Center thinks about us, the Muslims, and how it dealt with these important issues without us. The Center was free to mistrust us, but such senior offcials as Orjonikidze and Mdivani, likewise, disagree with its decision.23 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
42 Jamil Hasanli He openly told the head of the Soviet state about the fact that, with its decision about Karabakh the Center deprived us of our weapon, etc. It added plausibility to the provocative statements of the Musavat Party, which is holding forth that the Muslim Communists allegedly sold Azerbaijan to Russia, a country which recognizes the independence of Armenia and Georgia and, at the same time, insists for some reason that the areas which belonged beyond a doubt to Azerbaijan before Soviet power, become disputable. Comrade Chicherin says that we should obey the Center’s policy, but is the Center aware that it is using us as a screen? We are told in plain terms: ‘You cannot secure the absolutely undisputed territories, but you are holding forth about liberating the East’.24 In another letter to Lenin, Narimanov informed him about a serious threat to Azerbaijan: The situation is catastrophic. The Center has recognized Georgia and Armenia as independent states and recognized Azerbaijan’s independence. At the same time, the Center has transferred undisputed Azeri territories to Armenia. Had they been transferred to Georgia, public opinion could have been pacifed, but the fact that they were given to Armenia and the Dashnaks is a fatal and irreparable mistake. (For the letter of Narimanov to Lenin, see: Narimanov 1990, 117) Soviet Russia preferred to ignore Narimanov’s resolute and sometimes even oppositional stand; it followed the policy of humiliation of Azerbaijan devised by the People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs. On July 20, Commissar for Foreign Affairs Chicherin telegraphed Narimanov with a great deal of sarcasm: So far neither you, nor Orjonikidze have clarifed in your telegrams why you and the local Communists are dissatisfed with the occupation of Karabakh and Zangezur by Russian troops and why you want, without fail, their formal annexation to Azerbaijan… We should establish good relations with Armenia because if Turkey turns against us, Armenia, even Armenia of the Dashnaks, will serve as an outpost of our struggle against the advancing Turks.25 In another letter, Georgii Chicherin deemed it necessary to warn the Politburo of the CC RCP (B) that relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia should be treated as part of Russia’s Turkish policy: “When discussing the Azeri-Armenian disagreements, I have always pointed out that if the Turks acquired aggressive trends in the Caucasus, Armenia will serve as a barrier and will defend us.”26 As Soviet Russia was consolidating its position in Azerbaijan, the republic was gradually being turned into a toehold for the Bolsheviks’ regional Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Sovietization of Azerbaijan 43 policy; its natural resources and territories were used to lull the Georgian and Armenian bourgeois republics and to create conditions conducive to Sovietization of Armenia. On September 23, 1920, Boris Legran sent a ciphered telegram to Lenin in which he described Soviet Russia’s intentions regarding the Azeri territories: there is no danger in transferring Zangezur and Nakhchivan to Armenia. The very idea that Russia needed these territories for its liberating military operations in the Turkish and Tabriz sectors was utopian. One could not disagree with the territorial claims of Azerbaijan. Moscow’s objective and subjective considerations would undoubtedly satisfy Azerbaijan; as for Karabakh, it was possible to insist on its unifcation with Azerbaijan.27 In another of his telegrams dated October 24, 1920, this time addressed to Chicherin, Boris Legran described his agreements with the Armenians regarding the Azeri territories: The Armenians categorically insist that Nakhchivan and Zangezur immediately be recognized as theirs. I pointed out that without Azerbaijan this issue cannot be resolved and that it can be raised only if the Armenians drop their claims to Karabakh. After long discussions they agreed, with minor stipulations, to renounce their claims to Karabakh.28 After a short while, however, late in November 1920 when Soviet power had been established in Armenia, the struggle for the mountainous part of Karabakh entered a new stage. Why the Caucasian Bureau of Bolsheviks Treated the Karabakh Issue as “Strictly Confdential” As soon as Soviet power was established in Armenia on November 29, 1920, the Communists returned the Karabakh issue to the political agenda. On November 30, 1920, Chairman of the Azerbaijan Revolutionary Committee (Azrevcom) Nariman Narimanov and People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs Mirza Davud Huseynov congratulated the Armenian Revolutionary Committee in a telegram. The telegram, however, did not entirely correspond to the decision adopted by the joint meeting of the Politburo and Orgburo of the C.C. of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan held on November 30. Nariman Narimanov’s speech at the grand meeting of the Baku Soviet on the occasion of establishing Soviet power in Armenia and the Declaration he read on December 1, 1920 also contained certain contradictions. The document said that, Soviet Azerbaijan, declares that from this time on territorial issues will never cause bloodshed between two peoples who have been neighbors for centuries; the territories of the Zangezur and Nakhchivan uezds are an inalienable part of Soviet Armenia. The toiling peasants of Nagorno-Karabakh are granted the right to complete self-determination; all military actions in Uploaded by S. M. Safi
44 Jamil Hasanli Zangezur are being suspended, while the troops of Soviet Azerbaijan are being pulled out.29 It should be said that the Declaration of 1 December contradicts the decisions of the CC CPA (B) of 4 and 30 November. On November 4, 1920, after discussing the Russian-Armenian treaty, the meeting of the Politburo of the CC CPA (B) attended by Stalin and Orjonikidze decided that “the suggestion that Nakhchivan and Zangezur should be transferred to Armenia is disadvantageous both politically and strategically.” On November 30, 1920, however, the CC CPA (B) passed a decision on the transfer of Zangezur to Armenia (the Nakhchivan issue was not discussed). Several days later, on December 2, Envoy Plenipotentiary of the RSFSR in Armenia Boris Legran pointed out that Soviet Russia had recognized only the transfer of Zangezur (out of the three territories mentioned above) as legal.30 The Declaration Narimanov read on 1 December mentioned Nakhchivan in addition to Zangezur as the territories transferred to Armenia. Jörg Baberowki of Humboldt University asserts that in the summer of 1920 Narimanov under the pressure of Orjonikidze agreed to transfer Zangezur, Karabakh and Nakhchivan to Armenia (see: Baberowski 2010, 237). The text which appeared in the Baku newspapers had been falsifed by Orjonikidze. On December 1, he informed Legran and People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the RSFSR Georgii Chicherin of the following in a ciphered telegram: “Azerbaijan has already responded and transferred Nakhchivan, Zangezur, and Nagorno-Karabakh to Soviet Armenia.”31 On December 2, in another telegram, he informed Lenin and Stalin of the following: “Yesterday Azerbaijan announced that Nakhichevan, Zangezur, and Nagorno-Karabakh were transferred to Soviet Armenia.”32 On Stalin’s initiative, two days later “good news” appeared in Pravda. Stalin’s article based on a distorted telegram written when Soviet power was established in Armenia, which appeared on the same day in Izvestia, was later included in Volume IV of Stalin’s Works and reappeared in the collection of articles Vneshnyaya politika SSSR (Foreign Policy of the USSR). It still remains a favorite with certain authors.33 The question arises: was Grigorii Orjonikidze misinformed, or was it a lie? When Soviet power was established in Dilijan, Sergo Orjonikidze discussed the issues mentioned in the Declaration of the government of Azerbaijan with Amayak Nazaretyan by direct telephone line and said in particular that today, the Soviet gathered for its gala meeting in Baku where Narimanov read the Declaration of the government of Azerbaijan, which pointed out that there were no longer borders between Soviet Armenia and Azerbaijan. From this day on, the territory of the Zangezur and Nakhchivan uezds has become an inalienable part of Soviet Armenia. The Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh have been granted the right to Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Sovietization of Azerbaijan 45 self-determination. The riches of Azerbaijan—oil and kerosene—have become the riches of both republics. Overjoyed, Nazaretyan exclaimed: “We shall start shouting in the press: Bravo, Azeris!”34 Did anyone in Armenia see the real text of the Declaration? We know that the text signed by Narimanov and Huseynov was telegraphed to the Armenian Revolutionary Committee. After reading the document, Askanaz Mravyan (a member of the Armenian Revolutionary Committee) informed the Armenian representative in Moscow Saak Ter-Gabrielyan that Azerbaijan had announced that Zangezur and Nakhchivan had been united [with Armenia] and that a referendum would take place in Nagorno-Karabakh.35 Why did Narimanov suggest in his Declaration that Zangezur be transferred to Armenia? The idea belonged to the Politburo of the CC RCP (B). Grigorii Orjonikidze was behind this Declaration; this means that the man convinced that Zangezur belonged to Azerbaijan suddenly changed his mind. Why? He wanted to drive a wedge between Azerbaijan and Turkey to reduce to naught Turkey’s potential threat to Azerbaijan. On November 23, 1920, Stalin, while traveling from Baku to Moscow, used a direct line from Rostov-on-Don to inform Lenin that, according to Orjonikidze, the Turks’ desire to establish a common border between Turkey and Azerbaijan looked threatening and that the Turkish plans could be upturned by transferring Zangezur to Armenia.36 This explains why the Turks regarded the treaty between Soviet Russia and Dashnak Armenia and friendly relations between these countries when Armenia became Soviet to be an obstacle on Turkey’s road to the Muslim peoples of the Caucasus.37 Back on November 4, 1920, during his “famous” trip to the Caucasus, Stalin attended a joint meeting of the CC CPA (B) and the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B), which listened to Legran’s report on the situation in Armenia and passed a decision. Point “b” of the document, which related to the discussed treaty between Russia and Armenia, said the following: To inform, at the same time, that the Politburo insists that the point on the transfer of Nakhichevan and Zangezur (suggested by Moscow. —J.H.) is not advantageous either politically or strategically and can only be carried out in an emergency. Point “d” instructed Nariman Narimanov to substantiate the Politburo’s opinion about Nakhchivan and Zangezur.38 This meant that there was no Karabakh problem at all initially, which was why it was not discussed. On November 20, 1920, a diplomatic mission of Soviet Russia arrived in Erivan to monitor the talks between Turkey and Armenia underway in Gumri (Alexandropol) and to sort out Armenia’s territorial claims to Azerbaijan and Georgia. People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs Georgii Chicherin was informed that “today, the continued Uploaded by S. M. Safi
46 Jamil Hasanli existence of the Armenian people depends not so much on military force as on diplomacy. We should abandon party romanticism and arm ourselves with grim realism.”39 Despite the fact that on December 1, 1920, Nariman Narimanov made public the Declaration of the Revolutionary Committee of Azerbaijan, Nakhchivan and Karabakh (both its valley and mountain parts) still belonged to Azerbaijan. Under the Moscow Treaty of March 16, 1921, between Soviet Russia and Kemalist Turkey, the Nakhchivan Region became an autonomous territory as a protectorate of Azerbaijan on the condition that it would never cede protectorate to a third state. This revived the problem of the mountainous part of Karabakh as an urgent issue between Azerbaijan and Armenia. On June 3, 1921, members of the Caucasian Bureau, Grigorii Orjonikidze, Philip Makharadze, Nariman Narimanov, Alexandr Myasnikov (Martuni), Ivan Orakhelashvili, Amayak Nazaretyan, and Iurii Figatner, candidate for bureau member, Secretary of the CC of the Azerbaijan CP Grigorii Kaminsky, and member of the CC of the Communist Party of Georgia, Shalva Eliava, attended a plenary session of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B). Its evening sitting was expected to discuss three questions: 1 the Azerbaijani issue; 2 the issue of Zangezur; 3 the nomads. Protocol No. 6 deals with the decisions on the frst and third points; the second was discussed separately in the Addendum to the Protocol, 40 which started all the trouble. First, as distinct from Protocol No. 6, the decision on Zangezur, which consisted of seven points, was marked as “strictly confdential.” Second, of the seven points only six dealt with Zangezur, while Point 5 said: “The declaration of the Armenian government should mention that Nagorno-Karabakh belongs to Armenia.”41 This meant that Armenia was “strictly confdentially” instructed to issue a government Declaration saying that Nagorno-Karabakh belonged to Armenia. On 12 June, the Council of People’s Commissars (CPC) of Armenia issued a decree on joining the mountainous part of Karabakh to Armenia. The decree said: Proceeding from the declaration of the Revolutionary Committee of the Socialist Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan and from the agreement between the socialist republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan, it is declared that from this time on Nagorno-Karabakh has become an inalienable part of the Socialist Soviet Republic of Armenia.42 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Sovietization of Azerbaijan 47 The same day, Myasnikov and Karabekyan signed the document; three days later, on June 15, it was discussed by the CC CP of Armenia, which passed the following decision: “The decree on the unifcation of Nagorno-Karabakh and Soviet Armenia should be published.” The same sitting discussed the ffth point of its agenda on dispatching a representative to Karabakh; it was decided “to send Comrade Mravyan together with Pirumov, Akop Ionisyan, Ter-Simonyan, and a group of other comrades to Karabakh;”43 the government issued a corresponding decree, which the Armenian Revolutionary Committee published a week later, on June 19. Askanaz Mravyan was appointed chargé d’affaires extraordinaire in Nagorno-Karabakh. In fact, the frst step in this direction was made after the Moscow Treaty of 1921 when the government came up with a document of six points entitled The Basic Premises on Uniting Nagorno-Karabakh and the Republic of Armenia. It said that the mountainous part was separated from Lower Karabakh by a low mountain range. Convinced that this mountain range should be joined to Nagorno-Karabakh, the Armenians argued that, frst, this zone was allegedly used by the Armenians and, second, there were strips of arable land. Article 5 of the document is especially interesting. It reads: The transfer of Nagorno-Karabakh to the Republic of Armenia should be naturally accompanied by the transfer of so-called Kurdistan, a narrow mountainous strip between Karabakh and Zangezur. It’s very specifc location and the nationalist sentiments of its population, however, might cause certain problems.44 On June 26, the CPC of Azerbaijan discussed Aliheydar Karaev’s report about his trip to Nagorno-Karabakh and Nakhchivan and decided that the Armenian claims to Nagorno-Karabakh should be studied and summarized in a detailed report to the Council.45 On 27 June, Narimanov, in fulfllment of the decision, informed Orjonikidze and Myasnikov by telegraph that the CPC of Azerbaijan had unanimously deemed the unilateral decision on Nagorno-Karabakh passed by the Armenian Revolutionary Committee without discussion at the CPC of Armenia and the arrival of Askanaz Mravyan in Nagorno-Karabakh as envoy extraordinary of Armenia to be an unprecedented political and tactical mistake. It was also requested that Mravyan be immediately recalled. On June 27, a joint sitting of the Politburo and Orgburo of the CC of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan discussed the problem of borders between Azerbaijan and Armenia and dismissed the Nagorno-Karabakh issue raised by Alexandr Bekzadyan as untenable in view of the region’s obvious economic bias toward Azerbaijan. Likewise, it was administratively and economically untenable to divide the localities with Armenian and Azeri populations between the two republics. On the basis of Narimanov’s Declaration, Aliheydar Shirvani, instructed by Narimanov, 46 informed Huseynov in Tifis of this decision. His message said in part: Uploaded by S. M. Safi
48 Jamil Hasanli The Council of People’s Commissars has agreed with the decision. Comrade Narimanov asked me to inform you that the question must be resolved in this way, otherwise the Council will divest itself of all of its responsibilities, since if this is the way Soviet Armenia wishes to make a good impression on the Dashnaks and the non-party masses, we should bear in mind that by the same token we will be reviving antiSoviet groups in Azerbaijan similar to the Dashnaks. At this point Narimanov took the receiver and said to Huseynov: “Tell them that this is the unanimous opinion of Politburo and Orgburo. My declaration, to which they refer, merely said: ‘Nagorno-Karabakh is being granted the right to free self-determination.’” Nariman Narimanov said: “Today we sent you a telegram, with copies to Sergo, Myasnikov, and Karaev, to inform you that Comrade Mravyan has been recalled from Karabakh.” Narimanov asked Huseynov to tell Orjonikidze that “our Armenian comrades are only thinking about the territory and are not concerned about the wellbeing of the poorest Armenian and Muslim groups or about strengthening the revolution.”47 Who allowed the Armenians to speak in the name of the Azeri leaders? Later, however it turned out that it had been Sergo Orjonikidze and Sergei Kirov who gave the Armenians this permission. Having concentrated real power in the Caucasus, they were looking for ways to transfer Karabakh to Armenia. It was they who handed Narimanov the telegram on 26 June with Bekzadyan’s idea about dividing Karabakh on national-ethnic grounds. The telegram read: If you want to know our opinion, it is the following: to smooth out the friction and establish genuinely friendly relations when dealing with the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, we should be guided by the principle that none of the Armenian villages should be united with Azerbaijan, just as none of the Muslim villages should become part of Armenia.48 The same day, June 27, Huseynov, on Narimanov’s instructions, moved the issue to the Caucasian Bureau, which ruled the following: An extraordinary plenum of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B) must be convened immediately. The following telegram should be sent to comrades Narimanov and Myasnikov: ‘The Presidium of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B) suggests that when you receive this you must immediately depart to attend the extraordinary plenum of the Caucasian Bureau to discuss delimitation of the republics. There are six members of the Caucasian Bureau in Tifis; if you fail to arrive, their decision will be considered fnal, therefore we insist that you go there at once.’49 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Sovietization of Azerbaijan 49 On June 28, the CPC met once more under Narimanov’s chairmanship. Myasnikov’s Declaration, which proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh part of the Armenian SSR, was declined; the meeting discussed the possibility of recalling Mravyan, extraordinary representative of Armenia in Nagorno-Karabakh. After this, Narimanov departed to Tifis to attend the plenary meeting of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B) scheduled for July 4, 1921. How the Myth of Stalin Appeared in the Fate of Karabakh On July 4, however, at another plenum of the Caucasian Bureau attended by Stalin, Kirov, future head of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan (three weeks later he would have to become Secretary of the CC CP of Azerbaijan—J.H.), and Orjonikidze (the Transcaucasus republics’ curator) voted for the following resolution: “To include (italics mine—J.H.) NagornoKarabakh in the Armenian SSR and limit the plebiscite to the mountainous part.”50 The plenary session was attended by member of the CC RCP (B) Stalin and members of its Caucasian Bureau Orjonikidze, Makharadze, Narimanov, Myasnikov, Kirov, Nazaretyan, Orakhelashvili, Figatner; Breitman (Secretary of the Caucasian Bureau of the Central Committee of the Russian Young Communist League), and members of the Central Committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Georgia Tsintsadze, Mdivani, and Svanidze. The discussion revealed two opposite opinions. The participants were invited to vote for the following: a b c d Karabakh should remain (italics mine—J.H.) part of Azerbaijan (Narimanov, Makharadze, and Nazaretyan voted “for”; Orjonikidze, Myasnikov, Kirov, and Figatner, “against”); The plebiscite should be carried out throughout the entire territory of Karabakh among the Armenians and Muslims (Narimanov and Makharadze voted “for”). The mountainous part of Karabakh should be joined to Armenia (Orjonikidze, Myasnikov, Figatner, and Kirov voted “for”). The plebiscite should be carried out only in Upper Karabakh (Orjonikidze, Myasnikov, Figatner, Kirov, and Nazaretyan voted “for”).51 The protocol contains a note: Comrade Orakhelashvili was absent when the vote on Karabakh was taken. This was a much more honest position than that of future Secretaries of the CC of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan Kirov and Orjonikidze, who repeatedly demanded in their telegrams to Lenin and Chicherin that both the valley and the mountainous part of Karabakh be left in Azerbaijan. They voted “for” on the two last points. The adopted decision violated Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. This made people wonder why Orjonikidze and Kirov, who several months earlier Uploaded by S. M. Safi
50 Jamil Hasanli “could not imagine Azerbaijan without Karabakh,” changed their minds in June 1921 and voted against Azerbaijan at the 4 July sitting of the Caucasian Bureau. Were they guided by the Center’s secret instructions? Here is an explanation: the Moscow Treaty of March 16, 1921, between Soviet Russia and Turkey (with a point which preserved Nakhchivan within Azerbaijan on the condition that Azerbaijan would never cede protectorate to a third state) turned Nagorno-Karabakh into a target of secret and then open discussions at the Caucasian Bureau in June-July 1921 and triggered attempts to transfer Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia by force. The text and the political sense of the decision of the Caucasian Bureau of 4 July was frequently falsifed and misinterpreted. The Armenian authors performed a “minor” operation by replacing the verb “include” with the verb “keep within.” Nariman Narimanov stated resolutely that “because the Karabakh issue is so important to Azerbaijan, I believe it necessary to transfer the fnal decision on it to the CC RCP.” It was thanks to his protest that the meeting arrived at the following decision: “Since the Karabakh issue has caused serious disagreements, the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B) believes it advisable to transfer the fnal decision to the CC RCP (B).”52 This meant that the same sitting discussed the Karabakh issue as Point 5 of the agenda; the decision passed by a majority vote after Narimanov’s statement (Point 6) annulled the previous results. This issue was never discussed in the CC RCP (B) because, frst, Orjonikidze had renounced his previous erroneous position and, relying on Nazaretyan, demanded that the decisions of the previous plenary session on Karabakh be revised.53 On 5 July the plenary session of the Caucasian Bureau adopted the following decisions on Point 2 of the agenda in view of the frm position of Narimanov and Orjonikidze’s retreat from his previous stand: a b c d proceeding from the need to maintain national peace between the Muslims and the Armenians, the economic ties between Upper and Lower Karabakh, and its constant contacts with Azerbaijan, NagornoKarabakh should be left (italics mine.-J.H.) within the Azerbaijan S.S.R. with broad regional autonomy and its administrative center in the town of Shusha, which belongs to the autonomous region (for—4; abstained—3); the CC of Azerbaijan should be instructed to identify the boundaries of the autonomous region and present the results to the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B) for approval; the Presidium of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC should be instructed to talk to the CC of Armenia and the CC of Azerbaijan about a candidate for the post of commissar extraordinary of Nagorno-Karabakh; the CC of Azerbaijan should be instructed to identify the volume of rights of the autonomy of Nagorno-Karabakh and present the result to the Caucasian Bureau of the CC for approval.54 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Sovietization of Azerbaijan 51 When commenting on the repeal of the frst “fair decision” on the Nagorno-Karabakh, the Armenian side referred to Stalin’s unexpected arrival in Tifis. Stalin had allegedly pulled the strings for the Azeris in his usual manner. We have established that Stalin had arrived in Tifis earlier, late in June and could not, therefore, suddenly arrive at the plenary meeting of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B) on 5 July. Why do the Armenian historians, who falsify the historical documents of the Caucasian Bureau, implicate Stalin in “keeping” (“transferring” being their favorite term) Nagorno-Karabakh within Azerbaijan? Because the crimes perpetrated under Stalin give the Armenians a chance to present themselves as victims of the totalitarian regime and create the semblance of “fairness restored.” The Armenian authors and politicians who accuse Stalin of all misfortunes are fully aware of the truth about these dramatic sittings of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B). Protocols No. 11 (the plenary session of the Caucasian Bureau of 4 July) and No. 12 (the 5 July session) provide an absolutely clear picture. Stalin, who was present at both sessions, said nothing about Karabakh.55 Some of the Armenian authors, however, wrote (for obvious reasons) that it was Narimanov, not Nazaretyan, who together with Orjonikidze put the question back on the agenda on 5 July (see: Melik-Shakhnazarov 2009, 311). In their joint article, which appeared in Moscow, Vladimir Zakharov and Sergey Sarkisyan revived the erroneous statement that Nagorno-Karabakh had not been transferred to Azerbaijan until 5 July and associated this decision with Stalin’s name (see: Zakharov and Sarkisyan 2009, 221). According to the Armenian historian Valerii Tunyan, when assessing the meeting of the Caucasian Bureau of July 5, 1921, it is necessary to keep in mind the programmed nature of the solution of the Karabakh issue: the absence of a vote, a strong-willed decision, the imposition of the idea of a plebiscite, the change in the composition of the invited persons, the identity of the initiators of the revision of the decision on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh. Ordjonikidze could be forced to review the decision only on the instructions of the higher leadership of the Chicherin-Lenin bundle, or on behalf of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party. In the role of the guide of the higher leadership, Stalin could act, using his importance and infuence. (Tunyan, 2018, 254) The other Armenian historian Rem Kazanjyan writes: according to the protocols, Stalin already took part in the meetings of the Caucasian Bureau on July 2 and 3, 1921, having the opportunity, as a higher party member of the Central Committee of the RCP, to infuence Uploaded by S. M. Safi
52 Jamil Hasanli the course of solving a particular issue in the right direction, without bringing the matter to July 5. (Kazandzhyan 1997, 23). It is a well-known fact, however, that Stalin had been in Tifis since the end of June 1921. Why did Stalin come to Tifis in late June 1921? Anyone seeking an answer should look at the documents of the plenary meeting of the CC CP (B) of Georgia held on the same day as the plenum of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B). On 7 July, the plenary meeting of the Caucasian Bureau, at which Stalin was also present, was still in session. The plenary meeting also discussed two more issues on its agenda (On the Press and On the Cheka of Georgia) before moving on to the main issue which brought Stalin from Nalchik to Tifis, namely, changes in the leadership of Georgia. Chairman of the Revolutionary Committee of Georgia Philip Makharadze pursued a relatively independent policy; he clashed with Orjonikidze and, in general, was not a favorite with the CC CPR (B). Under the pretext of the far from simple situation in the country, Stalin suggested that he should be replaced by Budu Mdivani. The majority (six votes “for” and four abstentions; together with the votes cast by the members of the Caucasian Bureau, nine votes “for” and four abstentions) made Budu Mdivani head of the Revolutionary Committee of Georgia. For many years, Armenian and some Russian historians looked in vain for Karabakh’s impact on this situation. Stalin, however, came to Georgia to replace the more or less independent Philip Makharadze, who had quarreled with Orjonikidze, with the more pliable Budu Mdivani. In November 1921, Orjonikidze raised the question of removing Makharadze not only from Georgia but from the Caucasus on the whole. On November 2, he wrote to Lenin and Stalin once more: “Philip should be immediately removed from the Caucasus.” On July 19, 1921, after discussing the decision of the Caucasian Bureau of 5 July and Nariman Narimanov’s trip to Tifis, the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee (CEC) of Azerbaijan ruled that “Nagorno-Karabakh remains an inalienable part of Soviet Azerbaijan with the right to internal self-administration within the Soviet Constitution with the regional Executive Committee as its governing body.”56 Moreover, in his report, Narimanov spoke about the administrative borders between Azerbaijan and its Transcaucasian neighbors and informed that Nagorno-Karabakh remained an inalienable part of Soviet Azerbaijan within the Soviet Constitution with the right to self-administration. On July 20, the day after the meeting of the Presidium of the CEC of Azerbaijan and after hearing what Aliheydar Karaev had to say about the situation in Karabakh, the Politburo and Orgburo of the CC CPA (B) decided to set up a commission of representatives of the people’s commissariats of internal affairs, justice, and foreign affairs to draft a constitution of the autonomous region.57 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Sovietization of Azerbaijan 53 After 5 July, it was rumored that the Armenians had been evicted from Karabakh to Armenia (Levon Mirzoyan mentioned in his report that the rumors were started by nationalist-minded Armenians); gradually this “information” reached the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B). It should be said that all those who were displeased with the decisions of the Caucasian Bureau of 5 July acted through Sergei Kirov (when he was elected First Secretary of the CC of the Community Party of Azerbaijan). In August 1921, Secretary of the Caucasian Bureau Figatner wrote to Kirov that allegedly after the decision of the Caucasian Bureau of 5 July to keep Nagorno-Karabakh within Azerbaijan, “many Armenian villages were moved from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia.”58 After receiving this information, Kirov immediately asked Karaev and Mirzoyan (who were in Karabakh) to clarify it. They answered that there was an opposite trend: in the frst months of Sovietization of Azerbaijan Muslims started moving away from Karabakh to other places. In mid-August 1921, when talking on the phone to Orjonikidze, Alexandr Myasnikov said that treatment of the Karabakh issue in Armenia had become more or less loyal.59 The decision of the Caucasian Bureau on an autonomous status for the mountainous part of Karabakh forced the Center to closely follow the relevant developments. In a letter to Sergei Kirov, First Secretary of the CC CPA (B), dated 22 May, 1922, Stalin wrote the following with a great deal of sarcasm: “They say that Fonstein, a ‘native’ of Karabakh, represents it in the Central Executive Committee of Azerbaijan.”60 In his letter dated 18 June, Kirov explained to Stalin that he had been deluded and listed the members who represented Karabakh at the CEC.61 At the same time, the Center was playing into the hands of the Armenians; it tried to prevent subordination of the party organization of Karabakh to the Communist Party of Azerbaijan. On August 1, 1922, however, Kirov and Matyushin, who headed the organizational department of CC CPA (B), telegraphed to Moscow: “The territory of Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan, while its party organization is part of the CP of Azerbaijan”62 On July 7, 1923, the Central Executive Committee of Azerbaijan crowned three years of preparatory work with a decree on setting up the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region (NKAR) as part of the Republic of Azerbaijan. This is how the struggle over the territorial affliation of Nagorno-Karabakh which began in the frst years of Soviet power in the Transcaucasus ended. The decree signed by Mir Bashir Gasymov, deputy chair of the CEC of Azerbaijan, Mahmud Khanbudagov, secretary of the CEC announced that, elimination of national oppression and inequality, no matter what form it takes, and replacement of national hostility and hatred with the international solidarity of workers and fraternal cooperation of peoples in a common state union is one of the key tasks of the workerspeasants’ revolution and Soviet power. To execute this task, “the Azerbaijani Central Executive Committee of Soviets resolves: 1. to make the Armenian Uploaded by S. M. Safi
54 Jamil Hasanli part of Mountainous Karabakh an autonomous district, as a constituent part of the Azerbaijani SSR, with its center in a locality of Khankendi.”63 On 27 May 27, 1924, Nariman Narimanov wrote the following to Stalin: Under Mirzoyan’s strong pressure, Nagorno-Karabakh was made an autonomous region. I was not able to accomplish this, not because I was against the autonomy, but because the Armenian peasants themselves did not want this. Meanwhile, Mirzoyan, assisted by the Dashnak teachers, tilled the soil and pushed the decision through the Transcaucasian Territorial Committee. (Narimanov 1992, 59) He knew that the trouble for Azerbaijan did not stop there; he predicted that the autonomy of Nagorno-Karabakh was the beginning of a future tragedy. Conclusion The Sovietization of Azerbaijan started with territorial losses. From the frst days of the April occupation of the territory of the republic, it became the object of “compensations” within the framework of the Soviet political approach in the South Caucasus. Embraced by Soviet Russia, Azerbaijan began losing not only its freedom but also its land. The analysis shows that longtime allegations that Karabakh belongs to Armenian lands as well as allegations that Stalin took Karabakh away from Armenia and gave it to Azerbaijan and other empty talk have nothing to do with the historical truth. Study of the documents and materials of the 1920s for this chapter reaffrms the groundlessness of these claims. Such a brazen lie about the recent history of Karabakh is explained by attempts to justify occupation of Azerbaijani lands by Armenia over the past few years. A long-term tragedy initiated by the provision of autonomy to Mountainous Karabakh had its roots, as Narimanov used to say, in trusting strangers. In effect, a delayed-action bomb was placed under Azerbaijani statehood, in order to cause an explosion when Russia left the Caucasus. Orjonikidze’s idea “to declare autonomy in Karabakh and organize the Armenian population” in July 1920 passed the test of time. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Karabakh question became an effcient mechanism of controlling the region in Russia’s hands. In 1923, “a delayed action bomb with a clock-operated mechanism” was set to snap into action as soon as Soviet Russia pulled out of the Caucasus. Grigorii Orjonikidze’s idea formulated in July 1920 of “autonomy for Karabakh and organization of the Armenian population” has passed the test of time to become Russia’s lever of control in the region after the Soviet Union disappeared from the world map. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Sovietization of Azerbaijan 55 Notes 1 For more detail, see: “Results of Soviet Construction in Azerbaijan,” Report of Narimanov to Lenin. September 15, 1921, Russian State Archives of SocialPolitical History (RGASPI), fn. 5, l. 1, f. 1219, 12; Letter of N. Narimanov to Lenin, Archives of Political Documents at the Administration of the President of the Azerbaijan Republic (APDUDPAR), fn. 609, l. 1, f. 71, 51. 2 Telegram of Narimanov, Mdivani, Mikoyan, Nurijanyan to Chicherin. June 19, 1920, State Archives of the Republic of Azerbaijan (SARA), fn. 28, l. 1, f. 211, 115. 3 See: Letter of the People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs Chicherin to the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks)— (CC RCP (B)), June 22, 1920, APDUDPAR, fn. 1, l. 1, f. 2a, 9. 4 Chicherin’s reply to Lenin’s inquiry. June 1920, RGASPI, fn. 2, l. 1, f. 1451, 1. 5 Letter of Narimanov, Mdivani, Mikoyan, Naneishvili, Vesnik, Levandovskii and Mikhaylov to the CC RCP (B). July 10, 1920, APDUDPAR, fn. 1, l. 44, f. 118, 25–27. 6 Chicherin’s ciphered telegram to Orjonikidze. July 2, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 3c, f. 2, 3. 7 Orjonikidze’s reply on direct line to G. Chicherin’s telegram of 2 July about the disputed territories claimed by Azerbaijan and Armenia. July 1920, RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 3c, f. 2, 6. 8 Direct reminder to Lenin, Stalin and Chicherin. July 1920, RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 3c, f. 2, 8–9. 9 See: Telegram from Orjonikidze to Chicherin. 1920, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 17, 53. 10 Direct note to Nadezhda Allilueva. July 7, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 3c, f. 2, 20. 11 Telegram from Chicherin to Orjonikidze. July 8, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 17, 60. 12 Telegram from Orjonikidze to Lenin, Stalin and Chicherin. July 16, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 3c, f. 2, 12. 13 Telegram of A. Mikoyan to Orjonikidze. June 29, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 17, 134. 14 Ciphered telegram of Orjonikidze and Kirov to Lenin and Stalin. June 12, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 2c, f. 2, 9–11. 15 Telegram from Orjonikidze to Chicherin. 1920, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 17, 304. 16 See: Letter of Kirov to Chicherin. August 6, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 80, l. 4, fn. 102k, 1–2. 17 See: Treaty between the RSFSR and the Republic of Armenia. August 10, 1920, APDUDPAR, fn. 1, l. 169, f. 249/II, 11–12. 18 Telegram from Narimanov, Mdivani, Mikoian, and Nurijanian to Chicherin, June 19, 1920, SARA, fn. 28, l. 1, f. 211, 115. 19 Copy of a memo to Lenin. June 29, 1920, APDUDPAR, fn. 1, l. 1, f. 2a, 13–14. 20 Information of Nikolai Soloviev to Vladimir Lenin “Our Policy in Azerbaijan in Two Months (May–June) after the Coup. 1920, RGASPI, fn. 17, l. 84, f. 58, 15. 21 Ibid. 22 Letter of Narimanov to Lenin, July 1920, APDUDP AR, fn. 609, l. 1, f. 71, 41. 23 İbid, 41–42. 24 Ibid, 42. 25 Urgent telegram of Chicherin to Narimanov. July 20, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 5, l. 1, f. 2097, 1. 26 Letter of Chicherin to the Politburo of the CC RCP (B). October 5, 1920, Foreign Policy Archives of the Russian Federation (AVP RF), fn. 04, l. 39, f. 232, f. 52987, 40. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
56 Jamil Hasanli 27 See: Boris Legran’s telegram to Vladimir Lenin. September 23, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 5, l. 1, f. 21, 144. 28 Secret telegram of Legran to Chicherin. October 24, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 5, l. 1, f. 2178, 20. 29 Kommunist, December 2, 1920. 30 See: Radiogram of Legran to Orjonikidze. December 2, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 14, f. 33, 16. 31 Orjonikidze’s ciphered telegram to Legran and Chicherin. December 1,1920, RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 14, f. 33, 12. 32 Orjonikidze’s letter to Lenin and Stalin, December 2, 1920. RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 14, f. 33, 20. 33 See: Izvestia, December 4, 1920. 34 Conversation between Amayak Nazaretyan and Sergo Orjonikidze by direct telephone line. December 1, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 14, f. 37, 1. 35 See: From a member of the Armenian Revolutionary Committee (Mravyan) to representative of Soviet Armenia Ter-Gabrielyan. December 4, 1921, AVP RF, fn. 04, l. 39, f. 232, f. 53001, 14. 36 See: Conversation between Stalin and Lenin by direct line. November 23, 1920, AVP RF, fn. 04, l. 39, f. 232, f. 52987, 47. 37 See: Letter of Legran to Chicherin. December 22, 1920, RGASPI, fn. 5, l. 1, f. 212733, 5. 38 See: Protocol No. 4 of the joint meeting of the CC CP (B) of Azerbaijan and Caucasian Bureau. November 4, 1920, APDUDPAR, fn. 1, l. 1, f. 22, 20. 39 The Diplomatic Representatives of Soviet Russia in Erivan to People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs Chicherin. November 1920, SARA, fn. 28, l. 1, f. 38, 15. 40 See: Protocol No. 6 of the evening sitting of the plenary session of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B). June 3, 1921, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 1, 76op. 41 Addendum to Protocol No. 6 of the evening sitting of the plenary session of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B). June 3. 1921, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 1, 77. 42 Bakinskii rabochii, June 22, 1921. 43 Protocol No. 8 of the meeting of the C.C. of the Communist Party of Armenia. June 15, 1921, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, fn. 105, 11op. 44 See: The Basic Premises on Uniting Nagorno-Karabakh and the Republic of Armenia. 1921, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 137, 7-7op. 45 See: Protocol of a sitting of the Council of People’s Commissars of Azerbaijan. June 26, 1921, SARA, fn. 411, l. 1, f. 12, 1. 46 See: Protocol No. 20 of the sitting of the Politburo and Orgburo of the CC CP (B) of Azerbaijan. June 27, 1921, APDUDPAR, fn. 1, l. 74, f. 1231, 64. 47 Conversation of Shirvani and Narimanov by direct phone line with Mirza Davud Huseynov. June 27, 1921, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 215, 14. 48 Telegram of Orjonikidze and Kirov to Narimanov. June 26, 1921, RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 18, f. 229, 1–2. 49 Protocol No. 5 of a sitting of the Presidium of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B). June 27, 1921, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 2, 73. 50 Protocol No. 11 of the evening sitting of the plenary session of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B). July 4, 1921, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 1, 118. 51 See: Ibid. 52 Ibid., 114. 53 See: Protocol No. 12 of the plenary session of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B). July 5, 1921, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 1, 122. 54 See: Ibid. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Sovietization of Azerbaijan 57 55 See: Protocol No. 8 of the plenary session of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B). July 2–3, 921, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, fn. 1, 87–88; Protocol No. 8 of the plenary session of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B) with representatives of local party organizations and trade unions. July 2–3, 1921, RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 18, f. 59, 14. 56 Protocol of a sitting of the CEC of Azerbaijan. July 19, 1921, RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 31, 122. 57 See: Protocol No. 22 of the meeting of the Political and Organizational Bureau of the CC CP (B) of Azerbaijan. July 20, 1921. APDUDP AR, fn. 1, l. 2, f. 18, 94; RGASPI, fn. 64, l. 1, f. 92, 51. 58 Information supplied by Secretary of the Caucasian Bureau of the CC RCP (B) Figatner to Kirov. August 1921, APD UDP AR, fn. 1, l. 129, f. 107, 58. 59 See: Myasnikov’s talk with Orjonikidze by direct telephone line. August 1921, RGASPI, fn. 85, l. 18, f. 177, 4. 60 Stalin’s letter about the situation in the Communist Party of Azerbaijan and the representative of Karabakh in the CEC of Azerbaijan. May 22, 1922, RGASPI, fn. 558, l. 11, f. 746, 1. 61 See: Kirov’s confdential letter to Stalin. June 18, 1922, RGASPI, fn. 558, l. 11, f. 746, 2. 62 Telegram sent by Kirov and Matyushin to the CC RCP (B). August 1, 1922, RGASPI, fn. 80, l. 25, f. 2, 1. 63 Decree of the CEC of Azerbaijan, “Formation of the Autonomous District of Mountainous Karabakh,” July 7, 1923, SARA, fn. 379, l. 3, f. 73, 135. References Archives Archives of Political Documents at the Administration of the President of the Azerbaijan Republic (APDUDPAR) Foreign Policy Archives of the Russian Federation (AVP RF) State Archives of the Republic of Azerbaijan (SARA) Russian State Archives of Social-Political History (RGASPI) Publications Baberowski, Jörg. 2010. Vrag est vezde. Stalinism na Kavkaze. Moscow, ROSSPEN. (Baberowski, Jörg. 2003. Der Feind ist überall: Stalinismus im Kaukasus. Munich, Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt). Hasanli, Jamil. 2018. The Sovietization of Azerbaijan: The South Caucasus in the Triangle of Russia, Turkey, and Iran, 1920–1922. Salt Lake City, The University of Utah Press. Kazandzhyan, Rem. 1997. K predystorii samoopredeleniya Nagornogo Karabakha. Moscow, Verlag nicht ermittelbar. Melik-Shakhnazarov, Grant. 2009. “Politizatsia istorii kak istochnik napryazheniya mezhnatsionalnykh otnosheniy,” in: Mayendorfskaya deklaratsia 2 noyabrya 2008 goda i situatsiya vokrug Nagornogo Karabakha, Collection of articles. Moscow, Russkaia panorama. Narimanov, Nariman.1990. K istorii nashey revolutsii v okrainakh (Letter to I.V. Stalin). Baku, Azerneshr. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
58 Jamil Hasanli Narimanov, Nariman. 1992. K istorii nashey revolutsii v okrainakh (Pismo I.V. Stalinu). Baku, Azerneshr. Tunyan, Varerii. 2018. Fal’sifkatsiya istorii vosstanovleniya armyanskoy gosudarstvennosti v azerbaydzhanskoy istoriografi. Yerevan, Izdatel’stvo-vo YEGU. Zakharov, Vladimir and Sergey Sarkisyan. 2009. “Azerbaidzhano-karabakhskiy konfikt: istoki i sovremennost,” in: Mayendorfskaya deklaratsia 2 noyabrya 2008 goda i situastiya vokrug Nagornogo Karabakha, Collection of articles. Moscow, Russkaia panorama. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
3 Armenian Irredentist Nationalism and Its Transformation into the Mass Karabakh Movement “MIATSUM” (1965‒1988) Eldar Abbasov The rise of the wave of Armenian irredentist nationalism in the USSR began in the frst half of the 1960s of the last century, and coincided with the end of the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962, which was provoked by the attempt of the political leadership of the USSR to place nuclear-tipped missiles on the territory of Cuba in response to the US deployment of medium-range ballistic missiles “Jupiter” in Turkey in 1961. Despite the resolution of the crisis by political and diplomatic efforts, Moscow continued to consider Turkey ‒ a member of NATO a source of threat on the southern borders of the USSR, and by all means sought to discredit it in the eyes of the world community. It was during this period that the term so-called “Armenian genocide” was introduced into scientifc circulation in the Armenian Soviet historiography. In Soviet Armenia, the frst publication on this topic appeared in 1963, and in the period from 1963 to 1965, only four articles were published on this issue.1 It is very likely that the course of this issue was given by offcial Moscow as an effective means of propaganda against Turkey and pressure on it. This was not a new tactic of Moscow against Turkey. Back in the summer of 1945, it was on the instructions of Josef Stalin that the Georgian and Armenian SSR put forward territorial claims to the eastern provinces of Turkey. Thus, the Soviet Union wanted to expand its southern borders by 26,000 km2, 20,500,000 km2 of which was planned to be transferred to Armenia, and 5500 thousand km2 to Georgia.2 The aim of the Armenian irredentist nationalism was clearly expressed in the address of the leader of the Karabakh movement Igor Muradyan to the Central Committee of the CPSU on June 19, 1986. Igor Muradyan wrote that the Armenian issue, which provides for the return of the ancestral, historical territories to Soviet Armenia, was not resolved either during the years of world wars, or during periods of detente in the world. The Armenian question has two aspects ‒ international and domestic. The international aspect is the return of the ancestral Armenian lands located within the borders of modern Turkey to its rightful owner ‒ the Armenian people in the person of its sole representative ‒ Soviet Armenia, which is the national state of the Armenians and the representative of the interests of the Armenians of the whole world, who consider it their homeland. In this regard, he stated DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-5 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
60 Eldar Abbasov that the right of the Armenian people to establish an independent state in these historically Armenian territories was recognized by the Government of Soviet Russia by the Decree of December 29, 1917 on Turkish Armenia. However, the rights of the Armenian people to these territories due to the current international situation, the policy of Turkey and its NATO allies, primarily the US, cannot be realized at present. Referring to the second – the internal aspect of the Armenian issue, Igor Muradyan wrote: The internal aspect is the return to Soviet Armenia of the original Armenian lands ‒ Nakhichevan and Nagorno-Karabakh (historical Artsakh), which, due to a number of historical circumstances, are located within the borders of the Union Republic – the Azerbaijan SSR. These lands include the territory of the Nakhichevan ASSR, the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region, as well as the Kelbajar, Lachin, Shahumyan, Dashkesan and the southern part of the Khanlar administrative districts of the Azerbaijan SSR, a total of about 16.0 thousand square meters. km, or 18.5% of the territory of this federal republic.3 The process of the birth and formation of Armenian Soviet irredentist nationalism took place against the background of the preparation and holding of events dedicated to the 50th anniversary of the tragic events of 1915 in the Ottoman Empire during the First World War. The initiator and organizer of the anniversary events was the political leadership of the Armenian SSR. A special role in this process belongs to the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Armenia, Yakov Zarobyan. In the autumn of 1964, the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Armenia obtained permission from the Central Committee of the CPSU to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the events of 1915 in the capital of Soviet Armenia and agreed with it on a list of relevant commemorative events. The party leadership of Armenia, in its appeal to the Central Committee of the CPSU, justifed the need to mark the memorable date in the Armenian SSR as a counter-measure, since “foreign Armenian reactionary forces seek to mark this date for selfsh and provocative purposes”. Based on this, the party leadership of Armenia noted that “we consider it appropriate to mark the 50th anniversary of this date under the sign of propaganda of the triumph of the Leninist national policy of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union”. In this regard, the Presidium of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Armenia has outlined the following activities: (1) to present widely in the press and on the radio articles and materials in which to refect from the class and Marxist-Leninist positions the attitude to the events; to promote the struggle of the Soviet people for world peace and the policy of friendship of peoples, steadily pursued by the CPSU and the Soviet government, to expose the provocative actions of the imperialists and their agents ‒ Dashnaks, inciting national enmity; (2) to hold a meeting of public Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 61 representatives in Yerevan in April 1965, dedicated to the 50th anniversary of this date, with the agenda: “The October Revolution and the Rebirth of the Armenian people”; (3) erect an obelisk in memory of the Armenians who died in the First World War in Yerevan; (4) to organize festivals of Soviet flms and exhibitions of Soviet Armenian books in the spring of 1965 in major foreign Armenian colonies, to send delegations of representatives of scientists, literature and art workers to foreign Armenian colonies to promote the achievements of Soviet Armenia.4 The favor and goodwill of the Central Committee of the CPSU to the request of the party leadership of Armenia in connection with the events dedicated to the 50th anniversary of the events of 1915, revived the nationalist-minded forces ‒ representatives of the intelligentsia and students. This is eloquently evidenced by the report of the Chairman of the KGB under the Council of Ministers of the USSR Vladimir Semichastny to the Central Committee of the CPSU (for the Ideological Department), which noted that in connection with the approaching date of the fftieth anniversary of the events of 1915 in the Ottoman Empire, individuals from among the intelligentsia and youth allow nationalistic manifestations. Even the penetration of nationalist sentiments among high school students of some secondary schools in the city of Yerevan and certain districts of the republic was recorded. The chairman of the KGB informed the Central Committee of the CPSU that in January 1964, an anti-Soviet nationalist group of young people was discovered in the city of Yerevan. 7 of the most active members of the group who carried out hostile work were brought to criminal responsibility, and preventive measures were taken against 71 people.5 One of the main and effective methods of promoting nationalist views and forming an irredentist movement among young people was the production and distribution of illegal leafets. They mainly demanded the return of the Armenian lands that were part of Turkey and the annexation of the Nakhichevan ASSR and the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region (NKAR) to the Armenian SSR. The distribution of leafets calling for the seizure of “native Armenian lands” from Turkey and Azerbaijan was so popular in Armenia in the mid-60s of the last century that even schoolchildren in the Armenian capital were included in this process. In the summer of 1965, students with leafets were detained in Yerevan by the Police Department of the Ministry of Public Order Protection of the Armenian SSR. Vladimir Semichastny reported this shocking fact to the chairman of the Ideological Commission of the Central Committee of the CPSU Pyotr Demichev: Under the impression of the April events in May-June of this year, the facts of the distribution of leafets by secondary school students were noted. For example, on June 2 of this year, offcers of the Police Department of the Ministry of Public Order of the Armenian SSR detained Uploaded by S. M. Safi
62 Eldar Abbasov a minor Nagapetyan, a student of the 7th grade, who was distributing leafets about the return of Armenian lands with her friend Sarkisyan, a 5th grade high school student. During the survey, it turned out that Nagapetyan, Sarkisyan and other students, under the impression of the April events, produced and distributed about 100 leafets, and 47 of them were seized during their detention.6 The dynamics of the spread and expansion of Armenian irredentist nationalism in the Armenian SSR was clearly shown in the KGB reference sent to the Central Committee of the CPSU on May 16, 1966. The reference noted that if in 1963 six leafets were printed and distributed on the territory of the republic about the need to annex Western Armenia (Eastern Anatolia), Nakhichevan and Nagorno – Karabakh to the Armenian SSR, in 1964 ‒ 577, in 1965 ‒ 2038, and already in 1966 the number of such leafets increased to a record level ‒ 10902.7 The Central Committee of the CPSU was well aware that the reason for the emergence and spread of nationalist sentiments in the republic is the weak ideological work of the Central Committee of the CPSU of Armenia and its leadership personally. Therefore, in February 1966, Moscow decided to change the party leadership of Armenia. Curiously, the opening of the XXIV Congress of the Communist Party of Armenia was scheduled for March 3, 1966. As a rule, organizational issues were considered at the plenum immediately after the congress. However, the Central Committee of the CPSU decided to change the leadership of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia a month before the congress. On February 5, with the participation of the Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee Ivan Kapitonov, a plenum of the Central Committee of the CPSU of Armenia was held in Yerevan, at which Yakov Zarobyan was relieved of his duties as the frst Secretary and a member of the bureau of the Central Committee of the CPSU of Armenia and the Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Armenian SSR Anton Kochinyan was elected as the new frst Secretary.8 However, the change of political leadership in Armenia did not lead to a decrease in the intensity of nationalism in the republic. The wave of nationalism after the changes in the highest political echelon of Armenia had moved to a new stage. The main directions of Armenian nationalism were still territorial claims made to the Azerbaijani SSR against the background of the publication and distribution of nationalist literature, as well as the open propaganda of the ideology of the Dashnaktsutyun Party. In February 1966, a letter signed by 21 old Armenian Bolsheviks was sent to the members of the Presidium of the Central Committee of the CPSU, Leonid Brezhnev, Mikhail Suslov, Alexei Kosygin, Nikolai Shvernik and Anastas Mikoyan, in which the authors informed the political leadership of the country about the dangerous nationalist atmosphere in Armenia and demanded urgent intervention: Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 63 It is alarming situation in the capital of Armenia – Yerevan. The capital is again fooded with nationalist leafets printed in the printing house, calling for a new mass demonstration on the opening day of the CPSU Congress (it was the XXIII Congress of the CPSU – E. A.) with the demand to return Karabakh and Nakhichevan to Armenia… We strongly ask the Central Committee of the CPSU to remove the vicious leadership, create an ideological-Leninist leadership, improve the atmosphere infected with Dashnak Nazism, and raise the authority of the Communist Party of Armenia, which was glorious in the past.9 The disturbing symptoms of nationalism, about which the old Bolsheviks wrote with concern in a letter to the members of the Presidium of the Central Committee of the CPSU, were refected in the collective appeal of representatives of the creative intelligentsia, scientists and artists of the Armenian SSR to the XXIII Congress of the CPSU (March 29–April 6, 1966), which raised the question of the transfer of Nagorno-Karabakh and the Nakhichevan ASSR to the Armenian SSR. At the same time, the authors of the letter covered themselves with demagogic statements inherent in the representatives of the Armenian intelligentsia that “this decision of the country’s leadership will contribute to the further strengthening of brotherhood and friendship between the peoples, [and] once again demonstrate the triumph of Lenin’s national policy”. After reading the letter, the head of the sector of the Department of Party and Organizational Work of the Central Committee of the CPSU, Yuri Starchenko, asked the USSR Foreign Ministry to prepare a certifcate on the legal status of the Nakhichevan ASSR in the context of the Soviet-Turkish treaties. The certifcate signed by the head of the Middle East Department Sergey Kiktev and the head of the Contract and Legal Department of the USSR Foreign Ministry Oleg Khlestov was submitted to the Central Committee of the CPSU on May 31. It stated that the status of Nakhichevan as an autonomous territory within Azerbaijan was determined by the relevant articles of the Treaty of Friendship and Brotherhood between the RSFSR and Turkey of March 16, 1921 and the Treaty of Friendship between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, on the one hand, and Turkey, on the other, signed with the participation of the RSFSR on October 13, 1921. Based on this, the authors of the reference stressed that the revision of the status of the Nakhichevan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic would be a departure from the contractual obligations assumed by the Soviet Union under the above-mentioned agreements. At the same time, this step could lead to an aggravation of Soviet-Turkish relations. The Turkish side could qualify the revision of the status of Nakhichevan as a violation of these agreements and use this circumstance to annul them.10 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
64 Eldar Abbasov The secretariat of the Central Committee of the CPSU in September 1966, after discussing the appeal of a group of scientists and cultural fgures of the Armenian SSR addressed to the XXIII Congress of the CPSU, sent it to the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia for consideration. What is surprising in this story is that Moscow pretended not to notice the real inspirers and organizers of this appeal in the person of the highest party leadership of Armenia. This conclusion clearly follows from the response letter to the Central Committee of the CPSU, signed by the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the CP of the Armenian SSR Anton Kochinyan and the Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Armenian SSR Badal Muradyan. In it, the nationalist sentiments propagated by representatives of science and culture were not condemned but encouraged. Distorting and one-sidedly covering the history of the creation of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region and the Nakhichevan ASSR as part of the Azerbaijan SSR, the authors of the letter proposed to attach them to the Armenian SSR: In our opinion, it would be advisable to consider and resolve positively the issue of the transfer of Nakhichevan and Nagorno-Karabakh to the Armenian SSR, while the Nakhichevan ASSR could maintain its autonomy within the Armenian SSR, on the territory of which it is located. However, if the return of Nakhichevan to the Armenian SSR at the present stage will be associated with certain diffculties, then the return of Nagorno-Karabakh to the Armenian SSR is not associated with any diffculties and can be carried out painlessly.11 Moscow’s liberal, cautious and sometimes indecisive attitude to the manifestation of Armenian irredentist nationalism gave the Armenian party leadership the opportunity to behave more confdently when interpreting the issues of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region and the Nakhichevan ASSR. Such a mood was also created among the scientifc and creative intelligentsia by the party organization of Armenia. There is no doubt that at the direction of the Republican party organization in the late autumn of 1966, a number of institutes of the Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR appealed to the Central Committee of the CPSU with support for the initiative of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia in the issue of annexation of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region and the Nakhichevan ASSR to Armenia. On November 14, the reporting and election meeting of the party organization of the Oriental Studies Sector of the Armenian SSR Academy of Sciences, having considered the issue of transferring the NKAR and the Nakhichevan ASSR to the Armenian SSR, issued a decision stating that the party organization supports the initiative of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia in the issue of the return of Karabakh and Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 65 Nakhichevan to the Armenian SSR and requests the Central Committee of the CPSU to accelerate a positive solution to this issue.12 A week later, on November 21, a party meeting of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography was held, which stated: The party meeting of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography of the Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR reacted with deep satisfaction to the news that the Central Committee of the CPSU is dealing with the issue of the reunifcation of the Karabakh Autonomous Region and the Nakhichevan ASSR with the Armenian SSR. Communist scientists ‒ the entire staff of the Institute warmly supports the initiative of the Central Committee and the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Armenia and expresses confdence that this issue will be resolved historically fairly and in full accordance with the spirit of Lenin’s national policy.13 A meeting of the party organization of the Institute of History of the Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR was held on November 24 to discuss the transfer of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region and the Nakhichevan ASSR to the Armenian SSR and to express its support for the position of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia on this issue. The adopted resolution once again distorted the essence of the Declaration of the Government of Azerbaijan, which was announced on December 1, 1920 by Nariman Narimanov: It is well known that Nagorno-Karabakh and Nakhichevan are an integral part of the original cradle of the Armenian people, who have lived here for many centuries and created their own culture. It was from this immutable fact that the government of Soviet Azerbaijan proceeded, which in its declaration of November 30, 1920, declared Karabakh, Zangezur and Nakhichevan to be integral parts of Soviet Armenia.14 The document went on to state that however, on July 5, 1921, the matter was reconsidered. The principles of Lenin’s national policy were violated, and the question received a completely unfair solution. The Armenian people were artifcially separated from their signifcant part, which had long lived with them a single national-economic life in the regions of Armenia – Nakhichevan and Karabakh.15 The resolution adopted by the assembly of the party organization of the Institute of History of the Armenian SSR Academy of Sciences concluded with Uploaded by S. M. Safi
66 Eldar Abbasov demagogic and populist phrases that the transfer of the above-mentioned territories by Azerbaijan to Armenia would contribute to strengthening the friendship of the Armenian and Azerbaijani peoples: We are deeply convinced that the reunifcation of Karabakh and Nakhichevan with the Armenian SSR will undoubtedly contribute to the further strengthening of the centuries-old friendship of the fraternal Azerbaijani and Armenian peoples. With this deep conviction, we appeal to the Leninist Central Committee of the CPSU and the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia, believing that they will meet this cherished dream of our people.16 The unpunished spread of nationalist sentiments in the Armenian society and the promotion of territorial claims against the neighboring republic by the end of 1966 became threatening and could destabilize the situation in both republics, where the mixed Armenian-Azerbaijani population lived. The study of archival documents allows us to conclude that the Central Committee of the CPSU did not suffciently pay attention to this issue and did not fully realize the extent of the threat lurking in Armenian nationalism. After reviewing the appeals received to the Central Committee of the CPSU from the institutes of the Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR on the transfer of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region and the Nakhichevan ASSR from the Azerbaijan SSR to the Armenian SSR, on December 7, 1966, the head of the Department of Organizational and Party Work, Ivan Kapitonov, instructed his deputy Boris Moralev and the head of the sector of the Republics of Transcaucasia, Yuri Starchenko, to deal with this issue.17 In early 1967, the frst and second secretaries of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Armenia, Anton Kochinyan and Georgy Ter-Gazaryants, were invited to the Central Committee of the CPSU to discuss the current situation around the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region and the Nakhichevan ASSR in Armenian society. It is interesting that the conversation with them was conducted not by the top leadership of the CPSU Central Committee at the level of the Politburo, but by the deputy head of the Department of Organizational and Party Work of the CPSU Central Committee Boris Moralev and the head of the sector of the Republics of Transcaucasia of the Department of Organizational and Party Work of the CPSU Central Committee Yuri Starchenko. As a result of the conversation, a memorandum was drawn up for the Central Committee of the CPSU, which stated: The extracts received by the Central Committee of the CPSU from the resolutions of the party meetings of the Institute of History, the Institute of Archeology and Ethnography, as well as the Oriental Studies Sector of the Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR raise the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 67 issue of transferring the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region and the Nakhichevan ASSR from Azerbaijan to Armenia. On this issue, a conversation was held in the Department of Organizational and Party Work of the Central Committee of the CPSU with the secretaries of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia, Comrades Kochinyan A. E. and Ter-Gazaryan G. A. We believe that this consideration of the documents can be completed and attached to the previously submitted materials of similar content.18 Soon, the fre of Armenian irredentist nationalism, ignited in the Armenian SSR, spread to the territory of neighboring Azerbaijan. The emissaries from among the Armenian creative intelligentsia chose the NKAR and the areas of compact residence of Armenians in Azerbaijan as the object of their propaganda work. In June 1965, a group of communists from 13 responsible employees of the NKAR addressed a letter to the highest political leadership of the USSR ‒ General Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU Leonid Brezhnev, Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR Alexei Kosygin and Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR Anastas Mikoyan. The appeal was organized by Bagrat Ulubabyan, Executive Secretary of the branch of the Azerbaijan Writers’ Union. Hiding behind the alleged lag of Nagorno-Karabakh in socio-economic development, the authors of the appeal asked to transfer the region from Azerbaijan to Armenia. For further investigation and resolution of the issues set out in the letter, the appeal was forwarded on July 20, 1965 from the Central Committee of the CPSU to the Central Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan.19 The letter was discussed at a meeting of the bureau of the Central Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan and it was decided to send the responsible employees of the party and the government of the republic to the region to study the situation and take the necessary measures on the spot. Soon, the ministers of the relevant sectors of the national economy, Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Azerbaijan SSR Enver Alikhanov and Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan Khasay Vezirov visited Nagorno-Karabakh. And after them, the second secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan, Pyotr Elistratov, arrived in Nagorno-Karabakh. After studying the situation on the ground and summarizing the proposals received from the regional authorities, a decision was made at the government level on additional investment for the development of certain areas of the NKAR economy. On September 23, the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan sent a certifcate on the state of socio-economic and cultural development of the NKAR and on the additional measures taken to further develop the region. The certifcate stated that the volume of capital investments in Nagorno-Karabakh in 1965 was 80% higher than their volume in 1964. For clarity and persuasiveness, the reference made a comparative Uploaded by S. M. Safi
68 Eldar Abbasov analysis of the socio-economic development of the NKAR with the Nakhichevan ASSR. In the period from 1961 to 1965, the volume of state capital investments in the national economy of the NKAR amounted to 12.8 million rubles, while for the same period of time, the volume of capital investments in the Nakhichevan ASSR, whose population is 22% larger, amounted to only 12.3 million rubles. During the period under review, 48,000 m2 of housing was put into operation in the NKAR, and 37.5 m 2 in the Nakhichevan ASSR.20 However, the group of 13 was not satisfed with the reaction of Moscow to its appeal and the measures taken by the party bodies and the government of the republic, since their goal, ultimately, was not the socio-economic and cultural development of Nagorno-Karabakh, but its transfer to the Armenian SSR. Therefore, on September 22, under the signature of Bagrat Ulubabyan, Grigory Stepanyan, Sergey Shakaryan and Lazar Gasparyan, a new appeal was sent on behalf of the group of 13 Communists to the Presidium of the Central Committee of the CPSU, which read: We have written to the Central Committee of the CPSU about the alarming situation in Nagorno-Karabakh. But the discussion of our letter was handled by those who were supposed to keep the answer. We believe in the Central Committee of the CPSU and look forward to a fair discussion of the issue of our region.21 According to the authors of the letter, a fair discussion of the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh could only be its transfer to the Armenian SSR. In a new, repeated appeal to the Central Committee of the CPSU, the responsible employees of the region openly stated this: Why can’t the Armenian Autonomous Region of Nagorno-Karabakh be with the republic of its main people, with the Soviet socialist republic fourishing next to it? Why is it legal, the only fair demand hurts someone’s interests, someone seems to be nationalism?.22 The letter was forwarded from the Central Committee of the CPSU to the Central Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan to study the issues set out in it and make appropriate decisions. The head of the Republican party organization Veli Akhundov, in turn, instructed the frst secretary of the regional party committee Gurgen Melkumyan to take serious measures against party and Soviet workers, cultural fgures who appealed to Moscow with a demand to annex Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia. The appeal of the group of 13 Communists was discussed in detail at a meeting of the bureau of the regional party committee with the participation of the Second Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan, Pyotr Elistratov, held on December 9, 1965. At the bureau, it was noted that most of the facts stated in the letters were not true and were not confrmed when Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 69 they were examined. In this regard, the bureau decided to condemn the actions of the group of 13 Communists, which were expressed in the drafting of a group letter with a proposal to join the NKAR to the Armenian SSR.23 By the decision of the bureau of the regional party committee, the executive secretary of the regional department of the Union of Writers of Azerbaijan Bagrat Ulubabyan was reprimanded and entered in his personal fle. The editor of the newspaper Sovetakan Karabakh, Lazar Gasparyan, the chairman of the Stepanakert City Executive Committee Sergey Shakaryan and the senior editor of the regional radio control Grigory Stepanyan were dismissed from their posts, and the other signatories were warned. In July 1969, a change of political leadership took place in Azerbaijan. On the recommendation of Moscow, at the plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan, 46-year-old Heydar Aliyev, who previously worked as the chairman of the KGB of Azerbaijan, was elected the frst secretary of the Republican party organization. Being a professional security offcer, he was well aware of the irredentist mood of a group of Armenian intellectuals, both in Armenia and among the Armenian population of Azerbaijan. In order to slow down the growth of Armenian irredentist nationalism in Azerbaijan, in particular in the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region, it was important to strengthen the ideological work by sending a loyal party leader to Baku. The frst step in this direction was the removal of the secretary of the regional party committee for ideological work, A. N. Harutyunyan. On December 13, 1972, the second Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU of Azerbaijan, Sergey Kozlov, sent a letter to the Central Committee of the CPSU, in which it was noted that in recent years, as a result of the weakening of the leadership of the ideological work on the part of the Nagorno-Karabakh Regional Committee of the CPSU of Azerbaijan, there are serious shortcomings in the activities of organizations and institutions related to the political education of the masses. In this regard, the Central Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan proposed to strengthen this area of work and recommended the Central Committee of the CPSU to replace A. N. Harutyunyan as the secretary of the regional committee for ideological work with 49-year-old Mezhlum Gasparyan.24 Another step to improve the situation in the NKAR and stop the wave of Armenian irredentist nationalism in the region was the change of the head of the party organization of Nagorno-Karabakh. On September 14, 1973, the frst Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev, sent an information letter to the Central Committee of the CPSU, in which he noted the weak leadership of the regional party organization by its frst secretary, Hrant Melkumyan. In this regard, Heydar Aliyev proposed to transfer Hrant Melkumyan to the post of secretary of the Azerbaijan Council of Trade Unions (ASPS), and 40-year-old Boris Kevorkov to the post of frst secretary of the regional party committee.25 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
70 Eldar Abbasov After the change of the frst secretary and the secretary for ideological work of the regional committee, the turn came to the second secretary. As a rule, to the post of the second secretary of the regional committee of Nagorno-Karabakh on the recommendation of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan, ethnic Russians were elected. On November 27, 1974, Heydar Aliyev sent an offcial letter to the Central Committee of the CPSU, informing Moscow about the unsatisfactory work of the second secretary of the regional party Committee, N. I. Volodin. The Central Committee of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan considered the proposal of the Nagorno-Karabakh Regional party Committee, and proposed 50-year-old Valentin Bogoslovsky for the post of second secretary of the regional committee.26 By replacing the entire top of the party organization of Nagorno-Karabakh and appointing trusted cadres loyal to Baku to leadership positions in the region, Heydar Aliyev ensured the functionality and combativeness of the party power in the fght against Armenian irredentist nationalism. An important milestone on this path was the March 1975 plenum of the Nagorno-Karabakh Regional Committee of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan, which condemned the nationalist sentiments among a number of responsible employees of the party and Soviet authorities. Addressing supporters of the annexation of Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia, hiding behind demagogic statements about the lag of the region in socio-economic and cultural development about the insuffcient allocation of capital investments by the Azerbaijani authorities to the economy of the region, Boris Kevorkov announced at the plenum striking fgures indicating the rise of the economy of Nagorno-Karabakh. He noted that in comparison with 1960, in 1973, the total social product per capita in the NKAR increased by 250%, the growth rate of industrial production increased by 281%, the volume of allocated capital investments by 417%, the volume of trade turnover ‒ by 279%, the scale of consumer services for the population by 550%, and the volume of expenditures on social and cultural events per capita-by 220%.27 From the point of view of the correct formulation of ideological work, the plenum of the Nagorno-Karabakh Regional Committee of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan was considered a model of principled education of the Soviet people and the formation of their moral image, not only on the scale of the region and the republic, but also throughout the country. Telling about the ideological hardening of the Soviet people, about their moral character, the newspaper Pravda highlighted in its editorial the signifcance of the plenum and wrote: The plenum of the Nagorno-Karabakh Regional Committee of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan strongly condemned the unprincipled position of the former bureau in relation to certain politically immature people who allowed the idealization of antiquity, the glorifcation of patriarchy, and the departure from party class positions in the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 71 assessment of historical events. Communist idealism presupposes an irreconcilability, to any ideological distortions and concessions, to views hostile to socialism. It is inseparable from the Bolshevik principle in the evaluation of facts and phenomena.28 The plenum of the Nagorno-Karabakh regional Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan and the report delivered by the frst secretary of the regional Committee of the party Boris Kevorkov, as well as the mention of it in the editorial of the Central Committee of the CPSU, had the effect of an exploding bomb in the society of the Armenian intelligentsia, representatives of science and culture, who were carriers of the ideas of irredentism. The Central Committee of the CPSU and its organ of the newspaper Pravda began to receive a stream of letters and telegrams condemning the report of the frst Secretary of the Nagorno-Karabakh Regional Party Committee. Condemning the speech of Boris Kevorkov at the plenum, the Armenian irredentists in their appeals covered themselves with concern for the friendship between the Armenian and Azerbaijani peoples, considered his speech harmful and causing irreparable damage to the strengthening of friendship between the two peoples. The famous Armenian poet Silva Kaputikyan, in a telegram sent to the Central Committee of the CPSU and to the editorial offce of the newspaper Pravda, expressed her indignation at the speech of B. S. Kevorkov at the regional Committee plenum and the editorial of the newspaper Pravda, in which the plenum of the Nagorno-Karabakh Regional Party Committee was mentioned as a positive example in strengthening the struggle for communist ideals. In connection with this circumstance, she asked the General Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU to intervene in the alarming situation himself: The question is not only that the civil concern of respected people, old communists, learned writers, war veterans has been ignored, but above all that the current situation in Karabakh is so serious and complex that it is impossible to defne it with a few lines of the advanced Pravda. Therefore, dear Leonid Ilyich, we ask you to pay immediate attention to the current problem of Nagorno-Karabakh.29 The change of the political leadership of the USSR in March 1985 and the coming to power of the 54-year-old young and energetic Mikhail Gorbachev, who became the conductor of the policy of Glasnost and Perestroika, contributed to the rise of a new wave of the Armenian irredentist movement under the slogan “Miatsum” ‒ “The reunifcation of the ancestral Armenian lands”. The leader and organizer of this movement was a young economist Igor Muradyan, who decided to justify the need for the annexation of the Armenian-populated regions of Azerbaijan to Armenia by economic factors. He managed to enlist the support of the well-known Soviet economist of Armenian origin and Mikhail Gorbachev’s assistant on economic issues, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
72 Eldar Abbasov Abel Aganbegyan. According to I. Muradyan himself, before putting his signature under the address addressed to the highest political leadership of the USSR and delegates of the XXVII Congress of the CPSU, he spent four hours with A. Aganbegyan, and during this time about two liters of vodka were drunk.30 The signed address two days before the beginning of the XXVII Congress of the CPSU – on February 24, 1986 was transferred to the Central Committee of the CPSU The need to join the NKAR and the Nakhichevan ASSR to Armenia was considered in the appeal from the point of view of creating and developing a single territorial-industrial complex of the Armenian SSR. The authors of the letter noted that Nagorno-Karabakh and Nakhichevan lag far behind in terms of the development of productive forces from the neighboring regions of the Armenian SSR, which are similar to them in terms of natural and transport conditions. Meanwhile, Nakhichevan, located in the center of historical Armenia, and Nagorno-Karabakh, adjacent to it, could receive more accelerated and effective development as part of the Armenian territorial-industrial complex.31 The analysis of the letter gives reason to believe that its content was really infuenced by a large dose of alcohol consumed by Academician A. Aganbekyan and researcher of the State Planning Institute of the Armenian SSR I. Muradyan. For it is not diffcult to guess that with suffcient capital investment, it is possible to develop all industries, the agricultural sector, the transport and energy network of Nagorno-Karabakh and the Nakhichevan ASSR within Azerbaijan. This did not require the separation of these two regions of the Azerbaijan SSR and their annexation to the Armenian SSR. The authors of the appeal were invited to the Central Committee of the CPSU, where they were interviewed by instructors of the Department of Organizational and Party Work V. I. Polyakov and V. I. Romanov. It was explained to the applicants that territorial claims to the fraternal republics do not contribute to the strengthening of international friendship between peoples, the rapprochement of nations, and the education of workers in the spirit of communism.32 Four months after the end of the XXVII Congress of the CPSU on June 19, 1986, Igor Muradyan handed over to the Central Committee of the CPSU a new letter on 6 sheets, signed by 20 well-known economists of Armenia.33 The letter was addressed to the top leadership of the USSR, and a copy was sent to the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Armenia, Karen Demirchian. The letter was accompanied by a voluminous report on 231 typewritten sheets, prepared by I. Muradyan and entitled “Study of the conditions for the formation of the Armenian territorial-industrial complex, including Nakhichevan and Nagorno-Karabakh”.34 The necessity of joining the Nakhichevan ASSR Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 73 and the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Republic to the Armenian SSR for economic reasons was considered in a more detailed form. The work performed by I. Muradyan consisted of an introduction, two sections, 33 paragraphs, conclusion, bibliography and appendices. In other words, the work resembled, at frst glance, a complete research work, applying for the degree of Doctor of Economic Sciences. However, even a cursory acquaintance with this “study” convinces that it at best deserves a diploma work of a student of the Faculty of Economics of a medium-level university. There is every reason to believe that none of the 20 doctors of sciences who signed the letter of appeal read the “work” of Igor Muradyan. On January 20, 1987, under the signature of seven well-known Armenian writers and representatives of the creative intelligentsia, the Central Committee of the CPSU received another appeal addressed to the General Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee, Mikhail Gorbachev. In order to emphasize the political status of each signatory of the letter of appeal in society and to make a serious impression on the country’s leadership, all of their regalia were indicated and listed before their surnames: people’s Actress of the USSR, Hero of Socialist Labor, professor ‒ Gohar Mikaelovna Gasparya; poet, laureate of the state prizes of the USSR and the Armenian SSR ‒ Gevorg Emin; poet, laureate of the State Prize of the USSR, laureate of the Isaakian Prize, Honored Cultural Worker of the Armenian SSR and the Georgian SSR ‒ Silva Kaputikyan; artist, winner of the state prizes of the USSR and the Armenian SSR, People’s Artist of the Armenian SSR ‒ Hakob Hakobyan; actor, People’s Artist of the USSR, twice winner of the state Prize of the Armenian SSR-Sos Sargsyan; flm director, People’s Artist of the USSR, winner of the State Prize of the Armenian SSR ‒ Henri Malyan; and writer, winner of the state Prizes of the USSR and the Armenian SSR ‒ Hrant Matevosyan. The letter of appeal to the country’s leadership noted that due to a number of historical circumstances, the native Armenian region of Nagorno-Karabakh was included in the Azerbaijan SSR... Armenians are the indigenous population of Nagorno – Karabakh... and in all, without exception, the wars waged by Russia with the eastern despotists, the Armenian population of the region, which determined the pro-Russian orientation of the entire Armenian people, acted on the side of the Russian army-liberator, organizing numerous armed detachments. By the will of history Nagorno Karabakh became the frst Armenian region to be annexed to Russia under the Gulistan Treaty of 1813.35 The annexation of the Karabakh Khanate, founded by Panakh Khan of the Janshir Turkic tribe, to Russia under the Gulistan Peace Treaty of October 12 (24), 1813, is considered in Armenian historiography to be the frst stage of the entry of Eastern Armenia into the Russian Empire. It Uploaded by S. M. Safi
74 Eldar Abbasov should be emphasized that there is not a single mention of either Armenia or the Armenians in the treaty. Russian historian, academician LieutenantGeneral of the Russian Imperial Army Nikolai Fedorovich Dubrovin in his fundamental work on the Caucasus, among other khanates that became part of the Russian Empire according to the Gulistan Treaty, considered the Karabakh Khanate to be a Muslim province of Transcaucasia.36 The vast majority of the population of the Karabakh Khanate were Azerbaijanis. In a note submitted on July 19, 1811 to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Russia O. P. Kozodavlev describing Georgia and some other regions of the Caucasus, it was indicated that 12,000 families lived in the Karabakh domain, of which 2500 were Armenian, and the rest were Tatars or Mohammedans.37 (that is, the Azerbaijanis ‒ E. A.) On February 13, 1987, a letter from seven well-known Armenian writers and representatives of the creative intelligentsia was forwarded from the Central Committee of the CPSU to the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia for further consideration. The response of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia dated April 20, 1987, signed by the Secretary of the Central Committee Robert Arzumanyan, stated that the authors of the letter were invited to the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia, where they had a conversation on the issue of the annexation of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region of the Azerbaijan SSR to the Armenian SSR. During the conversation, a number of authors of the letter (G. Matevosyan, A. Hakobyan, G. Malyan, G. Emin) stated that they had been rash and hasty in signing such a document.38 The Central Committee of the CPSU agreed with the measures taken by the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia and decided to complete the consideration of this letter.39 Contrary to the expectations of I. Muradyan and his team, neither appeals signed by well-known economic scientists, nor representatives of the creative intelligentsia, nor high-ranking military leaders in the Central Committee of the CPSU led to the desired results in revising the existing borders between the Armenian and Azerbaijani SSR. The issue raised by the Armenian irredentists was not even included in the agenda of any party events. Another campaign of I. Muradyan and his team of 15 graduate students of the State Planning Institute of the Armenian SSR was to collect signatures of the Armenian population of the Armenian SSR and the NKAR demanding the “reunifcation” of Nakhichevan and the NKAR. According to the organizers, this event, like a plebiscite, was supposed to legitimize the struggle of the Armenian irredentists and provide a legal basis for their demands for the separation of part of its territory from Azerbaijan. This is how the frst president of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic and the second President of Armenia, Robert Kocharian, described the beginning of the campaign to collect signatures for “Miatsum”: The initiative to collect signatures appeared in Yerevan and very quickly covered Karabakh. The process was launched by the Armenian Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 75 intelligentsia – mostly natives of Karabakh, who for various reasons live outside of it. Everyone heard the names of Zori Balayan, Bagrat Ulubabyan, and Igor Muradyan, but the movement had no formal structure – it was spontaneous, like a forest fre: like a fame that broke out in a dry forest, it spreads rapidly and uncontrollably, capturing everything around.40 The frst fve volumes with 53,000 signatures collected in the Armenian SSR were handed over to the Central Committee of the CPSU on July 13, 1987.41 The cover letter was dated January 25, 1987. This gives reason to conclude that the campaign for the collection of signatures was launched by Igor Muradyan in the winter. The letter, which was attached to the ffth volume of signatures, blamed all the troubles and tragedies of the Armenian people on Turkey, and noted that “under the pressure of imperialist Turkey, the Armenian historical regions of Nakhichevan and Karabakh were artifcially declared autonomous divisions of the Azerbaijan SSR”.42 In this regard, the author urged the country’s leadership “in the name of the triumph of historical justice, in the name of fulflling Lenin’s precepts on the reunifcation of the Armenian historical regions of Nagorno-Karabakh and Nakhichevan with Socialist Armenia”.43 The next batch of collected signatures in the amount of 10 thousands was sent to the Central Committee of the CPSU on August 24, 1987 with a cover letter of the same content as the previous one.44 It should be noted that until the beginning of autumn, the campaign to collect signatures was conducted exclusively in Armenia. However, starting in the summer of 1987, separate groups of NKAR Armenians became active in the administrative center of Stepanakert and other districts of the region. The frst batch of collected signatures in the NKAR and Shahumyan district of the Azerbaijan SSR was handed to the Central Committee of the CPSU on September 16, 1987 with a cover letter addressed to Mikhail Gorbachev, signed by I. Muradyan. It was dominated by the socio-economic and ethno-demographic aspects of the argument for the transfer of Nakhichevan and Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia. The letter noted that a single Armenian socialist nation was formed in the USSR, including both the Armenians of Soviet Armenia and other compactly living groups of the Armenian population, among which the native Armenian region of Nagorno-Karabakh occupies a special place. In this regard, I. Muradyan suggested: Given the current ethnic and demographic situation, it is advisable to include Nagorno-Karabakh in the Armenian SSR as an integral part of it, which will ensure the Armenian population of the region not only cultural and ethnic, but also socio-economic unity with the socialist Armenian nation within its historical borders within the USSR.45 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
76 Eldar Abbasov The release of Heydar Aliyev at the October (1987) Plenum of the Central Committee of the CPSU from the duties of the First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR and a member of the Politburo gave confdence to the organizers of the “Miatsum” movement in the imminent positive solution of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue and encouraged them to take a new step to form and send to Moscow a delegation from among the Armenian population of the NKAR. Under the leadership of Igor Muradyan, a small delegation of the NKAR was formed in November 1987. Accompanied by Igor Muradyan and Emil Abrahamyan, the delegation arrived in Moscow. However, they did not manage to meet with the responsible staff of the Central Committee of the CPSU. On November 19, Igor Muradyan handed over to the Central Committee of the CPSU another batch of signatures with a note addressed to the Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU and a member of the Politburo Alexander Yakovlev. The short message, written in the handwriting of Igor Muradyan, read: “Dear Alexander Nikolaevich, we present for your consideration the signatures of 3,000 residents of Nagorno-Karabakh and the Armenian SSR (mostly natives of Nagorno-Karabakh) in connection with the request to reunite our native land with Soviet Armenia”.46 The Central Committee of the CPSU informed the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia about the visit of Igor Muradyan and instructed it to hold a serious conversation with him. Upon returning to Yerevan, Igor Muradyan was invited to the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia. The Secretary of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia Robert Arzumanyan held a routine conversation with him, which was reported to the Central Committee of the CPSU.47 Following the frst delegation, on December 1, another delegation from the NKAO arrived in Moscow, which was formed and accompanied by Artur Mkrtchyan. The delegation was received by the head of the reception room of the Central Committee of the CPSU A. Krynin.48 At this meeting, the next batch of collected signatures among the Armenian population of the NKAO was handed over to the Central Committee of the CPSU. The organizers considered the meeting very successful and decided to continue this practice. The ideologist of the Karabakh Movement, publicist Zori Balayan, called the meeting a fantastic success. A month later, in early January 1988, Igor Muradyan arrived in Moscow with a large delegation from the NKAR. The delegation was in Moscow from 5 to 12 January. A special “instruction” with the delegates was conducted in a Moscow apartment by Zori Balayan and Igor Muradyan. The delegation was received by the candidate for the Politburo of the Central Committee of the CPSU, First Deputy Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR Pyotr Demichev and the head of the newly created sub-department of Interethnic relations of the Central Committee Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 77 of the CPSU Vyacheslav Mikhailov. At the end of the meeting, expressing the point of view of the party and the state, based on the Constitution of the USSR and the Union republics, P. Demichev stated the impossibility of revising the existing borders between the republics. In early February, a new delegation was formed from among the representatives of the creative intelligentsia of Nagorno-Karabakh to be sent to Moscow. On February 13, in the capital, the delegation was received by the head of the sub-department of Interethnic Relations of the Department of Party and Organizational Work of the Central Committee of the CPSU Vyacheslav Mikhailov. Once again, he repeated the position of the Central Committee of the CPSU on the Karabakh issue and made it clear that it was impossible to transfer the NKAR from the Azerbaijan SSR to the Armenian SSR. Not satisfed with the results, right after the meeting, the delegation sent a telegram to the Central Committee of the CPSU, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet and the Council of Ministers of the USSR. The most surprising thing in the telegram is the false and hypocritical statements about the state of the Armenian population in Azerbaijan: In fact, there is a genocide of the Armenian population by creating conditions that force Armenians to leave their thousand-year-old homes, monuments of Armenian history and culture are being destroyed and desecrated, nationalist propaganda is being conducted, the Armenian population is being humiliated, insulted, and oppressed. There are excesses, murders and rapes on national grounds, Armenian settlements are being emptied and populated by Azerbaijanis.49 In early February, meetings were held at all enterprises and organizations of the NKAR, where, at the request of the workers, they discussed the issue of “reunifcation” of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region with Armenia. The decision to demand the transfer of Nagorno-Karabakh to the Armenian SSR was sent to Moscow. In parallel with the February 8 meetings, activists of the Karabakh Movement organized a campaign to send telegrams to the Central Committee of the CPSU on behalf of individual citizens of the Armenian population of the NKAR demanding the “reunifcation” of Nagorno-Karabakh with the Armenian SSR, as well as the creation and dispatch to the region of a special commission of the Central Committee of the CPSU to study the public opinion of the population on this issue. Telegrams were sent from Stepanakert, Martuni, Mardakert and Hadrut.50 A specifc text was prepared for each district, but the content of all the telegrams was reduced to one thing – the “reunifcation” of the NKAR. In order to intimidate the Kremlin and attract the attention of the country’s leadership to the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh, in a number of appeals to the Central Committee of the CPSU and the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, responsible employees of the party-Soviet authorities deliberately exaggerated the situation in the region and did not hesitate to artifcially try Uploaded by S. M. Safi
78 Eldar Abbasov to create a stir around the NKAR. A telegram addressed to the Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR A. A. Gromyko, sent by a group of employees of the regional fnance department, said: The situation of the population of Nagorno-Karabakh has deteriorated extremely. Party activists, heads of enterprises and organizations are constantly threatened by the frst secretary of the regional committee Kevorkov, the second Secretary of the Central Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan Konovalov, other representatives of the Central Committee of the CP and the Council of Ministers of Azerbaijan. We ask for your urgent intervention in the fate of the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh. Do not allow a second Armenian genocide.51 However, the country’s leadership did not particularly react to such “heartbreaking” appeals of the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh. This behavior of Moscow, on the one hand, upset and irritated the activists and supporters of “Miatsum”, while on the other hand, pushed them to search for new methods of infuencing the Kremlin. Finally, the activists, having secured the support of the overwhelming majority of the top party-Soviet authorities of the region, decided to move to the open phase of the process of annexation of Nagorno-Karabakh to the Armenian SSR. Thus, in the second half of February 1988, a mechanism was prepared for the transition to a new, open phase of the movement. The frst secretary of the regional party committee, Boris Kevorkov, in contrast to the supporters of the “Miatsum” movement, soberly assessed the situation and understood the futility and danger of separatist activities. He stood out for his loyalty to Baku and aroused the rage and anger of Armenian nationalists. Being an irreconcilable opponent of the annexation of Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia and a staunch supporter of the peaceful and prosperous life of the Armenian population of the NKAO as part of Azerbaijan, he constantly informed the party leadership of the republic about the developments in the region. At frst, offcial Baku desperately tried to prevent the spread and expansion of the Karabakh movement by its own forces and means without the help of Moscow. However, in early February, the party leadership of Azerbaijan realized the need to enlist the support of the Kremlin, and appealed to the Central Committee of the CPSU. Central Committee Secretary Anatoly Lukyanov, referring to Mikhail Gorbachev, said that the Central Committee of the CPSU is not considering, and will not consider, the issue of the reunifcation of the NKAR with Armenia.52 Immediately, offcial Baku informed the regional party organization about the position of the Central Committee of the CPSU on the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh. B. Kevorkov, in turn, gathered the responsible employees of the party and state apparatus in the regional committee, and brought to their attention that the issue of joining the NKAR to Armenia is not on the agenda of the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 79 Central Committee of the CPSU, that this issue is not being considered by Moscow, and will not be considered. In addition, B. Kevorkov mobilized communists from among the opponents of “Miatsum” and sent them to the districts of the region to explain the position of offcial Moscow. Contrary to expectations, this event of the regional party organization gave absolutely the opposite effect. The position of the Central Committee of the CPSU, which became public, immediately infuriated the supporters of “Miatsum”. They urged the population to boycott events with the participation of B. Kevorkov’s envoys in every possible way and to continue the campaign to send telegrams to the Central Committee of the CPSU. In one of the collective telegrams sent from Stepanakert to the Central Committee of the CPSU, it was said: The frst secretary of the Nagorno-Karabakh Regional Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan, comrade. B. S. Kevrkov has mobilized the regional committee apparatus and other party and Soviet workers who are obedient to him and sends them to the districts and villages of the region, where they speak to the population and declare on behalf of the Central Committee of the CPSU that the reunifcation of Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia is not being considered and will not be considered. Thus terrorizing the population, demanding that the collection of signatures and the sending of telegrams to Moscow be stopped, they declare that Nagorno-Karabakh was, is and will be part of the Azerbaijani SSR. If this terror is not suspended, it can lead to clearly undesirable consequences.53 In order to consolidate forces against the growing separatism, on February 11, the second Secretary of the Central Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan, Vasily Konovalov, accompanied by the head of the Department of Administrative Bodies of the Central Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan, Muhammad Asadov, and the Deputy Chairman of the KGB of the republic, Nariman Imranov, arrived in Stepanakert. On the same day, at night, a meeting of the bureau of the regional party committee was held, at which the head of the regional party organization Boris Kevorkov, warning party functionaries who support the “Miatsum” movement, threatened that “I will turn Karabakh into an Armenian cemetery if you do not refuse to reunite”.54 The bureau decided on February 12 to hold a meeting for party and economic activists of the city of Stepanakert. The leadership of the Republican party organization sent “reinforcements” to Stepanakert for the successful implementation of the city party-economic activists meeting. So, on the morning of February 12, the secretaries of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan, Ramiz Mehdiyev and Telman Orujev, arrived in Stepanakert. The party and economic activists gathered in the hall of the City committee of the party, to which the heads and secretaries of the party Uploaded by S. M. Safi
80 Eldar Abbasov and trade union organizations of enterprises and organizations were invited. In his speech, the frst secretary of the regional party committee B. Kevorkov qualifed everything that was happening in the region as the actions of individual extremists and nationalists, whose actions are alien to the international spirit of the Karabakh people. In conclusion, he turned to V. Konovalov and offcially assured him that Karabakh was, is and will forever remain part of Azerbaijan, as it is a truly Azerbaijani land with its own history. The situation changed dramatically when a number of supporters of the “Miatsum” movement began to come to the podium uninvited and denounce the position of the leadership of the party organization of the region. As a result, the meeting of the party and economic activists of the city was disrupted. Following this, a group of 38 workers of the party-Soviet apparatus of the region sent a telegram to the Central Committee of the CPSU addressed to M. S. Gorbachev and to the chairman of the KGB of the USSR V. M. Chebrikov, in which the event held by the regional committee with the participation of the secretaries of the Central Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan was called a performance that failed miserably. For a detailed and thorough study of the situation, they asked the country’s leadership to create and send a special commission to the region.55 On February 13, 1988, in Stepanakert, on Lenin Square, the frst rally of many thousands of workers of the city took place, which lasted an hour and a half. Participants of the rally, hiding behind slogans for perestroika, glasnost, friendship of peoples, Lenin’s national policy, shouted “Miatsum”. Despite the fact that the rally was held in a calm atmosphere without any excesses, a division of internal troops under the command of Major General Vladislav Safonov arrived in Stepanakert to maintain public order. Another crowded rally was held on February 16, at which the members of the fourth delegation of the NKAO, who had just returned from Moscow, actively spoke. A member of the Karabakh delegation, Armen Hakobyan, in his speech at the rally referring to the legitimate process of the NKAR’s secession from Azerbaijan, admitted that in Moscow, at one of the private meetings, the delegation members were told that the only way to implement the demands of the Karabakh people would be the decision of the session of the regional Council. In this regard, he appealed to the deputies of the regional Council of People’s Deputies who were present on the square with a request to speak and demand the convocation of an extraordinary session of the Council of People’s Deputies of the NKAR. This proposal was met with a storm of applause from the protesters. Immediately, under the leadership of the deputy of the regional council ‒ the director of the Stepanakert plant of building materials Arkady Manucharov, who headed the Karabakh movement in the region, an initiative group was created to convene an extraordinary session of the regional Council and a campaign was launched to collect signatures. The Council of People’s Deputies of the NKAO consisted of 149 deputies. In order to ensure Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 81 the necessary number of one-third of the deputy corps, it was necessary to at least enlist the support of 50 deputies. The initiative group managed to collect 87 written statements of deputies within two days. In parallel, meetings and sessions of the village, district and Stepanakert city councils were held, at which decisions were unanimously made on the reunifcation of Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia and demands were made for the holding of a session of the Regional Council. The regional Executive Committee had no choice but to make a decision to convene an extraordinary session of the Council of People’s Deputies of the NKAO. As a result, the Regional Executive Committee decided to convene an extraordinary session on February 20, 1988 at 16: 00. As soon as Baku learned about the decision of the Regional Executive Committee to convene an extraordinary session of the Council of People’s Deputies of the NKAO, the frst secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU of Azerbaijan, Kamran Bagirov, contacted the Central Committee of the CPSU, reported on the current explosive situation in the region and asked for the urgent intervention of the Center. Moscow sent Viktor Yashin, an instructor of the Propaganda Department of the Central Committee of the CPSU, to Baku. Given the relatively low rank and level of the seconded Moscow representative, it can be concluded that the Central Committee of the CPSU either was not suffciently informed about the true state of affairs in the NKAO, or did not understand the seriousness and danger of the situation, and did not imagine the possible development of events and their consequences. Most likely, Moscow really did not attach importance to the Karabakh issue and did not suffciently assess the seriousness of the situation in the region. This is clearly seen from Mikhail Gorbachev’s speech at the meeting of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the CPSU on March 3, 1988: But let’s pay tribute to ourselves. In three years, the Central Committee received 500 letters on the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh alone. Then the delegations went to Moscow. And we had a routine reaction. These, they say, there “the Armenians will not share everything in any way”, etc. This is a routine, unft approach to such a sensitive issue. We didn’t see it in a timely manner.56 On February 20, K. M. Bagirov, members of the bureau of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan, and V. M. Yashin, an instructor of the Propaganda Department of the Central Committee of the CPSU, who arrived from Moscow, arrived in Stepanakert to talk to the communist deputies on the spot and persuade them to abandon their rash decisions. By the time of the arrival of the high party leadership from Baku, additional police forces had been drawn up from the nearby Azerbaijani districts to ensure order and security in the regional center. Upon arrival in Stepanakert with the participation of K. M. Bagirov, a meeting of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
82 Eldar Abbasov the bureau of the regional party committee was held, where it was decided to convene a meeting with a part of the party and economic activists of the NKAO to conduct explanatory work. At this meeting, K. M. Bagirov insisted on adopting a draft decision prepared in advance by the bureau of the regional party committee, in which the responsibility for the current situation was entirely assigned to the party organization of the region. However, the bureau did not agree with such a draft, and it was not adopted. After an unsuccessful meeting of the bureau of the regional party committee, K. M. Bagirov, V. M. Yashin, B. S. Kevorkov and members of the bureau of the Central Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan and the regional party Committee went to the meeting room of the regional council where 111 deputies out of 149 had already gathered. Thirty-nine deputies, mostly Azerbaijanis from Shusha and Martakert districts, ignored the session. K. M. Bagirov and V. M. Yashin tried to persuade the deputies to refrain from holding the session and cancel it. One of the participants of the extraordinary session of the regional council, the secretary of the party organization of the largest industrial enterprise of the NKAO, the Karabakh Silk Combine, Robert Kocharyan, described in his memoirs the desperate efforts of Kamran Bagirov and Viktor Yashin to persuade the deputies to cancel the session: By the evening, we were able to secure a quorum, and the session started at 21:00. The square in front of the regional executive committee building was crowded with people. Bagirov, Yashin, Kevorkov, as well as members of the bureau of the regional party committee, unexpectedly came to the session. Bagirov was the frst to speak. He spoke about the fraternal friendship of our peoples, how we have lived together happily for 70 years side by side in Azerbaijan, and that [now] a small group of irresponsible nationalists incites the people to rash actions. He promised to correct all the mistakes made in relation to the region as soon as possible. He stressed that the session does not have the right to resolve territorial issues and that Karabakh will remain part of Azerbaijan. Yashin also spoke in the same vein. In response, the deputies began to speak. They spoke emotionally about the systematic infringement of the interests of the region and that the session has the right to make decisions on absolutely all issues related to the NKAO. Bagirov and Yashin often interrupted the speakers, poured out promises and declared that the problems of the region would henceforth be the focus of Baku’s attention. However, all their efforts to change the course of the session were in vain.57 Having failed to achieve success, K. M. Bagirov, V. M. Yashin, B. S. Kevorkov and their accompanying bureau members left the meeting hall of the regional executive Committee and the session continued its work. The question “On the petition to the Supreme Soviets of the Azerbaijan SSR and the Armenian SSR for the transfer of the NKAR from the Azerbaijan SSR Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 83 to the Armenian SSR” was put up for discussion at the session. After all the speeches, the session unanimously adopted a decision that read: After hearing and discussing the speeches of the deputies of the Regional Council of People’s Deputies of the NKAR on the petition to the Supreme Soviets of the Azerbaijan SSR and the Armenian SSR on the transfer of the NKAR from the Azerbaijan SSR to the Armenian SSR, the extraordinary session of the Nagorno-Karabakh Regional Council of People’s Deputies decided: To meet the wishes of the NKAR workers, to ask the Supreme Soviet of the Azerbaijan SSR and the Supreme Soviet of the Armenian SSR to show a deep understanding of the aspirations of the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh and to resolve the issue of transferring the NKAR from the Azerbaijan SSR to the Armenian SSR, and at the same time to petition the Supreme Soviet of the USSR for a positive solution to the issue of transferring the NKAO from the Azerbaijan SSR to the Armenian SSR.58 Thus, the decision of the extraordinary session of the Council of People’s Deputies of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region gave legitimacy to the “Miatsum” movement and became a landmark event in the history of not only the Armenian population of the region, but also in the history of the world’s Armenians. However, at this fateful moment, neither the deputies nor the activists of the “Miatsum” movement could even think that a new tragic page was opening in the history of the Armenian people, which, as the subsequent course of events showed, would bring them many troubles and sufferings. Soon after the transition of the Karabakh movement by the decision of the regional council to the open phase, clashes between Azerbaijanis and Armenians began both in Azerbaijan and in Armenia. As a result, even before the collapse of the USSR, 165,000 ethnic Azerbaijanis left Armenia, and 350,000 Armenians left Azerbaijan. After the collapse of the USSR and the formation of independent states on the ruins of the Soviet Empire, a war broke out between Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh, which ended with the defeat of Azerbaijan and the loss of not only the NKAR, but also seven districts around Nagorno-Karabakh. The war claimed about 30,000 lives on both sides. Unfortunately, the armistice signed in May 1994 between Azerbaijan and Armenia did not lead to a full-fedged peace treaty for 26 years due to Armenia’s intransigence on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh. Thanks to their victory in the First Karabakh War and the support of Russia, the Armenian leaders long behaved like victors, ignoring the four UN Security Council resolutions on the liberation of the occupied territories of Azerbaijan, and grossly violating international law. This behavior of the Armenian leadership ultimately led to a new war, which began on September 27, 2020 and lasted for 44 days. The war ended not only with the liberation by the Azerbaijani army of all the occupied Uploaded by S. M. Safi
84 Eldar Abbasov seven regions, but also ending the occupation of part of the territory of the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region, including the ancient city of Shusha. The trilateral Statement signed by Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on November 9, 2020 is regarded by Armenian experts as an act of Armenia’s surrender, which threatens the existence of the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh. In contrast, the Azerbaijani leadership believes that the trilateral Declaration, fnally, after more than 30 years of confrontation, opens the way for the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh to live in peace. Notes 1 Akopyan, S. M. Genocid armyan v osmanskoj imperii i otvetstvennost’ imperialisticheskoj Germanii ‒ Istoriko-flologicheskij zhurnal ‒ 1, Erevan, 1963; Nersisyan, M. G. Genocid zapadnyh armyan v 1915 godu ‒ Istoriko-flologicheskij zhurnal ‒ 2, Erevan, 1965; Dokumenty mladotureckogo komiteta o genocide zapadnyh armyan v 1915 ‒1916 gg. ‒ Izvestiya Akademii nauk Armyanskoj SSR. Obshchestvennye nauki ‒ 3, Erevan, 1965; Saakyan, R. G. Genocid armyan (v Turcii v gody pervoj mirovoj vojny) v ocenke peredovoj obshchestvennosti ‒ Izvestiya Akademii nauk Armyanskoj SSR. Obshchestvennye nauki ‒ 4, Erevan, 1965. 2 See.: Hasanli Jamil. Stalin and the Turkish Crisis of the Cold War, 1945–1953. Lexington Books, 2011, p. 127 3 Igor Muradyan. Study of the conditions for the formation of the Armenian territorial-industrial complex, including Nakhichevan and Nagorno-Karabakh. June 19, 1986 ‒ Russian State Archive of Modern History (hereinafter – RGANI), foundation 100, record 5, volume 627, p. 12. 4 Information letter of the Presidium of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia to the Central Committee of the CPSU signed by the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia Ya. Zarobyan. November 13, 1964 ‒ Genocid armyan: otvetstvennost’ Turcii i obyazatel’stva mirovogo soobshchestva. Tom 2. Chast’ 2. M., 2005. S. 17. 5 Memo of the Chairman of the KGB at the Council of Ministers of the USSR V.Semichastny to the secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU, the Chairman of the Ideological Department of the Central Committee of the CPSU P. Demichev. September 6, 1965 ‒ RGANI f. 5, r. 30, v. 462, p. 4. 6 İbid., p. 95 ‒96. 7 Information on the distribution of anti-Soviet materials and the identifcation of their authors by the KGB under the Council of Ministers of the Armenian SSR for 1963 ‒1965. May 16, 1966 ‒ RGANI, f. 5, r. 58, v. 3, p. 4. 8 See: “Kommunist” (Erevan) No. 31. February 6, 1966. 9 Letter of the old Bolsheviks of Armenia to the members of the Presidium of the Central Committee of the CPSU. February 19, 1966 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 6, v. 372, p. 43. 10 Nakhichevan ASSR in the Soviet-Turkish treaties. Reference prepared by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the USSR on May 31, 1966 ‒ RGANI, f. 5, r. 58, v. 3, p. 8. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 85 11 Letter of the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia A. Kochinyan and Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Armenian SSR B. Muradyan to the Central Committee of the CPSU dated September 30, 1966 ‒ Bor’ba armyan za vossoedinenie NKAO s Armeniej. Sbornik dokumentov i materialov. Erevan, 2011. S. 66. 12 Extract from the resolution of the reporting and election meeting of the party organization of the Oriental Studies Sector of the Armenian SSR Academy of Sciences. November 14, 1966 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 623, p. 5. 13 Extract from the resolution of the Party Assembly of the Institute of Archeology and Ethnography of the Armenian SSR Academy of Sciences of November 21, 1966 ‒ RGANI, f. 100. r 5. v. 623. p. 4. 14 Resolution adopted at the meeting of the party organization of the Institute of History of the Armenian SSR Academy of Sciences. November 24, 1966 (Protocol No. l 9) ‒ RGANI, f. 100. r. 5, v. 623, p. 6. 15 Ibid. 16 Ibid., p. 7. 17 Note by I. Kapitonov to Moralev B. N. and Starchenko Yu. M. December 7, 1966 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 623, p. 2. 18 Memo of the Central Committee of the CPSU on the conversation with the secretaries of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia Comrades Kochinyan A. E. and Ter-Gazaryants G. A. dated March 14, 1967 ‒ RGANI, f. 100. r. 5, v. 623, p. 1. 19 The Central Committee of the CPSU to the Secretary of the Central Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan P. M. Elistratov. July 20, 1965. ‒ Archive of political documents under the Administration of the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan (hereinafter-APDUDPAR, f. 1, r. 52, v. 232, p. 60–64. 20 Letter from V. Akhundov to the Central Committee of the CPSU. September 23, 1965. ‒ APDUDPAR, f. 1, op. 52, d. 194, l. 107. 21 Letter on behalf of the group of 13 Communists signed by B. Ulubabyan, G. Stepanyan, S. Shakaryan and L. Gasparyan to the Presidium of the Central Committee of the CPSU dated September 22, 1965 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 622, p. 117. 22 Ibid., p. 116. 23 Resolution of the Regional Committee of Nagorno-Karabakh of the CP of Azerbaijan “On the letter of the group of Communists of Nagorno-Karabakh addressed to the Central Committee of the CPSU”. December 12, 1965. ‒ APDUDPAR, f. 1, r. 53, v. 265, p. 40. 24 Information letter signed by S. V. Kozlov to the Central Committee of the CPSU. December 13, 1972 ‒ APDUDPAR, f. 1, r. 59, v. 177, p. 1. 25 Information letter signed by G. Aliyev to the Central Committee of the CPSU. September 14, 1973 ‒ APDUDPAR, f. 1, r. 60, v. 150, v. 92–93. 26 Information letter signed by G. Aliyev to the Central Committee of the CPSU. November 27, 1974-APDUDPAR, f. 1, r. 61, v. 164, p. 148. 27 Kevorkov B. S. On the tasks of the regional party organization for the further improvement of the international education of workers. Report at the plenum of the regional Committee of the CP of Azerbaijan. March 21, 1975 ‒ “Sovietakan Karabakh” (Stepanakert) No. 69. March 23, 1975. 28 The source of our power ‒ Pravda No. 149. May 29, 1975. 29 Telegram from Sylvie Kaputikyan to the Central Committee of the CPSU addressed to L. I. Brezhnev, copy: to the editorial offce of the newspaper Pravda and the bureau of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia. June 5, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
86 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 Eldar Abbasov 1975 ‒ Bor’ba armyan za vossoedinenie NKAO s Armeniej. Sbornik dokumentov i materialov. S. 99. Tomas de Waal. Chernyj sad. Armeniya i Azerbajdzhan mezhdu mirom i vojnoj. M., 2005. S. 38. Address of academicians of the USSR Academy of Sciences A. Aganbegyan, T. S. Khachaturov, I. L. Knunyants, M. H. Chailakhyan and others to the General Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee M. S. Gorbachev, Chairman of the Presidium of the USSR Supreme Soviet A. A. Gromyko, delegates of the XXVII Congress of the CPSU. February 24, 1986 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5. v. 622. p. 41. Reference of the Central Committee of the CPSU. March 18, 1986 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 622, p. 39–40. Letter from Armenian economic scientists (20 signatures in total) to the General Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU M. S. Gorbachev, to the Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR A. A. Gromyko, to the Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR N. I. Ryzhkov, a copy – to the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia K. S. Demirchian. June 19, 1986 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 627, p. 1–6. Igor Muradyan. Study of the conditions for the formation of the Armenian Territorial-industrial complex, including Nakhichevan and Nagorno-Karabakh. June 19, 1986 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 627, p. 7–239. Letter of the representatives of the creative intelligentsia of Armenia (G. Gasparyan, G. Emin, S. Kaputikyan, A. Hakobyan, S. Sarkisyan, G. Malyan and G. Matevosyan) to the General Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU M. S. Gorbachev. January 20, 1987 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5. v. 683, p. 113–114. See: Dubrovin N.F. Istoriya vojny i vladychestva russkih na Kavkaze. SPb, 1871. T.1. Kn.2. S. 225–226. A note presented to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Russia O. P. Kozodavlev, describing Georgia and some other regions of the Caucasus. July 19, 1811 ‒ Prisoedinenie Vostochnoj Armenii k Rossii, T. I (1801–1813).Sbornik dokumentov (Sost. C.P. Agayan, S.A. Ter-Avakimova, D.A. Muradyan, V.A. Diloyan. AN ArmSSR, In-t istorii). Erevan, 1972. S. 562. Response of the Central Committee of the CP of Armenia to the letter of the Central Committee of the CPSU 028851/01 of February 13, 1987. April 20, 1987 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 683, p. 111. Reference of the Central Committee of the CPSU. April 30, 1987 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 683. p. 110. Kocharyan R. Zhizn’ i svoboda. Avtobiografya eks-prezidenta Armenii i Karabaha. M., 2019. S. 56. See: Letters on the reunifcation of the native Armenian lands of Nakhichevan and Nagorno-Karabakh with Soviet Armenia. July, 1987 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 630, p. 1ob. Cover letter to the signatures addressed to the General Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee M. S. Gorbachev dated January 25, 1987-RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 630, p. 6. Ibid., p. 7. See: To the Central Committee of the CPSU, General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev. August 24, 1987 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 630, p. 28–32. Igor Muradyan’s address to the General Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee M. S. Gorbachev. September 16, 1987 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 632, p. 5. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Armenian Irredentist Nationalism 87 46 Igor Muradyan’s address to the Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU, member of the Politburo A. N. Yakovlev. November 11, 1987 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 636, p. 1. 47 Ibid. 48 Arutyunyan V.B. Sobytiya v Nagornom Karabahe. Khronika. Chast’ I. Fevral’ 1988 g. – Yanvar’ 1989 g. Erevan, 1990. S. 32. 49 Telegram of the Karabakh delegation of representatives of the creative intelligentsia of the NKAO to the Central Committee of the CPSU M. S. Gorbachev, E. K. Ligachev, A. N. Yakovlev, Chairman of the Presidium of the USSR Supreme Soviet A. A. Gromyko, Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR N. I. Ryzhkov. February 13, 1988 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 639, p. 48–49. 50 See: Telegrams of the Armenian population of the NKAO to the Central Committee of the CPSU. February 9–12, 1988 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 638, p. 12– 26, 28–39, 41–57, 59–65, 67–80, 82–94, 96–113, 115–124, 134–140. 51 Telegram of a group of employees of the Financial Department of the NKAO to the Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR A. A. Gromyko dated February 14, 1988 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5. v. 639, p. 58. 52 Brutenc, K.N. Nesbyvsheesya. Neravnodushnye zametki o perestrojke. M., 2005. S. 338. 53 Collective telegrams of the residents of Stepanakert to the Central Committee of the CPSU M. S. Gorbachev. February 12, 1988 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 638, p. 131–138. 54 Collective telegram of the leading employees of the party-Soviet apparatus of the NKAO to the Central Committee of the CPSU M. S. Gorbachev, Chairman of the KGB of the SSR V. M. Chebrikov. February 13, 1988 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 639, p. 36. 55 See: Collective telegram of the leading employees of the party-Soviet apparatus of the NKAO to the Central Committee of the CPSU M. S. Gorbachev, Chairman of the KGB of the SSR V. M. Chebrikov. February 13, 1988 ‒ RGANI, f. 100, r. 5, v. 639, p. 33–38. 56 From the speeches of M. S. Gorbachev at the meeting of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the CPSU on March 3, 1988 ‒ Gorbachev M.S. Sobranie sochinenij. T.9. Noyabr’ 1987 – Mart 1988. M., 2009. S. 234 57 Kocharyan, R. Zhizn’ i svoboda. Avtobiografya eks-prezidenta Armenii i Karabaha. S. 60. 58 The decision of the extraordinary session of the Council of People’s Deputies of the NKAO of the XX convocation “On the petition to the Supreme Soviets of the Azerbaijan SSR and the Armenian SSR on the transfer of the NKAO from the Azerbaijan SSR to the Armenian”. February 20, 1988 ‒ “Sovetskiy Karabakh” No. 43. February 21, 1988. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
4 The Orientalizing of Azerbaijanis and the Armenia–Azerbaijan Confict Farid Shafyev Introduction The Second Karabakh War with all modern warfare employed, had another battleground – information. From the beginning of the modern confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the international coverage and perception had no less signifcance than the real situation. Unleashed offcially on 13 February 1988 in Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region of the Soviet Azerbaijan by a group of Armenian nationalists demanding miatsum – an Armenian language term for unifcation with Armenia – the confict had profound academic, media and popular misperceptions. The history of the region, religious connotations, causes of the confict, victimhood and other important topics became the subject of heated debate within public and scholarly discourse about the confict (Broers, 2019). Understanding the confict itself and surrounding perceptions require in depth analysis of the origin of the ongoing confict within its historical and cultural context. English language academic literature has relatively rich items on Armenian history characterized by admiration about a small Christian nation squeezed between the mountains of the Caucasus. Popular media coverage is even more palpitating about frst Christians who survived centuries of oppressive Islamic environment and especially Turkish “oppression.” These were starting points for any analysis when the Armenian question surfaced in the age of nationalism – during the second half of the nineteenth century. Such approach would explain much of the public Western perception about the confict between Armenians and Azerbaijanis – from the frst clashes in 1905 until today. Islam, the Ottoman Empire and related stereotypes played important roles in the coverage of the confict – from superfcial journalistic dispatches to serious scholarly research. I argue that strong Orientalist stereotypes greatly distorted the historical data, and relegated the Azerbaijanis as a Muslim, Turkic-speaking ethnic group in an unfavorable light versus the Christian Armenians in both Western and Russian media and academic discourse despite the fact that the confict had no religious connotation. DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-6 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Orientalizing of Azerbaijanis 89 Orientalist Understanding of the Confict The narrative about the Armenian-Azerbaijani confict in Western media and academic literature is overwhelmingly pro-Armenian and repeats clichés of Armenian historians. One can fnd a similar trend in Russian coverage of the confict. Any attempt to cast doubt on the entrenched history of Armenia and Armenians faces the accusation of revisionism or denialism, and scholars, especially in Western academia, risk their career and suffer from well-organized attacks by Armenian activists, which are frequently supported by Western and Russian scholarly communities (Evinch, 2005, Mamigonian, 2015, Mukhanov, 2020). In a nutshell, the Armenian narrative revolves around the following major arguments (ArmenianInstitute.org.uk, Armenianmuseum.org, Croissant, 1998, Avedian, 2012, Cheterian, 2015, Baghdassarian, 2020, Tchilingirian, 2020, Mirabile, 2021): – Armenians for centuries were oppressed by Muslims, especially by Turks (here modern-day Azerbaijanis also regarded as Turks as it was their self-identifcation in today’s Republic of Azerbaijan until 1936); – Turks were always “genocidal” toward Armenians which resulted in massacres during 1890–1915 in Anatolia; – In addition, Islamic “jihadism” was unleashed against Armenians in the Caucasus since 1905; – These Turkic genocidal tendencies and Muslim “jihadism” repeatedly occurred, including in the Second Karabakh War; – Historical Armenian lands encompassed a big part of the territories in Anatolia and the South Caucasus, including Nagorno-Karabakh, which was unjustly assigned by Soviet leader Josef Stalin to Azerbaijan in 1921; – Armenians were discriminated against in Soviet Azerbaijan, and had worse socio-economic conditions than Azerbaijanis; – Armenians peaceful struggle for freedom was met by violence and pogrom in Sumgayit in February 1988; – The First Karabakh War (1988–1994) was merely the Armenian response to insecurity caused by Azerbaijani aggressiveness; – The Second Karabakh War was an Azerbaijani-Turkish jihadist alliance against small democratic Armenia. Before addressing these arguments-clichés, I would like to analyze the theoretical context of confict-related narrative. Interestingly enough, the Armenian narrative enjoys support from two opposite groups – Christian fundamentalists and liberals. An even more extraordinary fact is that this phenomenon is also observed both in the West and Russia. In this regard, the Armenian-Azerbaijani confict is unique and sharply different from other post-Soviet conficts such as in Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine. The Uploaded by S. M. Safi
90 Farid Shafyev West as a whole support the territorial integrity of Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine, seeing Moscow’s imperialistic ambitions in the form of support to separatist movements in these three countries. Despite the fact that Russia has a military base in Armenia and both countries are members of the same political-military alliance, Western politicians, experts and journalists tend to be ambiguous about supporting Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. The frst explanation, which comes into mind for this situation, is the religious factor. Azerbaijan is a Muslim majority country, unlike Armenia and all other above-mentioned post-Soviet countries involved in territorial conficts. However, it is consensus in the expert community that the confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan does not have religious connotations, although especially Armenian lobby groups view and exploit it through a religious narrative. For example, the Armenian National Committee of America regularly sends messages, tweets and other public announcements to American policy-makers highlighting the Armenian Christian affliation (for example, ANCA twitter account, @ANCA_DC). Armenian lobbyists regularly remind the US and European governments that they were the frst Christian nation and shy away from acknowledging friendly relations with Russia and Iran. More scrutinized analysis of the trend in the West and Russia with regard to the Armenia-Azerbaijani confict warrants a broader scope of arguments. The application of several theories stemming from the philosophy of knowledge explains this phenomenon. Michel Foucault, Edward Said, Antonio Gramsci, Benedict Anderson and a few other thinkers must be employed to understand the dominant perception formed over the course of more than hundred years since the beginning of animosity between the Armenians and Azerbaijanis in 1905. Said’s Orientalism in particular is the key framework to unpack this narrative. I dismiss the sometimes-quoted theory of ancient hatred (Laycock, 2020). Historical data is scarce if not almost non-existent about the ethnic clashes between Armenians and Azerbaijanis (in pre-twentieth-century documents Azerbaijanis were referred to by Russian as “Tatars” or “Turks” by Westerners). “Classic” medieval wars involving Armenians cannot be counted as ethnic confict, but even they are few. Those which are referred to, for example, the forced Armenian deportations realized by Safavid Shah Abbas in the seventeenth century and Agha Mahammad Shah Gajar in the eighteenth century, after close scrutiny, reveal the fact that those incidents affected not only Armenians, but also other peoples, including Muslims (Imranli-Lowe, 2016). Despite the modern narrative about century-old oppression of Armenians by Muslim rulers, this Christian group was called by the Ottomans “milleti sadika” (loyal people) which signifes the trust and relative harmony in relations between them (Gunter, 2011, Ekinci, 2014). In Persia, Armenians had also enjoyed privileges, though certainly, as Christians had to abide by some discriminatory rules, such as jizya – an elevated tax imposed on all non-Muslims according to Sharia Law. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Orientalizing of Azerbaijanis 91 With the conquest of the South Caucasus by Russia in the frst quarter of the nineteenth century, which Armenians not only welcomed but actively supported, they became a privileged group, while Muslims, including Azerbaijanis, were deprived of previous positions. For example, Russian authorities preferred recruiting Armenians to local administration (Mostashari, 2006). Azerbaijanis were called “Tatars” by Russians and self-identifed themselves as “Turks” or “Muslims.” These ethnic markers explain many stereotypes and biases against them by Russian and Western media. Cultural predisposition is at the core of the process of the Orientalizing of Azerbaijanis. The concept of Orientalism formulated by Edward Said (1978) with regard to Western imperial discourse on the Islamic world with the application of clichéd perceptions focuses mostly on persistent prejudices against Arabic peoples and their history and culture. The Ottoman Empire is overall absent in Said’s Orientalism as are other signifcant Muslim majority states such as the Safavid and Qajar Iranian states or Mughal India. However, in the view of several scholars these historical entities received similar Eurocentric treatment from Western academia, which fall into the category of Orientalism (Bryce, 2013, Eldem, 2015). British, French, Spanish and other European thinkers, following their imperial rulers, regarded peoples in Africa, Asia and America as wild tribes which should be “civilized” through both Christianization and colonization. The Western scholars applied their own mold and values to evaluate Ottomans and later the Republican Turks, frequently accusing them of barbarism, but occasionally praising them for modernization and Westernization. In 1853, Russian tsar Nicholas I suggested to Great Britain to deal with the Ottomans as “the sick man of Europe” and such sentiments continue even today whenever discussion emerges on Turkey’s accession to the European Union (EU) (Livanios, 2006). Despite the fact that the Ottoman Turks had never been colonized, “the Europeans’ attitude toward the Ottoman Empire in terms of the political language used and the policies pursued was no different from the ones toward the colonized world” (Erdagoz, 2019, p. 2). In the nineteenth century the issue of rescuing Christian minorities from the Ottoman yoke became the acute topic in European capitals and the so-called Eastern and Armenian questions were brought to the agenda of imperial powers. The connections between Orientalism and the construction of the stereotypic image of the “terrible Turks” were reinforced during World War I, when the British, French and Russian empires collided with the Ottoman. This affected the modern categorization of the events in 1915 as “genocide” when Armenians were deported from Eastern Anatolia to secure the frontline against invading Russian troops, which Armenian rebels supported. After the end of World War I, the demonization of Turks was forgotten, but reentered the academic and political discourse by the end of the Cold War with the emergence of independent Armenia. Embedded Orientalism fourished especially in the context of Armenian territorial claims against Uploaded by S. M. Safi
92 Farid Shafyev Azerbaijan and Turkey, Turkey’s bid for EU membership, and more independent policy under the incumbent president Recep Tayyib Erdogan. Armenian diaspora activists resorted to aggressive anti-Turkish and anti-Azerbaijan campaigns with typical Orientalization, advancing clichés about “terrible Turks” against the frst Christian nation, i.e. Armenia. The complex history of the region was reduced to a white-and-black picture with a few “essential” traits (Yavuz, 2014). Anyone, especially in Western academia who disagrees with questioning the validity of the claim of the 1915 “genocide” might lose his or her tenure and even face criminal charges. For example, Switzerland and France have enacted relevant legislation criminalizing the so-called denial of genocide or alternative historical narratives based on research that rejects the legal description of these events as genocide (ECHR, 2013). Severe ostracism might fall upon scholars questioning major arguments entrenched in Western or Russian expert communities with regard to the history of Karabakh too. Strong Orientalist stereotypes continue dominating the discourse, and affect the perception of the Armenia-Azerbaijani confict as well. Another reason for Western and Russian support to the Armenian question revolves around imperial projects, which at various times coincided with the attempts of Armenians to create independent statehood. The ancient Armenian kingdom lost its sovereign status by A.D. 428, but its history has assumed signifcance, beginning from the eighteenth century for both Armenian nationalists and imperial strategists, who eyed the territories of the Ottoman Empire and Persia. The reconstruction of the “Armenian homeland” with vast areas from the Mediterranean to Karabakh is the result of only two centuries discourse, and did not exist in the Mediaeval or Ancient periods (Imranli-Lowe, 2015). This is exactly when a more mythologized and even hypertrophied history of Armenia along with “Great Armenia” maps with extended boundaries made inroads into Russia and Europe. The Armenian Church and clericals proved instrumental in this process In the 1670s, Armenian Catholicos Jacob (Akop) IV decided to send a mission to Europe, which was eventually assigned to Israel Ori (1658–1711) from Zangezur (the Sunik region in modern-day Armenia). Having settled in Europe, Israel Ori approached the courts in Vienna, Paris and Vatican, soliciting their support for Armenian statehood but received no assurances. In 1701, Israel Ori managed to deliver a letter to Russian tsar Peter the Great, who promised to render necessary assistance (Ezov, 1898). The Russian military campaign in the Caucasus in 1722 was successful, but after Peter the Great’s death, the Russian army left the region and only returned a century later. It seemed that Israel Ori’s mission was mainly supported by Armenian clerics and many aspects of the interaction between Ori and Peter the Great were distorted and mythologized later by the Armenian-Russian historian Gerasim Ezov (Ekozyants, 2020). The national history of the “Armenian homeland” from the Mediterranean to Karabakh was promoted by Mikayel Chamchyants (1738–1823), Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Orientalizing of Azerbaijanis 93 an Armenian Catholic monk. According to Kevork Bardakjian (1976), Chamchyants mixed the historical accounts with “frequently accepted sheer legends” (p.17). Nevertheless, the Armenian “histories” and maps matched the goal of imperial strategists. Armenian archbishop and prelate of the Russian-Armenian community Iosef Argutinskiy (1743–1801) and Count Ivan Lazarev (Ovanes Lazarian) (1735–1801) supplied the Russian court with maps and memos (Pollock, 2006). During the frst part of the nineteenth century Russia conquered the territory of the South Caucasus and looked increasingly at the Ottoman lands. In the war of 1877–1878 St. Petersburg occupied Kars. The Russian administration conducted several campaigns of Armenian settlement to the newly conquered territories, frst in Crimea after the Russian-Turkish War of 1768–1774 (Ezov, 1901) and later to the South Caucasus after a series of Russian-Turkish and Russia-Qajar wars ended by 1829 (Mostahsari, 2006, Shafyev, 2018). The Russian military campaigns and Armenian settlement projects were accompanied by historical claims on the newly acquired territories. This policy was continued during the Soviet Union. After World War II, Josef Stalin demanded the Kars and Ardahan regions from Turkey, and subsequently the Soviets launched the campaign by Armenian and Georgian historians to claim the Turkish eastern provinces (Hasanli, 2011b). Exactly during this time such terms as “Western” and “Eastern Armenia” entered the academic lexicon. These geographic names, non-existing historically, bear irredentist agenda and were manipulated by Armenian historians and diaspora activists with regard to other historical regions. For example, Nakhichevan, part of modern Azerbaijan, is presented as the location of the Biblical Noah and Armenian homeland, though it is clear that during the Biblical times no Armenian settled in Nakhichevan and no such name existed in antiquity. Connecting Nakhichevan’s etymology to Armenian origin and affliating with Christianity is a well-designed move to solicit the support of Christian brethren. Overall, the history as it is known in the mainstream Western and Russian scholarship is greatly infuenced by the nationalist narrative promoted by the Armenian Church, a narrative, which was only manufactured during last 300 years. Frequently, the existence of Armenian churches and monasteries in the Middle East and Caucasus were used by Armenian nationalist historians as a marker of “homeland” despite the fact that many religious communities overlapped and co-existed with other communities. One of such Christian communities was the Caucasian Albanians, a theory, which many Western experts believe Azerbaijan falsely promoted for political purposes (de Waal, 11 November 2020). However, as Gerard Toal and John Loughlin (2013) observe: the Armenian Church has a long and complicated geographical footprint across the Middle East, Anatolia and Caucasus…. [C]hurches, graveyards and religious stones are taken as evidence of original Uploaded by S. M. Safi
94 Farid Shafyev ownership of territories under dispute and the basis for making claims to territories that may not otherwise be under dispute. Such discourses seek to imagine territory as sacred space, sacred not simply for its religious meaning but more broadly as the ancient patrimony of the modern nation (p.170). It is known that Caucasian Albania had its own church – with the medieval center in Gandzasar, located in the present day Karabakh region of Azerbaijan – which became gradually subordinated to the Armenian Catholicosate, and eventually abolished by the order of the Russian tsar in 1836. The remnants of Albanian liturgical books, known to modern scholars as palimpsests, manifest the evidence that Albanian written texts were erased or embroidered in order to write on them again in other languages, primarily in Armenian (Maisak, 2010). Azerbaijan’s narrative related to the Caucasian Albania has some faws but the subject is not developed and the source base remains limited. In the meantime, many Armenian historical claims also have shaky ground. Other relatively modern “historical” discoveries are the ancient Armenian settlements, especially related to the reign of the Armenian king Tigranes the Second (140–55 BC), which are promoted by Armenian historians as territorial markers. Tigranes’ territorial acquisitions, mostly short-lived and lost after his death, are taken by Armenian nationalists as evidence of an ancient Armenian presence in the vast area of the Middle East and the Caucasus. Armenian historians claim that several “Tigranakerts,” cities established by Tigranes, existed from ancient times, and quite suspiciously those settlements were recently discovered in Karabakh, Nakhichevan and other areas which Armenian scholars claim to be ancient Armenian land. In the complexity and uncertainty of the ancient history of the region, local nationalistic discourses are being dealt with not only through the prism of “imagined communities” (Andersen, 1991) but also “imagined geographies” (Said, 1979). One of the key Armenian historical discourses focuses on Armenian ancient statehood as the frst Christian one – an argument which has also some opponents, who believe the frst Christian state was Ethiopia (Woldegaber and Portella, 2012). The centrality lies not only in the fact of pioneering Christendom at state level, but more in the victimhood of Armenians surrounded for the past millennium by hostile Muslim states. However, this narrative about animosity was mostly promoted by the Armenian Church. During the Russian-sponsored campaign of Armenian resettlement from the Qajar state to the Russian Caucasus in 1828–1831, many Armenian peasants resisted relocation (Glinka, 1831). It was mostly clergymen who persuaded ordinary Armenians to leave their established settlements. Firouzeh Mostashari (2006, p. 41) believes that force was used to ensure the departure of Armenians from Persia. Similar trends can be observed in the Armenian resettlement from the Ottoman Empire, which followed in Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Orientalizing of Azerbaijanis 95 1829–1832. The Porte accused the Russian army and the Armenian clergy of forcing people to immigrate to Russia (Ozcan, 2011). Discontent among Armenians made them return back to the Ottoman Empire, and the Russian Caucasus administration shut down the border in 1831 to prevent an outfow of population (Sherry, 2007, pp. 65–71). Armenian habitation in the territory of medieval Persia and Turkey was characterized by coexistence and synergy with locals rather than by animosity. The narrative of permanent hostility is greatly infuenced by religious authorities supported by both Western and Russian clericals and imperial strategists. While it is easy to comprehend why right-wing Christian groups and activists support Armenians as religious brethren, the marriage of liberals with the Armenian narrative, which also includes irredentist territorial claims (Ambrosio, 2001), raises some questions, which I will try to answer. This trend can be observed already in the nineteenth century and was related to the Western and Russian perception of the Orient, especially Turks. Hakan Yavuz (2014) questions: Why did both Christian scholars and Enlightenment thinkers want so badly to see an end to the Ottoman presence in Europe? European powers became less tolerant of ‘Turkey-in Europe’ in the nineteenth century than in earlier centuries. Ironically, it was in the ‘liberal’ and ‘secular’ era that European leaders asked how was it possible that an Islamic entity could rule Christian populations in Europe’s backyard? (p. 114) European liberalism has close linkages with an idea of “civilizing mission,” and for that matter, can be considered as another offshoot of Christian missionary campaign within Western colonialism. Spreading the words of Christ was transformed into the British “white man’s burden” (Hitchens, 2004) and French “mission civilisatrice” (Burrows, 1986). Many liberal thinkers of the nineteenth century supported the idea that European civilization is not only superior to others but also has messianic duties. Western liberalism in the nineteenth century denied equal rights for many so-called backward societies, proceeding from reasoning voiced by philosophers like John Stuart Mill, who believed that those societies like children did not reach “the maturity of their faculties” (Mill, 2009, p. 19). This colonial attitude has been applied to Turks as Oriental barbarians. French philosophers had similar attitudes to the Ottoman culture. Voltaire described the Turks as tyrants who destroyed Europe’s heritage. Armenian nationalists like quoting French novelist Victor Hugo: “Wherever the Turkish hoof trods, no grass grows” (Koloyan-Keuhnelian, 2020). Armenian publisher and scholar Arshag Mahdesian wrote in 1917: The Armenians, as the protagonists of western ideals, and as the frst nation to embrace Christianity, have rendered remarkable services to civilization. The Armenians belong to the Indo-European family of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
96 Farid Shafyev mankind. They have been depicted by impartial observers as intellectually, morally, and physically superior to most of the races surrounding them, or as “the Anglo-Saxons of the Orient.” (Mahdesian, 1917, p. 448) The British Prime Minister and the leader of the Liberal Party William Gladstone (1808–1898) defned the Turks as “the one great anti-human specimen of humanity” (Çiçek, 2006). Victorian Britain deplored Turkish “barbarianism” at the same time the English media had moral arguments over the Irish Potato Famine and Opium Wars in China. This sentiment was prevalent during World War I too. The Turk remained “at heart the untutored nomad he ever was” and “animal incapable of adopting Western civilization as the African negro in the Eastern and the Indian savage in the Western hemisphere had proved themselves to be” (Auchterlonie, 2001, p. 11). British liberals, such as Lord James Bryce (1838–1922), a member of parliament and the author of the Blue Book on Ottoman atrocities against Armenians during World War I, was often employed in circulating disingenuous depictions of the Turks and the Ottoman Empire (Erdagoz, 2019). The European psyche on the Turks was greatly infuenced by the Ottoman siege of Vienna in the seventeenth century, and it is not coincidence that the incumbent prime minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan exploited similar rhetoric during the Second Karabakh War in 2020, warning that “Europe should wait for Turkey near Vienna” (Turkeygazette, 2020). While in the nineteenth century Britain saw in the Ottomans the balancing power to Russia, during World War I, aligned with Russia, British interest in dismembering the Ottoman Empire had selfsh goals to extend its own empire. As Indian subaltern historian Dipesh Chakrabarty (2002, p. 85) pointed out, “it is, in fact, one of the ironies of British history that the British became political liberals at home at the same time as they became imperialists abroad.” British images of the victimized Armenians in the Ottoman Empire carry the imperialistic view of a civilizing mission and imperial “protectiveness” (Laychock, 2009). The Western liberal narrative, especially during the frst part of the twentieth century, should be considered in the parlance of Antonio Gramsci’s theory of liberal imperialism, which today continues in the form of neoliberalism and paternalism, especially with regard to the Muslim world (Taylor, 2010, Salem, 2021). Eventually it brings us to Edward Said’s Orientalist understanding of the history of Ottoman-Armenian relations, greatly infuenced by Western and Russian imperialism. Russia had also a strong school of Orientalism (Oye, 2010), and many Russians, including the liberal-minded poet Alexander Pushkin, supported the Russian conquest of the Caucasus (Layton, 1994). Renowned Russian writer Fyodor Dostoyevsky advocated a messianic Russian role to free Christians in the Ottoman Empire and the whole Orient, and subsequently justifed an expansionist policy (Sahni, 1997, pp. 71–90). Russian Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Orientalizing of Azerbaijanis 97 liberals echoed similar views and legitimized the Russian acquisition of the Caucasus. Russian imperial historians such as Potto and Velichko used extensively the notion of the “civilizing mission” to advance Russian rule in the Caucasus against Qajar and Ottoman infuences (Shafyev, 2018, p. 41). In 1905, when the frst violent clashes broke out between Armenians and Azerbaijanis the contemporary Western and Russian media displayed an anti-Turkish and anti-Muslim tone. Observers nearly always blamed “Tatar gangs” (Le Matin, 1905) for the violence, describing a clash as “part of that wider feud between modern ideas and Asiatic barbarism” (Villari, 1906, p. 191). According to American historian Tadeusz Swietochowski (1995, pp. 41–42), “the events were reported in the world press generally with a tone of partiality towards the Armenian.” Soviet authorities continued the colonialism-infuenced policy by terming many Muslim ethnic groups in the Soviet Union as backward people (otstaliye narody) (Oye, 2014), including Azerbaijanis and other Turkic-speaking groups, which, according to Josef Stalin, lacked developed proletariat (Tolstov, 1947). Completely different treatment was applied to Christian peoples such as Armenians in the South Caucasus. In this regard, it is a completely false assumption adopted in Western and Russian academia following the Armenian claim that the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin assigned Karabakh to Azerbaijan. This story was propelled by Armenian nationalists in order to demonize the territorial arrangement made in 1921 under the alleged infuence of Stalin. Experts in Soviet studies know well that in 1921 Stalin did not possess the power which he enjoyed later in the 1930s. Stalin was among several communists, including some Armenians, who adopted decisions to keep the region within Azerbaijan. Armenian scholar Arsen Saparov believes that there is no direct evidence of Stalin doing or saying something in those 12 days in the summer of 1921 that [resulted in this decision on Karabakh]. A lot of people just assume that since Stalin was an evil person, it would be typical of someone evil to take a decision like that. (quoted from Samayan, 2018) Moreover, Soviet archives indicate that the decision was made to leave (ostavit in Russian) Karabakh within Azerbaijan, which means it had already belonged to Azerbaijan (Hasanli, 2011a). Further, claims by Armenian nationalists that Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh lived worse than Azerbaijanis during the Soviet period have not been supported by socio-economic data (Yamskov, 1991). One of the strongest misperceptions about the modern confict between Armenians and Azerbaijanis is that it began by violence in Sumgait on 27–29 February 1988. The cliché revolves around the stereotype that the peaceful Armenian protest was met by the Azerbaijanis’ pogrom. However, careful research reveals that the violent stage of the confict began in the fall of 1987 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
98 Farid Shafyev (De Waal, 2003), and that the Armenian petition to Moscow (Fuller, 1987, BBC, 2013) was followed by the expulsion of the Azerbaijani population from Armenia prior to the Sumgait event (Brogan, 1998, BBC, 2005). The frst two victims of the confict – Ali Hajiyev and Bakhtiyar Guliyev were two Azerbaijanis killed in Askeran. In the threshold of the riot in Sumgait, the Deputy Soviet Prosecutor General A. Katusev speaking on central TV told the audience about the killing, specifcally naming the nationality of those killed (Zverev 1996). This announcement may have acted as a catalyst of violence, which offcially claimed the lives of 26 Armenians (others claim hundreds) and 6 Azerbaijanis. During the same year of 1988, about 100 Azerbaijanis lost their life in Armenia, and Armenian nationalists called for the purge of all Azerbaijanis from Armenia (AOD, 1989). Eventually, all Azerbaijanis were completely cleansed from Armenia and Armenians expelled from Azerbaijan (UNHCR (1996) estimates 185,000 Azerbaijani refugees from Armenia and 299,000 Armenians from Azerbaijan). When the modern confict began in 1988, many liberals in the West and in the Soviet Union regarded it as an opportunity to dismantle the Soviet system. Therefore, they tended to support the Armenian nationalist movement in Karabakh as “reformist” (BBC, 2013) while the Soviet authorities tried to preserve the existing ethno-territorial administration. However, this division between liberals and Soviet conservatives refected neither the nature of the confict nor its legal and moral dilemmas (Shafyev, 2016). Soviet dissident and Nobel Prize Winner Andrei Sakharov, whose wife Elena Bonner was an ethnic Armenian as well as several other public activists such as Galina Starovoytova launched a campaign, supporting Armenian demands for unifcation with Nagorno-Karabakh. Only later, after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, did Armenian nationalists change their tactic and put forward the idea of self-determination for Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, realizing that the idea of unifcation was not well received by the international community. As Stephen Saideman and Wiliam Ayres (2008) write, “while its actions on the ground helped create what was in effect a union of the two territories, Armenia’s diplomatic strategy was to put pressure on Azerbaijan for denying Karabakhis their rights to self-determination” (p.84). Once the Soviet Union collapsed, offcial Russian authorities under the leadership of Boris Yeltsin returned to classic imperial “divide and rule” policy and aligned with Armenia. This was especially “relevant” when Azerbaijan with pro-Turkic nationalist and pro-Western president Abulfaz Elchibey demanded the full withdrawal of all Russian military forces and bases from Azerbaijan in the summer of 1992. Moscow had withdrawn its forces in February 1993, and in April 1993 the Azerbaijani region of Kalbajar was occupied by Armenia. This was the frst in a series of territorial losses which led to the fall of the Elchibey government and the adoption of four United Nations Security Council resolutions demanding the withdrawal of occupying forces from Azerbaijan. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Orientalizing of Azerbaijanis 99 Armenian occupation, accompanied by ethnic cleansing and massacres, was met by a highly “permissive international environment” (Ambrosio, 2001). While the Armenian irredentist project was rejected formally by the international community, including the United States and Russia, in fact many politicians in the West and Russia welcomed it. In the United States this happened due to the support of the well-organized Armenian lobby despite the fact that Azerbaijan was a loser in the war. This was characterized by President Elchibey and supported by Western experts as “proWestern” (Shafyev, 2021). As Thomas Ambrosio (2001, p. 155) notes, By defnition victims cannot be aggressors. The Armenian-American lobby campaign successfully defected charges of irredentism and put the blame for the Nagorno-Karabakh confict on the Azerbaijanis. Russian impetus for Armenian support was geopolitical, stemming from its centuries old interests in the South Caucasus, which modern Russia considers as its “near abroad” and spheres of infuence. In the context of Azerbaijan’s independent foreign policy under Abulfaz Elchibey (1992– 1993) and Heydar Aliyev (1993–2003), Moscow’s decision was “logical” and later was only “highlighted with a growing military alliance between Yerevan and Moscow” (Ambrosio, 2001, p. 168). As a matter of fact, Armenia is unique in the post-Cold War era as both the United States and Russia for albeit different reasons, domestic lobbying and geopolitical interests respectively, tolerated and even informally supported the Armenian occupation. Moscow’s grand design for control in the post-Soviet area met the backing of Russian liberals (Torbakov 2003). This trend once again was exhibited during the Second Karabakh War. Russian liberals sided with Russian imperialist-minded politicians and experts. As Alexander Tsipko questions: It would seem that people professing liberal European values should have been happy that this time the Russian leadership strictly followed the rule of law, recognized the legitimate right of Azerbaijan to restore its territorial integrity, and the annexation of seven regions of Azerbaijan to Nagorno-Karabakh during the 1989–1994 war years [as being] not only illegal, but also humanly immoral. (Tsipko, 2020) Many Russian liberals manifested limitation of their liberal mindset when it came to Russian territorial ambitions. This subject became recently heatedly debated with regard to Alexey Navalny, the Russian human rights activist who supported the Russian annexation of Crimea, military actions in Georgia and the pejorative narrative about the Caucasians (kavkaztsy). Some experts justify his views as political pragmatism to solicit Russian popular support (Gessen, 2021). However, I will agree with Alexander Tsipko, who gives his own explanation, which fts the concept of Orientalism: Uploaded by S. M. Safi
100 Farid Shafyev For them [Russian liberals], Azerbaijanis are half-people, Muslims; for them religious fanaticism on the basis of Islam is indeed more aggressive in nature than Christian clericalism and fanaticism. Behind the liberalism of our intelligentsia is not just atheism, but atheistic messianism, the perception of modern human history as a confrontation between religion and godlessness. (Tsipko, 2020) These sentiments perfectly echo the views of many Russian liberals of the nineteenth century, which tolerated the brutal conquest of the Caucasus, expulsion of Muslims, including the massive resettlement of Circassians in the 1860s, and other massacres. Modern Russian scholars justify the Russian control over the Caucasus and Central Asia through similar messianic views or security concerns. For example, Vadim Mukhanov (2020), an expert of the Russian State Institute of International Relations, wrote in the European History Quarterly, that Russia conducted a kind of “civilizing mission” in the Mugan region of Azerbaijan referring to the settlement of Russians there in the end of the nineteenth century. However, it is also true that continued stereotyping of Azerbaijanis as Muslim fanatics did not fnd support among both Western and Russian policy-makers as it is a well-known fact that offcial authorities in Baku do not tolerate Islamic militants and thus enacted legislation to enforce the completely secular nature of the state institutions, including education. The international community as a whole accepted the Azerbaijani’s military campaign in September–November 2020 as fully legitimate and justifable under international law, though it called for a ceasefre, constraints and other formal terms pronounced usually in cases of armed conficts. In the meantime, it is also the fact that a cohort of Western scholars, experts, and journalists writing about the confict solely focused on geopolitics and history but remained largely silent on the most important element – namely international law – because it did not ft the pro-Armenian narrative (Shafyev, 2020b). The fundamental principle of the Western approach in academic discourse about the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict was at best to fnd a “balance” (de Waal, 2003, Broers, 2019): in such a complicated and bloody confict, both sides should be responsible. International NGOs dealing with confict resolution took a similar approach. Thus the “balanced approach” became the sacred cow. As a result, the balanced approach of mediators and international experts has perpetuated and protracted the confict, which fnally erupted in September 2020 (Shafyev, 2020a). Western media and scholars long ago jettisoned a term of “occupation” to describe the status of Azerbaijani territories under Armenian control, though from the perspective of international law this was exactly the term used in the United Nations Security Council resolutions. Instead, the more “balanced” term “disputed” was used and being used which created the false impression of equivalence. It might be justifable from the historical perspective Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Orientalizing of Azerbaijanis 101 where Western experts fnd more comfort in the domain of international law, which holds Armenia responsible for the occupation of Azerbaijani territories (ECHR, 2015). The Second Karabakh War, which lasted 44 days, re-opened an old repertoire of Orientalist clichés about the confict. A starting point lays in the basic defnitions, for example, as mentioned earlier, “disputed territory” or Christian-Muslim standoff. The road to the latest war was also described as the failure of the negotiations from both sides while it was Armenia, which abandoned the Madrid Principles accepted in 2007–2009 as a basis for future implementation (Baunov, 2020, Cutler, 2020). There was hope with the current Armenian leader Nikol Pashinyan when he came to power in 2018, but the events demonstrated, unlike another accepted cliché, that “a democratic popular mandate does not necessarily correlate with pacifst inclinations. Mass democracy can, just as well, stimulate and reward politicians’ nationalist militancy” (Socor, 2021). It was Pashinyan who revived the miatsum-unifcation slogan in August 2019, which made the negotiations meaningless. The Western and Russian media have also spotlighted the AzerbaijaniTurkish alliance, frequently in terms of neo-Ottomanism, mostly ignoring the fact that Armenia had enjoyed military support from Moscow for three decades, which became decisive in the last days of the war. Russia did not interfere directly in the confict, probably out of fear of Turkish involvement, and tolerated Azerbaijan’s operation until it approached Khankendi (Stepanakert), the capital of the former Nagorno-Karabakh region. However, after the war it became clear that Russia delivered a massive amount of weapons to Armenia before (Kucera, 2020) and during the war (Bryen, 2020), and even encouraged Yerevan to use its exported Iskander missile against Azerbaijan (Soylu, 2021). Since 1994, Russia has systematically supplied Armenia with free or zero credit-based military equipment to consolidate Armenia’s territorial gains in occupied territories of Azerbaijan (Asgarli and Abay 2020, Horowitz, 2020). The Armenian diaspora chanted slogans about “the Turkish-Azerbaijani attack” trying to show Armenia as a weak party and small actor versus powerful neighbors harassing it, even frequently claiming the danger of “genocide” recurrence. However, all military actions happened on the territory of Azerbaijan. The crossing of the Armenian international border would have triggered direct Russian interference due to its military alliance with Yerevan. Much stronger emphasis in international coverage was related to the Christian Armenian heritage. The main lobby organization in the United States, the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA, 26 October 2020) tweeted: “Armenia – the world’s 1st Christian nation – is under attack and in danger of annihilation. At risk of a 2nd genocide. Stop Turkish and Azerbaijani aggression against this landlocked, blocked genocide-survivor state, an ancient cradle of Christianity and modern democracy.” This tweet Uploaded by S. M. Safi
102 Farid Shafyev carries all typical clichés which in one or another form were disseminated in Western media, covering the Second Karabakh War. While during the war, some Armenian churches were damaged including Gazanchesots in Shusha, loss of Azerbaijani cultural heritage clearly was much more massive once the dreadful situation in the liberated territories became known to the international media (Efendi, 2021). About 67 mosques and hundreds of museums and graveyards, all were pillaged and destroyed. However, the main focus of the Western and Russia media remains Christian heritage (Berberian 2020, McGreevy, 2020). During the war certain Western institutions such as Columbia University and the University of California in Los Angeles, media outlets and individual journalists, promoted a one-sided view of the war (See report published by The Greater Middle East, 2020) holding discussions without Azerbaijani participants. An even more worrisome trend after the Second Karabakh War is that unlike previous years, Western media outlets refused to grant the Azerbaijani side a right of reply (Shafyev and Jafarova, 2020). While the Azerbaijani attitude toward the Armenian heritage contains some controversy (de Waal, 2020), the scale of destruction on both sides is not comparable. As Taras Kuzio (2021) highlights, There are three components to the human rights abuses that have occurred in the war for Nagorno-Karabakh. These include ethnic cleansing, the abuse of civilians and prisoners of war, and cultural vandalism. Ethnic cleansing has been largely ignored in reports about confict in the former USSR. An online search will return many articles about human rights abuses committed by Azerbaijan against Armenian prisoners of war. At the same time, it is diffcult to fnd a single article about the human rights violations inficted on Azerbaijani prisoners by their Armenian captors. Similarly, every article on the internet on cultural destruction is concerned with threats to Armenian cultural heritage in Nagorno-Karabakh. The false equivalence was also put forward with regard to civilian casualties and the treatment of the prisoners of war (POWs). While the focus of the Western media was about the acts of the Azerbaijani army (for example, Ostrovsky, 2020), data by international human rights organizations, especially by Amnesty International (2021), illustrate that Armenian mistreatment of POWs such as deliberate fring on civilian residences far from the frontline and other war crimes prevailed on the Armenian side with 52 Armenians and 94 Azerbaijanis killed. In addition to targeting civilian settlements during the fatal clashes, Armenia’s military attempted to hit Azerbaijan’s largest hydropower station with big water reservoirs located in the central city of Mingachevir. If this had occurred, it might have caused ecological disaster on a regional scale. The largest massacres of civilians during both wars, such as in Khojaly in February 1992, still Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Orientalizing of Azerbaijanis 103 remain unaccountable regarding responsibility, denied by all governments in Armenia, including Nikol Pashinyan’s, dubbed as “democratic” by Western media. The discussion about past tragedies, ethnic cleansings and war crimes frequently carry the infuence of “whataboutism” from both sides, while both ethnic groups suffered from violence and destruction. But the premises for discussion of these issues in the Western and Russian media are based on false historical narratives, one-sided focus on the Azerbaijani side replete with Orientalist stereotypes and ill-intended ignorance of international law. The Armenia–Azerbaijan confict represents a rare case in which the Russian and Western positions converge. On the surface, this can be explained by factors such as the Armenian diaspora, and even Christian solidarity, but deeper down, Turkophobic sentiments echo the old imperial rivalries (Shafyev, 2020c). As was the case previously, during the Second Karabakh War, both Russian and Western liberals and right-wing Christian groups allied with each other to support Armenia. During the critical stage of the war, Thomas de Waal (23 October 2020), who would have otherwise severely criticized Russia’s human rights record and her involvement in conficts in Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine, wrote that “it’s getting late for Russia to intervene directly on the ground to save [the] Armenian side from potential collapse. If that’s the case, Putin is basically accepting the damage to Russia’s standing in the region.” Anna Ohanian (2020), in her article titled “Russia and the West Still Need Each Other in Nagorno-Karabakh” for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, called for united Western-Russian efforts against Azerbaijan and Turkey. Several prominent Western liberals, such as Noam Chomsky, Bernard-Henri Levy and others, appealed for a halt to the “jihadist Turco-Azerbaijani alliance” (Levy, 2020). Such discussion frequently was facilitated by Armenian interlocutors and information was delivered with bias against Azerbaijan, highlighting falsely “jihadist” motives versus Armenian “peaceful democratic revolution” (Barsamian, 2020). International law was perverted to promote the illegal regime established by Armenia in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan. Moreover, the old narrative about “ancient hatred” was revived by a number of liberal intellectuals who posited that Azerbaijanis and Armenians lived in “confictual coexistence” (Compare letters signed by Western liberal thinkers and published in the LA Review of Books (2020) with the NY Review of Books (1990)). Most Western intellectuals had very rudimentary knowledge about the history of the confict and ignored the fate of many Azerbaijanis expelled and massacred by the Armenian side. Armenian nationalists in diaspora were successful in weaponizing several elements: history, religion, victimhood and liberalism in order to promote their irredentist project (Shafyev, 2021), which instigated more nationalism in Armenia itself and made the country a monoethnic state, “cleaned of [Azerbaijanis’] weed” (Panossian, 2006, p. 281). Those Western and Russian liberals did a big disservice to the Armenian Uploaded by S. M. Safi
104 Farid Shafyev statehood, which, due to extreme nationalism, developed distorted democratic institutions (Rutland, 1994). This pattern of nationalism – a mixture of irredentism and ethnic purity – affected the whole Armenian society and brought the country to the deepest crisis in its modern history. Dr. Andrey Kortunov, Director General of the Russian International Affairs Council, believes that the most urgent and important task for Armenia “is not even to reform the political system, but to mobilize around a new national idea, leading society away from the destructive temptations of endless irredentism” (2021). Unfortunately, what in essence is the irredentist project, promoted by Armenian nationalists at home and in diaspora, enjoys support among both the Western and Russian intellectual elites. Conclusion The Armenian-Azerbaijani confict with a bit more than hundred years history and 30 years into its modern phase claimed thousands of lives and inficted huge material and moral damage to the respective countries. Both societies suffer from historical traumas and continue disseminating mutually exclusive narratives. However, the two countries are not equal in terms of legal accountability. Armenian nationalists advanced territorial claims and Armenia occupied the internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan for almost 30 years. While the confict caused war crimes, ethnic cleansing and destruction in both countries, the moral judgment should derive from international legal norms, which have two distinctive sides, occupier and its victim. The Western and Russian academic and public discourse with regard to this confict is uniquely blended with an anti-Azerbaijani undertone, which is embedded in strong Orientalist clichés and rooted in Islamophobia and Turcophobia. Christian right and Liberal left spectrums in the West and Russia, due to the closeness of ideas of Christian missionary and liberal messianism, tend to support Armenian historical narratives, which were promoted for the last three centuries by the Armenian Church and clergymen. These narratives were employed by imperial strategists in Russia and Western capitals for their own colonial agenda, frequently disregarding the fate of the people in the region, including Armenians themselves. The narrative of ancient animosity and “ethnic incompatibility” (a term used by ex-president of Armenia Robert Kocharian) is a fake argument. In this regard, the Second Karabakh War (27.09–10.11.2020) was not different in terms of coverage in Western and Russian media than the frst one (1988–1994). While Azerbaijan managed to liberate a big part of its formerly occupied territories, legitimate security concerns over the fate of the region remain in public discourse in Azerbaijan, Armenia and other major regional and global actors. The future lies in a radical revision of approaches to the outstanding political issues. No less important is the rectifcation of the historical record of the confict and history of the region. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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108 Farid Shafyev Kucera, Joshua (2020). Aliyev Airs Grievances to Putin Over Arms Shipments to Armenia. Eurasianet, 13 August, https://eurasianet.org/aliyev-airs-grievancesto-putin-over-arms-shipments-to-armenia. Kuzio, Taras (2021). Human Rights in the Two Karabakh Wars. New Eastern Europe, 16 February, https://neweasterneurope.eu/2021/02/16/human-rights-in-thetwo-karabakh-wars/. LA Review of Books (2020). A Call for Lasting Peace in Nagorno-Karabakh. Los Angeles Review of Books, 16 October, https://lareviewofbooks.org/short-takes/ lasting-peace-nagorno-karabakh. Laycock, Jo (2020). Nagorno-Karabakh’s Myth of Ancient Hatreds, https://www. historytoday.com/miscellanies/nagorno-karabakhs-myth-ancient-hatreds. Laycock, Joanne (2009). Imagining Armenia: Orientalism, Ambiguity and Intervention. Manchester: Manchester University Press. Layton, Susan (1994). Russian Literature and Empire: Conquest of the Caucasus from Pushkin to Tolstoy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Le Matin (1905). Les Desordres Du Caucase, 20 September, p. 3. Lévy, Bernard-Henri (2020). L’Europa deve schierarsi dalla parte degli armeni. Il Foglio, November, https://www.ilfoglio.it/il-foglio-internazionale/2020/11/09/news/ bernard-henri-le-vy-l-europa-deve-schierarsi-dalla-parte-degli-armeni--1394245/. Livanios, Dimitris (2006). The ‘sick man’ Paradox: History, Rhetoric and the ‘European character’ of Turkey. Journal of Southern Europe and the Balkans Online, 8(3): 299–311. Mahdesian, Arshag (1917). Armenia, Her Culture and Aspirations. The Journal of Race Development, 7(4): 448. Mai ̆ sak, Timur A. (2010). K Publikatsii Kavkazsko-Albanskikh Palimpsestov iz Sinai ̆ skogo Monastyrya. Voprosy Yazykoznaniya, 6: 88–107. Mamigonian, Marc A. (2015). Academic Denial of the Armenian Genocide in American Scholarship: Denialism as Manufactured Controversy. Genocide Studies International, 9(1): 61–82. McGreevy, Nora (2020). Why Scholars, Cultural Institutions Are Calling to Protect Armenian Heritage. The Smithsonian Magazine, 24 November, https:// www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/metropolitan-museum-scholars-callprotection-cultural-heritage-nagorno-karabakh-180976364/. Mill, John Stuart (2009). On Liberty. London: Floating Press (reprint of 1859). Mirabile, Paul (2021). Turkish, Azerbaijani Identity Void and Genocide. EVN Report, https://www.evnreport.com/raw-unfltered/turkish-azerbaijani-identityvoid-and-genocide. Mostashari, Firouzeh (2006). On the Religious Frontier: Tsarist Russia and Islam in the Caucasus. London: I. B. Tauris. Mukhanov, Vadim (2020). Farid Shafyev, Resettling the Borderlands: State Relocations and Ethnic Confict in the South Caucasus. European History Quarterly, 50(2): 381–383. NY Review of Books (1990). An Open Letter on Anti-Armenian Pogroms in the Soviet Union. New York Review of Books, 27 September, https://www.nybooks. com/articles/1990/09/27/an-open-letter-on-anti-armenian-pogroms-in-the-sov/. Ohanian, Anna (2020). Russia and the West Still Need Each Other in Nagorno-Karabakh. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 24 November, https://carnegieendowment.org/2020/11/24/russia-and-west-still-need-eachother-in-nagorno-karabakh-pub-83295. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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Part II The First Karabakh War and the Consequences Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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5 Self-Determination or Territorial Integrity? International Legal/Political Doctrines in Opposition and Their Implications for Karabakh Michael M. Gunter Introduction The long-running, frozen-unfrozen confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Karabakh (Artsakh)1 constitutes the most recent example of the continuing clash between the oft-opposed international legal/political doctrines of self-determination and territorial integrity.2 The United Nations Charter includes specifc references to self-determination in Articles 1(2) and 55, and to territorial integrity in Article 2(4). Put simply, self-determination refers to the right of a people to choose their own form of government (usually independence), while territorial integrity means the right of a state to maintain its existing borders.3 Thus, in the case of Karabakh, Armenia has supported the doctrine of self-determination because the vast majority of its population is ethnic Armenian. On the other hand, Azerbaijan has maintained the doctrine of territorial integrity because Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan.4 Illustrating the most recent deadly results of this confict that suddenly unfroze in September-November 2020, Russian president Vladimir Putin declared “there were more than 4,000 killed in both countries … including civilians, 8,000 wounded and thousands driven from their homes.”5 Which doctrine takes precedence? In its famous “Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples,”6 the United Nations gave a defnitive answer to this question. While proclaiming in paragraph 2 of this celebrated Resolution that “all peoples have the right of self-determination,” the General Assembly warned in paragraph 6 that “any attempt at the partial or total disruption of the national unity and the territorial integrity of a country is incompatible with the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations.” This defnitive interpretation or “safeguard clause” that territorial integrity supersedes self-determination has been reiterated on several occasions, in particular by the “UN Declaration on Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation among States in Accordance with the Charter of the United Nations,”7 which was adopted by consensus and “is considered DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-8 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
116 Michael M. Gunter to be the authoritative interpretation of the UN Charter.”8 The Helsinki Final Act of 1975 that recognized Europe’s existing borders resulting from World War II also prominently recognized this interpretation.9 In 1993, the United Nations World Conference on Human Rights held in Vienna concurred, when it specifcally declared the right of self-determination “shall not be construed as authorizing or encouraging any action which would dismember or impair, totally or in part, the territorial integrity or political unity of sovereign and independent States.”10 It is true that the two Human Rights Covenants on (1) Civil and Political Rights and (2) Economic, Social and Cultural Rights which entered into force in 1976 both declared, “All peoples have the right of self-determination: By virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development” without any specifc mention of territorial integrity.11 However, from the drafting history of these two international treaties and a systematic interpretation of their full texts, it is clear that in the sense of secession, self-determination is not a right of minorities in existing states, even when they might have a relatively obvious territorial basis within the existing, larger state. As James Crawford concludes, Outside the colonial context, the principle of self-determination is not recognized as giving rise to unilateral rights of secession by parts of independent States… . Self-determination for peoples or groups within the State is to be achieved by participation in its constitutional system, and on the basis of respect for its territorial integrity12 Joshua Castellino adds, The law as it stands suggests that uti possidetis juris [original] lines may be modifed [only] by consent … between sovereign states. … Non-state actors have no explicit right in international law to demand or even raise questions of territorial adjustment, rendering the territorial aspects of self-determination relatively meaningless.13 Furthermore, in the territorial dispute between the African states of Burkina Faso and Mali, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) also recognized the obligation to respect existing borders in cases of state succession—which of course aptly describes the dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Karabakh—by declaring, “There is no doubt that the obligation to respect pre-existing international frontiers in the event of a State succession derives from a general rule of international law.”14 Similarly, the Conference on Yugoslavia Arbitration Commission that was established in 1991 by the initiative of the European Community supported by the United States and the former Soviet Union to render opinions on matters arising Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Self-Determination/Territorial Integrity? 117 from the dissolution of Yugoslavia pronounced, “Except where otherwise agreed, the former boundaries become frontiers protected by international law. This conclusion follows from the principle of respect for the territorial status quo.”15 In addition, the UN General Assembly Declaration on Minorities—while granting certain rights to individual members of ethnic, linguistic or cultural minorities to have their language and identity respected by the state in which they resided—emphasized the preservation of the existing state’s territorial integrity. Thus, Article 8(4) of the Declaration declared, “Nothing in the present Declaration may be construed as permitting any activity contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations, including sovereign equality, territorial integrity and political independence of States.”16 Indeed, any right of self-determination or secession is not mentioned in the Declaration on Minorities. International law gives no justifcation to a “kin-state” pursuing irredentism to intervene by force under the claim of protecting portions of the population of other states with which they have some type of ethnic affliation. The UN General Assembly Resolution on the Inadmissibility of Intervention specifcally declares, “No State has the right to intervene, directly or indirectly, for any reason whatever, in the internal or external affairs of any State.”17 Understandably, states which create international law and draw up international treaties or declarations in the frst place are not in the business of committing suicide. Redrawing internationally recognized borders by force contravenes international law as defned by the UN Charter and the Helsinki Final Act that recognized Europe’s existing borders resulting from World War II. Indeed, the same reasoning has been used by the West to oppose Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 as well as Moscow’s earlier recognition in 2008 of South Ossetia’s and Abkhazia’s secession and independence from Georgia, which, of course, borders on Armenia and Azerbaijan. Thus, the doctrine of territorial integrity clearly trumps that of self-determination in the case of Karabakh. Indeed, not a single state in the world recognizes (or recognized) Karabakh as an independent state or part of Armenia, not even Armenia, its progenitor and protector. Additional Reasoning The international legal doctrines of sovereignty, state succession, and uti possidetis give further defnition to territorial integrity. Jean Bodin originally defned sovereignty in 1576 as a defense for the unlimited power of the French king. Thus, sovereignty means a state’s lawful and exclusive control of its territory with the authority to govern, make laws, and enforce laws for all persons, property, and events within its territory. As the eminent Swiss jurist Max Huber noted in the famous Isle of Palmas case in 1928 involving Uploaded by S. M. Safi
118 Michael M. Gunter a dispute between the United States and the Netherlands concerning who owned or possessed sovereignty over an island between the Indonesian and Philippine archipelagoes, sovereignty amounts to independence or the right to exercise in a territory the powers of a state to the exclusion of any other state.18 The UN Charter declares in Article 2(1) that “the Organization is based on the principle of the sovereign equality of all its Members.” Related elements of sovereignty such as exclusive territorial jurisdiction, state immunity, and the immunity of diplomatic agents are also strongly upheld by all states and thus reinforce the doctrine. As already discussed in the case of Burkina Faso and Mali, state succession is another principle of international law that relates to and helps to defne the opposing doctrines of self-determination and territorial integrity. Put simply, state succession deals with the legal consequences of a change of sovereignty over territory. The failure of the two draft Vienna conventions (treaties) of 1978 and 198319 to codify the existing customary international law on the issue has created no small amount of confusion and controversy. The specifc cases of the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, and Germany resulting from the end of the Cold War in the 1990s added to this uncertainty as different conclusions and resulting precedents emerged. An analysis of these developments, of course, is beyond the scope of this chapter. Suffce it to note, however, that the current miasma of Karabakh is one specifc result of the political consequences of the breakup of the Soviet Union and the state succession that occurred. Armenia and Azerbaijan were 2 of the 15 internationally recognized states that emerged from the collapse of the Soviet Union. As such, both of these newly independent Caucasian states assumed all the rights under international law possessed by states, members too of the United Nations. Their territorial integrity was obviously among these rights despite the controversies involving the overall doctrine of state succession. As noted above, the legal doctrine of uti possidetis (literally in Latin “as you possess under law [so you shall continue to possess]”) is closely related to the doctrine of territorial integrity or maybe best understood as an aspect of the latter. Beginning as a specifc example of regional or non-universal international law (admittedly a literal contradiction in terms and therefore originally not as solid a principle as other modes of territorial succession and acquisition), the doctrine of uti possidetis arose early in the nineteenth century during the disintegration of the Spanish colonial empire in Latin America in the interests of stability and peace. In civil Roman law, the term referred to a judicial pronouncement to preserve the existing state of possession over immovable property pending further litigation. Thus, the principle began to be used to mean that old administrative colonial boundaries would remain legal international boundaries upon independence. In the twentieth century, the International Court of Justice also referred to the principle of uti possidetis in cases involving borders during decolonization in Africa. The frontier dispute between Burkina Faso and Mali Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Self-Determination/Territorial Integrity? 119 referred to above is a specifc example. In this case, the ICJ referred to “the obligation to respect pre-existing international frontiers in the event of a State succession … whether or not the rule is expressed in the formula of uti possidetis,” and thus by implication that this principle prevails even over the right of self-determination of peoples.20 Legal cases based on uti possidetis have also been raised between Asian states. The famous Temple of Preah Vihear Case21 between Cambodia and Thailand in 1962 and the Rann of Kutch arbitration22 between India and Pakistan in 1968 are two specifc examples. Furthermore, in the matter of state succession regarding the former Yugoslavia, the Conference on Yugoslavia Arbitration Commission noted: “Uti possidetis, though initially applied in settling decolonization issues in America and Africa, is today recognized as a general principle, as stated by the International Court of Justice.”23 On the other hand, Eritrea’s secession from Ethiopia in 1993 after a checkered colonial history and 30 years of subsequent civil war, raised questions about the sanctity of African borders and the principle of uti possidetis.24 However, given the fact that Eritrea was originally a separate Italian colony forcibly attached to Ethiopia after World War II, some have argued that Eritrea’s independence actually did not violate the principle of uti possidetis, but rather belatedly reinforced it. Furthermore, Ethiopia fnally had agreed to Eritrea’s independence. Nevertheless, the case of Eritrea’s secession from Ethiopia obviously has elements contradicting the principle of uti possidetis and territorial integrity that might be applicable to the case of Karabakh. However, one might also argue that when a rule of law works well in most cases but causes a problem in a rare incident like this, the best solution may be to turn a blind eye to violations of the rule. Indeed, in some municipal (domestic) law systems, legal authorities sometimes exercise a certain amount of discretion on whether or not to prosecute. Moreover, as will be analyzed below, there is nothing in international law that prohibits secession. International law eventually will recognize the winner of a civil war as legitimate. Indeed, traditionally in international law and still so today, the formation of a new state was simply a matter of fact, not law.25 Therefore, in this case, of course, Eritrea won its independence by force of arms, not by any legal right of self-determination. The same basic reasoning applies to Kosovo’s successful secession from Serbia.26 This political fact, of course, shows the ultimate limitation of analyzing such cases as Karabakh solely in terms of the international legal doctrines of self-determination and territorial integrity. In addition to these weighty limitations on the doctrine of selfdetermination as applied to Karabakh in light of the superseding doctrine of territorial integrity, the doctrine of self-determination is even more restricted in actual legal practice. For example, who precisely are the selves or peoples who have the right of self-determination and what precisely is it they can determine? As a legal doctrine—with the exceptions of the now only historical case of South Africa under the apartheid regime that ended Uploaded by S. M. Safi
120 Michael M. Gunter in the early 1990s27 and the continuing case of the Palestinians28 —selfdetermination in the practice of the United Nations can only be exercised by trust and non-self-governing territories (i.e. colonies), which have not yet achieved independence. In addition, and most importantly for Karabakh by implication, self-determination may be exercised by a territory only within its already existing administrative boundaries inherited from the colonial power, without any breakup of the state’s territorial integrity. Accordingly, since Karabakh was legally a part of Azerbaijan which was not a colonial power, Karabakh was not eligible for self-determination on its own. Although some might argue that this amounted to a double standard, it was still the international legal reality. Indeed, given that the decolonization process has virtually come to an end and barring a newly agreed upon further legal defnition not likely to occur, it must be concluded that self-determination has largely become a doctrine of only historical interest. Ironically, given these facts, self-determination as a legal doctrine remains applicable only to the few remaining bits and pieces of former colonial empires such as Pitcairn Island’s 50 odd inhabitants, while lying beyond the reach of such large, well-defned entities as the 35 million or so Kurds or the ethnic Armenians in Karabakh who unfortunately for their rights inhabit various other states whose territorial integrity prohibit them any legal right of self-determination. Future Possibilities On the other hand, using the exceptional examples of the Black majority in apartheid era South Africa and the Palestinians in territorial limbo both referred to above, the United Nations might also theoretically single out Karabakh as entitled to self-determination. Similarly, after World War I, the right of self-determination was granted by some treaties to the inhabitants of a few territories in central and eastern Europe. For example, the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 provided for a plebiscite in Upper Silesia to determine whether it should become part of Germany or Poland. However, nobody has ever suggested such special treatment for Karabakh. Of course, this constraining legal defnition does not prohibit secessionist movements claiming the unilateral political right of self-determination as indeed the Armenians have regarding Karabakh. To make such a claim legally valid, however, the secessionist entity must win its civil war or possibly have the existing state countenance the secession peacefully as indeed occurred when Norway seceded from Sweden in 1905. As noted above, Eritrea and Kosovo succeeded in so doing, while Karabakh did not.29 Neither does this inhibiting legal defnition prevent various proposed distinctions between “internal” self-determination as some sort of right to implement real democracy or autonomy for a group contained within an existing state (see above) and “external” self-determination defned in most Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Self-Determination/Territorial Integrity? 121 30 cases as independence for the group concerned. However, to equate the right of “internal” self-determination with democracy would seem merely verbal legerdemain and not any real solution to the defnitional dilemma. Thus, although a great deal has been written about these possibilities concerning the meaning of self-determination, they do not constitute legal rights that currently would be applicable to Karabakh. Nevertheless, in recent years, counter trends have suggested a loosening of the strict legal defnitions discussed so far. This line of reasoning leads along the path of soft (developing) law or de lege ferenda, relating to the law as it ought to be or is to be developed, in contrast to de lege lata, i.e. according to the law currently in force. On January 25, 2001, for example, Prince HansAdam II of Liechtenstein, speaking before the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), a prominent British think tank, suggested the coming necessity for a more fexible attitude toward the doctrine of territorial integrity. Let us accept the fact that states have lifecycles similar to those of human beings who created them. Hardly any Member State of the United Nations has existed within its present borders for longer than fve generations. The attempt to freeze human evolution has in the past been a futile responsibility and has probably brought about more violence, rather than if such a process had been controlled peacefully. Restrictions on self-determination threaten not only democracy itself but the state which seeks its legitimation in democracy.31 Remedial secession is a proposed principle that if a specifc people living in the territory of a larger state is egregiously misrepresented within that larger state and there is no remedy for the situation, then, as a last resort, this oppressed people have a right to remedial secession. Under such circumstances, the larger state loses its right to its territorial integrity. Although remedial secession is discussed in the scholarly literature, the consensus of most is that it is not a legal right to achieve external self-determination (independence) outside the colonial context.32 Interestingly, the Supreme Court of Canada, in its lengthy and useful discussion of the international legal status of secession, basically agreed with this reasoning when it ruled that Quebec did “not enjoy a right at international law to effect the secession of Quebec from Canada unilaterally.”33 Nevertheless, the increasingly legally binding rules on maintaining and furthering human rights may ultimately challenge the territorial integrity of a state grossly violating human rights.34 Humanitarian intervention, for example, is actions by states, international organizations, or other international groups to intervene, often with coercive force, to prevent human suffering without necessarily obtaining the consent of the state involved. The emerging Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine holds that when domestic methods for protection against massive violations of human rights are Uploaded by S. M. Safi
122 Michael M. Gunter ignored or fail, other states have a responsibility to intervene in the domestic affairs of the state where the abuses are occurring to provide security. Such actions might be seen as enforcing some sort of self-determination, while contradicting the Westphalian doctrines of state sovereignty and territorial integrity. As two UN offcials have attested, this “marks the coming of age of the imperative of action in the face of human right abuses, over the citadels of state sovereignty.”35 Although such initiatives might eventually create a broader, more fexible application of the doctrines of sovereignty and territorial integrity, to date they have not. Territorial integrity still trumps self-determination. Furthermore, how legitimate are such initiatives when employed only selectively? For example, why was intervention against Serbia in Kosovo (1998–1999) and Libya (2011) justifed, while in Rwanda (1994) and Syria (2011–present) it was not? How massive do the violations against human rights have to be before intervention is justifed? Who decides to implement intervention? In the past, some states have employed humanitarian intervention as a mere pretext for their own selfsh interests of state. In the case of Karabakh, the Organization for Security and Cooperation’s (OSCE) Minsk Group tasked to facilitate communication between Armenia and Azerbaijan to fnd a negotiated solution to the confict has failed because neither Armenia nor Azerbaijan wanted to compromise. As Svante Cornell noted when the confict was beginning again in 1991, “there seems to have been no-one in a power position, in any of the republics, at any time, that was interested in a dialogue and a peaceful resolution of the confict through compromise.”36 Conclusion The rugged mountainous geography of the Caucasus region partially explains the confict over Karabakh.37 Thus, the mountain ranges and watershed lines dictated small political units and their unique political boundaries. What roads that existed were often barely passable. When the Russians conquered the region early in the nineteenth century, they did create larger provinces or governorates, but at the lower levels kept the old, smaller frontiers dictated by geography. This perpetuated a bewildering ethnic and religious mix of people that ignited with the coming of nationalism by the end of the nineteenth century. Karabakh with its Christian Armenian majority and Muslim Tatar (Turkic) minority was one of the regions where ethnic/nationalist conficts arose. In 1905, there was a particularly violent Armenian-Tatar War. The regional geography made access to Karabakh considerably easier from the east than from the West where virtually impassable mountains lay. These geographic facts favored placement of Armenian-majority Karabakh within Muslim majority Azerbaijan. Thus, the Bolshevik approach to the Karabakh problem became an eclectic stew of several ingredients involving Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Self-Determination/Territorial Integrity? 123 a genuine attempt to solve the problem, pursuing Bolshevik aims, and attempting to satisfy the conficting interests of Armenia and Azerbaijan. The disputed area of Karabakh was left under Azeri control with limited Armenian autonomy. Although the compromise satisfed neither adversary, as long as the Soviet Union stood strong these ancient conficts remained obscured. However, once Soviet power began to weaken in the late 1980s, the submerged confict reemerged and quickly degenerated into war. Indeed, nothing could more easily testify to the disintegration of the once mighty Soviet Union than internal civil war within its existing boundaries. Even bloodier wars resulted with the breakup of communist Yugoslavia. Despite all the damning Western rhetoric against communism, few had appreciated how it had dampened and even dropped into the memory hole these ancient conficts that were now resurfacing. In surveying the opposing internationally legal doctrines of selfdetermination and territorial integrity’s implications for Karabakh, this chapter has concluded that the latter trumps the former. However, as was also noted, there is nothing in international law that prohibits secession from an existing state. Neither is there any rule of international law which prohibits the existing state from crushing the secession. International law simply will recognize the winner of such struggles as legitimate.38 Thus, in Kosovo and Eritrea, cases with similarities to Karabakh, these former possessions of Serbia and Ethiopia won their independence by force of arms. South Sudan, East Timor, and Bangladesh are similar examples. Although resort to war violates UN Charter Article 2(4), “All Members [of the UN] shall refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state,” in such cases one might counter by citing UN Article 51, “Nothing in the present Charter shall impair the inherent right of individual or collective self-defense if an armed attack occurs.” Thus, in the end attempting to further parse the distinction between self-determination and territorial integrity leads to the conclusion that force of arms becomes determinative, while recourse to legal doctrines secondary. In an attempt to suggest a peaceful compromise based both on international law and political realities, one recent study has recommended the famous example of the Aland Islands located half way between Sweden and Finland at the entrance to the Gulf of Bothnia.39 For many centuries, the Swedish-speaking Aland Islands were, together with mainland Finland, part of Sweden. In 1809, however, following its defeat during the Napoleonic Wars, Sweden was forced to cede Finland to Russia. The Aland Islands, along with the rest of Finland, became an autonomous Grand Duchy of the Russian Empire, with the Tsar as Grand Duke. (The Islands were also famously placed under an international servitude not to be fortifed by an annex to the Treaty of Paris in 1856, but that narrative is beyond the scope of this article.) When the Tsar collapsed in 1917, Finland became independent. Sweden, the “kin-state,” claimed the islands on the basis of selfdetermination, while Finland averred its sovereignty based on maintaining Uploaded by S. M. Safi
124 Michael M. Gunter its territorial integrity. Under the auspices of the League of Nations, the Aland Islands successfully became an autonomous region of Finland, but were granted a very high level of self-government. However, given the volatility of Caucasian politics compared to those in the Scandinavian states, whether such a solution would work for Karabakh remains problematic. Indeed, autonomy for Karabakh is exactly the solution that failed and led to the most recent war in 2020. Thus, we seem to need what another observer has termed “a bolder approach,” along the lines post-World-War-II Europe has apparently fnally achieved. “The problem “can only be solved if borders lose their signifcance.”40 Only in such a seemingly utopian world, would Karabakh fnd security. Unfortunately, that time does not appear imminent. Notes 1 For background on Karabakh, see Svante E. Cornell, The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict, Report no. 46, Department of East European Studies, Uppsala University, Sweden, 1999; Thomas de Waal, Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan through Peace and War (New York: New York University Press, 2003); Gerard J. Libaridian, ed., The Karabakh File: Documents and Facts on the Question of Mountainous Karabakh, 1918–1988 (Cambridge: Zoryan Institute, 1988); and Thomas Goltz, Azerbaijan Dairy: A Rogue Reporter’s Adventures in an Oil-rich, War-torn, Post-Soviet Republic (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe Press, 1998). More recently, see Michael Kambeck and Sargis Ghazaryan, eds., Europe’s Next Avoidable War: Nagorno-Karabakh (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013); and Arsene Saparov, From Confict to Autonomy in the Caucasus: The Soviet Union and the Making of Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno Karabakh (London and New York: Routledge, 2015). 2 Other recent examples that involve various elements of the inherent contradiction between these two conficting doctrines, but in each case have their unique characteristics it should be noted, include Kosovo, Eritrea, Western Sahara, East Timor (Timor-Leste), Belize, Gibraltar, the Falkland Islands (Malvinas), the Basques, Biafra, Catalonia, Chechnya, Eastern Ukraine, the Kurds, Northern Cyprus, and Scotland, among numerous others. For background on over 40 self-determination conficts including Karabakh outside the colonial context that have appeared virtually impossible to settle, see Marc Weller, “Settling Self-determination Conficts: Recent Developments,” The European Journal of International Law 20:1 (2009), pp. 111–164. For many further possible examples, see James Minahan, Nations without States: A Historical Dictionary of Contemporary National Movements (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996). 3 The legal doctrines of sovereignty meaning unlimited power or better just independence, and uti possidetis meaning that old administrative colonial boundaries would remain legal international boundaries upon independence are closely related to and tend to reinforce the concept of territorial integrity. In general, see Peter Malanczuk, Akehurst’s Modern Introduction to International Law, 7th revised ed. (London and New York; Routledge, 1997), pp. 17–18 and 162, 163. For an encompassing historical approach to the concept of sovereignty, see Stephen D. Krasner, Sovereignty: Organized Hypocrisy (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1999). For further analysis, see below. The most comprehensive analysis of statehood creation in international law is arguably Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Self-Determination/Territorial Integrity? 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 125 James R. Crawford, The Creation of States in International Law, 2nd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006). As Svante Cornell noted when the present confict was still in its earlier stages: “The Armenians invoked the principle of peoples’ right to self-determination, and the Azeris defended the principle of territorial integrity.” Nagorno-Karabakh Confict, p. 25. Thomas de Waal concurred: “A resolution of the issue had to reconcile the competing claims of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and Karabakh’s self-determination (or, in blunter language, de facto secession).” Black Garden, p. 255. “Hundreds of Dead Armenian Soldiers Shown in Nagorno-Karabakh,” Novinite.com (Sofa News Agency), November 13, 2020, https://www.novinite. com/articles/206519/Hundreds+of+Dead+Armenian+Soldiers+Shown+in+Nagorno-Karabakh, accessed November 14, 2020. UN General Assembly Resolution 1514 (XV), December 14, 1960. UN General Assembly Resolution 2625 (XXV), October 24, 1970. Boleslaw A. Boczek, The A to Z of International Law (Lanham: The Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2010), p. 114. See “Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe Final Act,” Helsinki 1975, https://www.osce.org/fles/f/documents/5/c/39501.pdf accessed December 7, 2020. While Principle VIII of the Helsinki Final Act proclaims the right of self-determination, Principle IV calls for states to refrain from acting “against the territorial integrity, political independence or the unity of any participating State,” and Principle III emphasizes the inviolability of state frontiers.” UN World Conference on Human Rights, Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, June 25, 1993, as cited in International Legal Materials 32 (1993), pp. 1661, 1665. However, it should be noted that this Declaration added that the sanctity of their territorial integrity assumed States “conducting themselves in compliance with the principle of equal rights and [internal] self-determination of peoples and thus possessed of a Government representing the whole people belonging to the territory without distinction of any kind.” Ibid. UN General Assembly Resolution 2200A (XXI), December 16, 1966. Crawford, Creation of States in International Law, pp. 415, 417. Joshua Castellino, “Territorial Integrity and the ‘Right’ to Self-Determination: An Examination of the Conceptual Tools.” Brooklyn Journal of International Law 33:2 (2008), p. 566. “Internal self-determination, in the sense of the recognition of cultural identity and internal self-government for different groups or peoples within the State,” that is some type of meaningful autonomy, is the recommended solution. Crawford, Creation of States in International Law, p. 418. See above and below. ICJ Reports, 1986, p. 566. Opinion No. 3 of 11 January 1992, cited in International Legal Materials 31 (1992), p. 1499. UN General Assembly Resolution 47/134, December 18, 1992. UN General Assembly Resolution 2131 (XX), December 21, 1965, https://legal. un.org/avl/pdf/ha/ga_2131-xx/ga_2131-xx_e.pdf, accessed April 16, 2021. The UN Declaration on Friendly Relations referred to above, repeats this principle in practically the same language. Island of Palmas Arbitration, United Nations Reports of International Arbitral Awards II, 1928, p. 829. This case is best known for its defnition of prescription as a mode of territorial acquisition as well as its mention of the problem of intertemporal law. Texts in International Legal Materials 17 (1978), p. 1488; and International Legal Materials 23 (1983), p. 306. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
126 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Michael M. Gunter ICJ Rep., 1986, p. 566. ICJ Rep., 1962. 17 Reports of International Arbitral Awards 1. Opinion No. 3 of 11 January 1992, cited in International Legal Materials 31 (1992), pp. 1499–1500. Eyassu Gayim, The Eritrean Question: The Confict between the Right of SelfDetermination and the Interest of States (Uppsala: Iustus Folag, 1993). East Timor (Timor-Leste) went through a similar process of Portuguese colonization until 1975 followed by annexation by neighboring Indonesia claiming territorial integrity, and fnally independence in 2002. Western Sahara, a similar case, remains disputed between an indigenous population claiming self-determination following the end of Spanish colonization in 1975 and neighboring Morocco claiming sovereignty through territorial integrity. On this point, see Lassa F.L. Oppenheim (1858–1919), regarded by many as the father of modern international law, particularly its positivist school: Robert Jennings and Arthur Watts, eds., Oppenheim’s International Law, vol. 1, 9th ed. (London: Oxford University Press, 2008), p. 677. For background, see Independent International Commission on Kosovo, The Kosovo Report: Confict, International Response, Lessons Learned (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000). The secession of Bangladesh (East Pakistan) from Pakistan in 1971 proved successful because of India’s military support for the breakup of its existential enemy. Turkey’s continuing solitary support for the potential separation of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus from internationally recognized (Greek) Cyprus represents an additional exception to the generally recognized doctrine of territorial integrity. Indeed, in this case, Turkey’s position would seem a double standard given its support for Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. Incongruously with its long-established legal practice regarding an existing state’s territorial integrity, many UN General Assembly resolutions declared the Black majority inhabitants of apartheid era South Africa were entitled to self-determination. See, for example, UN General Assembly Resolutions 2396 (XXIII), 1969; and 31/61, 1976. Since 1970, the UN General Assembly has also frequently proclaimed that the Palestinians are entitled to self-determination. See, for example, UN General Assembly Resolutions 2672 C (XXV), 1971; 3236 (XXIX), 1975; and 33/23, 1979. For a list of 21 “unsuccessful attempts at secession … by groups or territories within independent States” including Karabakh, see Crawford, Creation of States in International Law, p. 403. Subsequently, however, two of these then unsuccessful attempts, South Sudan and Kosovo, have now become independent. History does not stand still. One day after it had virtually equated self-determination for colonial entities with complete independence in UN General Assembly Resolution 1514 (XV), December 14, 1960; UN General Assembly Resolution 1541 (XV), December 15, 1960 stated that self-determination might also result in “free association” or “integration” with another state. The Cook Islands’ association with New Zealand is an example of the frst option, while the former independent states of Texas and Hawaii becoming states in the United States might be cited as an example of the second. The UN Declaration on Friendly Relations referred to above added a fourth possible outcome for self-determination, “Any other political status freely determined by the people of the territory in question.” UN General Resolution 2625 (XXV), October 24, 1970. Suffce to say, independence has almost always been the preference. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Self-Determination/Territorial Integrity? 127 31 Cited in “Self-determination and the Future of Democracy,” tamilnation.org/ selfdetermination/index.htm, accessed December 8, 2020. This site contains a great deal of information about “more than 2000 thousand ethnic groups but only 192 states,” which theoretically might claim self-determination and independence. 32 On these points, see Jure Vidmar, “Remedial Secession in International Law: Theory and (Lack of) Practice.” St. Anthony’s International Review 6:1 (2010), pp. 37–56; and Turgut Kerem Tuncel, “The Karabakh Confict and the Lawfare of Armenia: Armenia’s Campaign for Remedial Secession (I).” Center for Eurasian Studies (AVIM), October 27, 2020, https://avim.org.tr/en/Analiz …, accessed December 22, 2020. 33 Supreme Court of Canada, “Reference re Secession of Quebec.” [1998] 2 S.C.R. 217, Case number 25506 Supreme Court Judgments, https://scc-csc.lexum.com/ scc-csc/scc-csc/en/item/1643/index.do, accessed April 10, 2021. The Court did elaborate that a state whose government represents the whole of the people or peoples resident within its territory, on a basis of equality and without discrimination, and respects the principles of self-determination in its internal arrangements is entitled to maintain its territorial integrity under international law and have that territorial integrity recognized by other states. Ibid. 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 This reasoning might imply that a territory denied such rights might have a right to secede. Martha Finnemore, The Purposes of Intervention: Changing Beliefs about the Use of Force (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2003). Shashi Tharoor and Sam Daws, “Humanitarian Intervention: Getting Past the Reefs.” World Policy Journal 18:2 (Summer 2001), p. 23. Cornell, Nagorno-Karabakh Confict, p. 27. See also de Waal, Black Garden, p. 83, interview on December 5, 2000, where he cites Vyacheslav Mikhailov, the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union’s adviser on nationalities in Mikhail Gorbachev’s time and who had hundreds of conversations while traveling between the two republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan in 1988, “I didn’t meet a single Armenian or a single Azerbaijani who held a compromise position on this question, from shepherds to academicians.” Much of the following discussion is based on Arsene Saparov, From Confict to Autonomy in the Caucasus: The Soviet Union and the Making of Abhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno Karabakh (New York: Routledge, 2015), pp. 90–177. See also Arsene Saparov’s earlier, “Why Autonomy? The Making of Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region 1918–1925.” Europe-Asia Studies 64 (March 2012), pp. 281–323. Malanczuk, Akehurst’s Modern Introduction to International Law, p. 78. See Kamal Makili-Aliyev, Contested Territory and International Law: A Comparative Study of the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict and the Aland Islands Precedent (London and New York: Routledge, 2020). Frank Engel, “The Karabakh Dilemma: Right to Self-Determination, Imperative of Territorial Integrity, or a Caucasian New Deal?” in Michael Kambeck and Sargis Ghazaryan, eds. Europe’s Next Avoidable War: Nagorno-Karabakh (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), pp. 207, 209. Lessening the signifcance of borders has similarities with what many years ago Karl Deutsch termed a Uploaded by S. M. Safi
128 Michael M. Gunter security community, that is an area where relations are predictably peaceful and war for solving problems is inconceivable. Political Community and the North American Area: International Organization in the Light of Historical Experience (Princeton: Princeton University, 1957). References Boczek, Boleslaw A. The A to Z of International Law. Lanham: The Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2010. Castellino, Joshua. “Territorial Integrity and the ‘Right’ to Self-Determination: An Examination of the Conceptual Tools.” Brooklyn Journal of International Law 33:2 (2008), pp. 503–568. “Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe Final Act.” Helsinki 1975, https://www.osce.org/fles/f/documents/5/c/39501.pdf, accessed December 7, 2020. Conference on Yugoslavia Arbitration Commission. Opinion No. 3 of 11 January 1992, cited in International Legal Materials 31 (1992), p. 1499. Cornell, Svante E. The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict. Report No. 46. Department of East European Studies. Uppsala University, Sweden, 1999. Crawford, James R. The Creation of States in International Law, 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006. Deutsch Karl. Political Community and the North American Area: International Organization in the Light of Historical Experience. Princeton: Princeton University, 1957. Engel, Frank. “The Karabakh Dilemma: Right to Self-Determination, Imperative of Territorial Integrity, or a Caucasian New Deal?” in Michael Kambeck and Sargis Ghazaryan, eds. Europe’s Next Avoidable War: Nagorno-Karabakh. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. Finnemore, Martha. The Purposes of Intervention: Changing Beliefs about the Use of Force. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2003. Gayim, Eyassu. The Eritrean Question: The Confict between the Right of Self-Determination and the Interest of States. Uppsala: Iustus Folag, 1993. Goltz, Thomas. Azerbaijan Dairy: A Rogue Reporter’s Adventures in an Oil-rich, War-torn, Post-Soviet Republic. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe Press, 1998. “Hundreds of Dead Armenian Soldiers Shown in Nagorno-Karabakh.” Novinite.com (Sofa News Agency), November 13, 2020, https://www.novinite.com/ articles/206519/Hundreds+of+Dead+Armenian+Soldiers+Shown+in+NagornoKarabakh, accessed November 14, 2020. ICJ Reports (Burkina Faso vs. Mail). 1986, p. 566. ICJ Reps. 1962. Independent International Commission on Kosovo. The Kosovo Report: Confict, International Response, Lessons Learned. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000. International Legal Materials. 17 (1978), p. 1488. International Legal Materials. 23 (1983), p. 306. Island of Palmas Arbitration. United Nations Reports of International Arbitral Awards II. 1928, p. 829. Jennings, Robert and Arthur Watts, eds. Oppenheim’s International Law. vol. 1, 9th ed. London: Oxford University Press, 2008. Kambeck, Michael and Sargis Ghazaryan, eds. Europe’s Next Avoidable War: Nagorno-Karabakh. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Self-Determination/Territorial Integrity? 129 Krasner, Stephen D. Sovereignty: Organized Hypocrisy. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1999. Libaridian, Gerard J, ed. The Karabakh File: Documents and Facts on the Question of Mountainous Karabakh, 1918–1988. Cambridge: Zoryan Institute, 1988. Makili-Aliyev, Kamal. Contested Territory and International Law: A Comparative Study of the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict and the Aland Islands Precedent. London and New York: Routledge, 2020. Malanczuk, Peter. Akehurst’s Modern Introduction to International Law, 7th revised edition. London and New York: Routledge, 1997. Minahan, James. Nations without States: A Historical Dictionary of Contemporary National Movements. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996. Reports of International Arbitral Awards. 17. Saparov, Arsene. “Why Autonomy? The Making of Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region 1918–1925.” Europe-Asia Studies 64 (March 2012), pp. 281–323. Saparov, Arsene. From Confict to Autonomy in the Caucasus: The Soviet Union and the Making of Abhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno Karabakh. New York: Routledge, 2015. “Self-Determination and the Future of Democracy.” tamilnation.org/selfdetermination/index.htm, accessed December 8, 2020. Supreme Court of Canada. “Reference re Secession of Quebec.” [1998] 2 S.C.R. 217, Case number 25506. Supreme Court Judgments, https://scc-csc.lexum.com/scccsc/scc-csc/en/item/1643/index.do, accessed April 10, 2021. Tharoor, Shashi and Sam Daws. “Humanitarian Intervention: Getting Past the Reefs.” World Policy Journal 18:2 (Summer 2001), pp. 21–30. Tuncel, Turgut Kerem. “The Karabakh Confict and the Lawfare of Armenia: Armenia’s Campaign for Remedial Secession (I).” Center for Eurasian Studies (AVIM). October 27, 2020, https://avim.org.tr/en/Analiz…, accessed December 22, 2020. UN General Assembly Resolution 1514 (XV). December 14, 1960. UN General Assembly Resolution 1514 (XV). December 14, 1960. UN General Assembly Resolution 1541 (XV). December 15, 1960. UN General Assembly Resolution 2131 (XX). December 21, 1965, https://legal. un.org/avl/pdf/ha/ga_2131-xx/ga_2131-xx_e.pdf, accessed April 16, 2021. UN General Assembly Resolution 2200A (XXI). December 16, 1966. UN General Assembly Resolution 2625 (XXV). (UN Declaration on Friendly Relations). October 24, 1970. UN General Assembly Resolution 31/61. 1976. UN General Assembly Resolution 3236 (XXIX). 1975. UN General Assembly Resolution 33/23. 1979. UN General Assembly Resolution 47/134. December 18, 1992. UN General Assembly Resolutions 2396 (XXIII). 1969. UN General Assembly Resolutions 2672 C (XXV). 1971. UN World Conference on Human Rights. Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action. June 25, 1993, as cited in International Legal Materials 32 (1993), pp. 1661, 1665. Vidmar, Jure. “Remedial Secession in International Law: Theory and (Lack of) Practice.” St. Anthony’s International Review 6:1 (2010), pp. 37–56. Waal, Thomas de. Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan through Peace and War. New York: New York University Press, 2003. Weller, Marc. “Settling Self-determination Conficts: Recent Developments.” The European Journal of International Law 20:1 (2009), pp. 111–164. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
6 The UN Security Council Resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh View from Azerbaijan Shamkhal Abilov and Ceyhun Mahmudlu Introduction The confict between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region was one of the most controversial issues of the modern history of the South Caucasus until the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War of 2020. Nagorno-Karabakh has been a historical territory of Azerbaijan and the majority of its population was ethnic Azerbaijanis for the past several centuries. The Armenian population could prevail only during the last two centuries after the settlement of the Armenians in this region as a result of the treaties signed between Russian-Persian and Russian-Ottoman empires at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Although the Versailles Peace Conference recognized Nagorno-Karabakh as part of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic of 1918– 1920, Armenia did not abandon its demand on the territory (Altstadt 1992, 102). After two years’ controversies between Azerbaijan and Armenia, when the South Caucasus countries became part of the Soviet Union at the beginning of 1920s, Nagorno-Karabakh was again fagged as a topic of discussion. Therefore, while referring to pre-existing reality, the plenum of the Kavbureau CC RCP(b) (Caucasus Bureau of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party of the Bolsheviks) decided to leave Nagorno-Karabakh within the territory of Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic according to the decree of the July 5, 1921 (Baguirov 2008, 5). Further in 1923, it was granted with an autonomous status (Saparov 2012, 315). On the eve of the collapse of Soviet Union at the end of 1980s, the Regional Soviet of Nagorno-Karabakh decided to transfer the region to the sovereignty of Armenia, which was rejected not only by Azerbaijan SSR, but also by the Supreme Soviet of the USSR and the Central Committee of the CPSU with reference to the Article 78 of the USSR Constitution. The Article 78 clearly signifed that territorial alterations were unacceptable without the agreement of the affected union republic (Krüger 2010, 18). Despite this fact, Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh followed a secessionist policy and began to create their political structures with the direct support of the Armenian SSR. They elected a Congress of Authorized Representatives of the Population of the NKAO in the summer of 1989. The congress was comprised DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-9 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The UN Security Council Resolutions 131 exclusively of Armenian deputies, elected by local soviets or by village councils. On 24 August of 1989, the congress elected a National Council, featuring 78 members, and its Presidium became the de facto government of Karabakh. Furthermore, the Armenian side used the Soviet Law of 3 April 1990 “on the Procedures for Resolving Questions Related to the Secession of Union Republics from the USSR” as a legal basis to justify its separatist actions. These endeavors explicitly violated not only the abovementioned article of the Soviet Constitution, but also the 1990 April Law per se (Dədəyev et al. 2014, 123–124). The termination of the USSR in 1991 was followed with several ethnic conficts and war escalations within its former borderline. As a result, the Nagorno-Karabakh confict stemming from territorial claims of Armenia on historical Azerbaijani lands broke out into a hot war from 1991 to 1994. From 1994 until the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War of 2020, which is also labeled as “44-Days War” or “Patriotic War”, Armenia violated the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan by the occupation of 20% of its lands, maintained an unconstitutional government over Karabakh, and forced approximately 1 million Azerbaijanis to leave their homelands (Abilov and Isayev 2016, 293–294). During the First Nagorno-Karabakh War the UN Security Council adopted 4 resolutions, which condemned the occupation of the regions of Azerbaijan and demanded respect for its sovereignty and territorial integrity and cessation of hostilities and hostile acts that endangered peace and security in the region, and the immediate, full and unconditional withdrawal of all occupying forces from all occupied territories of Azerbaijan. However, the UN Security Council resolutions were reduced to dust by further occupation of Azerbaijani territories by the Armenian side. In this regard, the aim of this chapter is to investigate the resolutions of the UN Security Council concerning the Nagorno-Karabakh confict, analyze whether these resolutions had a binding effect over the conficting parties in general, fnd out what was the positions and argumentations of the parties regarding to the resolutions and try to answer the question why didn’t the members of the UN Security Council push parties of the confict for the implementation of the above mentioned 4 resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh? UN Security Council Resolution 822 On April 30, 1993, at its 3205th session, the United Nations Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 822, which condemned the occupation of the Kalbajar region of Azerbaijan, situated outside of Nagorno-Karabakh, and demanded respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. In that resolution, the Security Council further demanded the immediate cessation of hostilities and hostile acts that endangered peace and security in the region, and the immediate, full and unconditional withdrawal of all occupying forces from not only the Kalbajar region but also all the occupied Uploaded by S. M. Safi
132 Shamkhal Abilov and Ceyhun Mahmudlu territories of Azerbaijan. The Council also requested the Secretary General, in consultation with the Chairman-in-Offce of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe as well as the Chairman of the Minsk Group of the Conference “to assess the situation in the region, in particular in the Kalbajar district of Azerbaijan, and to submit a further report to the Council” (Resolution 822). It should be mentioned that the Kalbajar region (area: 1,936 sq. km., population: 58,000) was not part of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast, and no Armenians have lived there at any time throughout history (Sheets 2012). As a place of great strategic importance for both sides in the confict, it is a sliver of Azerbaijan land situated between the northwest part of Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia (De Waal 2003, 211). After the occupation of Kalbajar by Armenian forces, Nagorno-Karabakh lost its enclave status within the territory of Azerbaijan and was attached de facto to Armenia with a 60 miles long and 30 miles wide land stretch (Bonner 1993). The major offensive on the Kalbajar region by Armenian forces began on March 27, 1993. The defense by Azerbaijan was very poorly planned, and no reinforcements were sent to assist. However, the Armenian side was highly motivated. The main attack on the Kalbajar region came not from the Nagorno-Karabakh military units but from the West, the Vardenis region of Armenia. Consequently, Armenians captured the Kalbajar region on April 3 without military losses (De Waal 2003, 211). Armenia justifed its capture with the pretext that it was establishing a “security belt” to protect Nagorno-Karabakh (Sheets 2012). During the attack on Kalbajar, several violations of the rules of war were perpetrated by the Armenian forces, such as the forced displacement of civilians, indiscriminate fre, and hostage taking. Within a week, an estimated 60,000 civilians, roughly equal numbers of Kurds and Azerbaijanis, had been forced to fee their homes (Human Rights Watch 1994, 8–9). In the words of the US Department of State Human Rights Country Report, “They [the Armenian forces] drove out the inhabitants and looted and burned the provincial capitals and most of the villages of these regions” (McDowall 2004, 493). According to Human Rights Watch, initially the civilian population of the Kalbajar region was allowed to fee, but after a while it became clear that all escape routes were closed, “except those over the treacherous Murov Mountains” (Human Rights Watch 1994, 11). As Thomas de Waal puts it, “a new desperate tide of refugees set off in fight, this time along the only route the Armenians had left open: the ffty miles of snowy road north across the Murov Mountains” (De Waal 2003, 212). As a result, civil population, many of them Azerbaijani Kurds who lived in there for centuries, perished while feeing over the Murov Mountains (De Waal 2010, 121). On the question of the feeing Kurdish population, Human Rights Watch (1994, 11) stated the following: Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The UN Security Council Resolutions 133 Despite Armenian reports to the contrary, there is no evidence to support allegations that Kurds living either in Lachin or Kalbajar provinces supported the Armenian seizure of those areas or that large numbers of Kurds remained in the provinces after they fell to Armenian forces and sought to set up an autonomous Kurdish region. All Kurds fed, together with the Azeri population. An American journalist Thomas Goltz went further and wrote that after the occupation of Kalbajar, the Kurdish community in the region appealed to Kurds around the world for help in stopping the aggression and the occupation of Azerbaijan by Armenia, and in preventing the slaughtering and looting of the civilian population. The appeal read as follows: We call on the world Kurdish community to join us, the Kurds of Azerbaijan, to start a massive, international campaign of solidarity to free our country from aggression and occupation! We call on you to help us save our ancient homeland in Azerbaijan in the name of justice and peace!. (Goltz 1998, 346) Consequently, within a few short weeks, the civilian population of Kalbajar was ethnically cleansed and expelled from its native land by Armenian forces, resulting in a vast number of IDPs living in unbearable conditions and a humanitarian crisis in Azerbaijan. According to a report by the Azerbaijan State Committee on Refugees in April 1993, 9,582 families from the region were registered and were settled in schools, summer camps, hotels and also in tents (Human Rights Watch 1994, 15). The capture of Kalbajar led to the formation of another land corridor, after Lachin, between Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia. However, Armenia was faced with a heavy diplomatic cost. The occupation of the region by Armenians, with the help of outside forces, brought widespread international condemnation. As mentioned above, 28 days after the operation, UN Security Council passed Resolution 822, which demanded the cessation of hostilities. According to Thomas de Waal (2003, 213), “while calling on both sides to cease hostilities, the resolution singled out the Armenian side and demanded an ‘immediate withdrawal of all occupying forces’ from Kalbajar”. However, Armenians deny any involvement by military forces of the Armenian Republic in the occupation of the Kalbajar region. They accuse Azerbaijan of misinterpreting UN Security Council resolutions in order to mislead the international community. Accordingly, they argue that the resolutions never referred to Armenia as an “aggressor” or “occupier”, and claim that Resolution 822 stated that the armed confict was between Azerbaijan and “local Armenian forces” in Nagorno-Karabakh, “which distinguished Azerbaijan and Nagorno-Karabakh as immediate parties Uploaded by S. M. Safi
134 Shamkhal Abilov and Ceyhun Mahmudlu to the confict” (Avetisyan 2012). However, the principal attack during the Kalbajar operation came mainly from the Western part of the region, from the territory of Armenia rather than from the Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians, and “marked the increasingly blatant involvement of the Armenian state in the war” (Cornell 2011, 73). Regarding this, De Waal (2003, 211) also narrates that “The main thrust of the Armenian attack came from the west, from the Vardenis region of Armenia – although this was denied at the time for political reasons”. Strong evidence, such as Armenian military ID cards, call-up papers to active service, passports, vacation cards, discharge tickets and petitions captured by Azerbaijan military units, plus the testimonies of soldiers of the 555th separate Motor Rife Regiments of Armenia (Sadigbeyli 2009, 349; Human Rights Watch 1994, 69) also proves that not only Armenia but also outside forces, namely soldiers from the Russian 7th Army, were involved in the occupation of the Kalbajar region. Thomas de Waal (2003, 213–316–317) wrote the following on this: A military map captured by the Azerbaijanis and dated 1 April 1993, had belonged to a Major S. O. Barsegian. The dates on the map showed that Barsegian had been on the shores of Lake Sevan on 2 March, crossed the Armenia-Azerbaijan border at 4:30 p.m. on 27 March, and headed toward Kalbajar. Azad Isazade, formerly of Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry, has a copy of the map… The Azerbaijani Security Ministry later released an audiocassette of an intercepted radio conversation between an offcer speaking very pure Russian and a heavily accented Armenian. Human Rights Watch said with respect to this matter that according to radio intercepts released by the government of Azerbaijan, troops belonging to the 128th Regiment of the 7th Russian Army were involved in the occupation of Kalbajar. Human Rights Watch also said that after listening to the tapes, the UN Representative in Baku, Mahmoud Al-Said, who was fuent in Russian, confrmed that native Russian speakers were on it (Human Rights Watch 1994, 8). Furthermore, the direct involvement of Armenian forces in the occupation of Kalbajar was proved by Western news agencies. On April 8, The Independent wrote, “[i]t is Armenia that invaded Azerbaijani territory”, and a week later, on April 14, The Times also wrote that “[o]ne thing is certain: the [Kalbajar] region was attacked from Armenia itself, to the west, as well as from Nagorno-Karabakh to the east”. On April 22, Agency France Presse reported that “Azerbaijan has suffered a series of setbacks in the war after Armenia carried out a major offensive early this month…”. In turn, The Washington Post agreed with other news agencies and reported on April 28 that “[t]he war involving the former Soviet Republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan has moved into a dangerous new phase…” (Sadigbeyli 2009, 350). Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The UN Security Council Resolutions 135 In addition, the OSCE Minsk Group also recognized that the confict was between two states, Armenia and Azerbaijan, which “adjusted timetable of urgent steps to implement United Nations Security Council Resolutions 822 (1993) and 853 (1993)” dated September 28, 1993 (Sadigbeyli 2009, 355). Meanwhile, the Minsk Group set in motion a negotiation process between the parties to the confict according to the Baker Rules, named after US Secretary of State James Baker, and this recognized only two “principal parties” to the confict – Armenia and Azerbaijan (Huseynov 2009). Special emphasis should also be placed on the concept of “invasion”, as stated in Resolution 822 as “latest invasion of the Kalbajar district of the Republic of Azerbaijan by local Armenian forces” (Resolution 822). Armenians argue that it should be referred to as an “internal confict” between Azerbaijan and Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians, rather than a confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. However, according to the international law terms the word “invasion” is mainly used for the international confict that was adopted in 1974 by the General Assembly of UN, which states that armed aggression against a sovereign state takes place as a result of [t]he invasion or attack by the armed forces of a State of the territory of another State, or any military occupation, however temporary, resulting from such invasion or attack, or any annexation by the use of force of the territory of another State or part thereof. (Sadigbeyli 2009, 354) By admitting that they had assisted in the occupation of the Kalbajar region, when Deputy Foreign Minister, Libardian said, “we give them whatever is necessary for their security and survival. That includes sugar, four, electricity, small arms, tanks and the surface-to-air missile systems” (Bonner 1993). The occupation also gave neighboring countries an impetus to put pressure on Armenia to stop its aggression against Azerbaijan and begin negotiating a peaceful solution to the confict. After the invasion of Kalbajar, Turkey immediately closed its border with Armenia (Shiriyev and Davies 2013, 186). The occupation of further Azerbaijani territories, such as the Jabrayil, Gubatli and Zengilan regions, by Armenian forces also alarmed Iran. In his letter addressed to the UN Secretary General, Mr. Ali Akbar Vilayati, the Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs called on the UN to “… take immediate and effective measures to implement Security Council Resolutions 822 (1993) … and decisively compel the aggressive forces to accept a cease-fre and to withdraw to the internationally recognized borders” (Sadigbeyli 2009, 364–365; Letter from the Charge d’Affaires a.i. of the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran). Russia also pointed to the tripartite peace talks in which Russia, Turkey and the USA were involved, which was later called the “3+1 initiative” when the Italian Minsk Group chair joined the discussion. This initiative demanded the withdrawal of Armenian military forces from the Kalbajar Uploaded by S. M. Safi
136 Shamkhal Abilov and Ceyhun Mahmudlu region and set a timetable for the start of a two-month ceasefre and the resumption of new peace talks. Azerbaijan and Armenia accepted the peace plan, but in May 1993 Armenia rejected it on the pretext that it did not mention anything about security guarantees for Karabakh Armenians (Baser 2008, 92). Robert Kocharian, chairman of the Nagorno-Karabakh State Defense Committee, commented that, …A peace-bringing to the region should take into account the essential interests of the Karabakh people…Because of that, Karabakh leadership’s answer to the trilateral initiatives a call upon the world community to respect the right of the people of Karabakh to guard their security, though they noticed the lack of security in the initiative. (Human Rights Watch 1994, 17–18) Svante Cornell construes the rejection of the peace initiative by the Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians as an excuse, a pretext used by the Armenian government “for pursuing its own goals and avoiding a diplomatic embarrassment” (Cornell 2001, 85). The Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians later accepted the plan, on June 14, after pressure was put on them by the Armenian Government, but they asked for a month’s delay in implementing it. However, UN Security Council Resolution 822 and the “3+1 initiative” were reduced to dust when Armenian forces occupied Aghdam in July 1993 (Human Rights Watch 1994, 18). UN Security Council Resolution 853 The United Nations Security Council adopted Resolution 853 during its 3259th session on July 29, 1993. This Resolution was based on the report submitted on July 27, 1993 by the Chairman of the Minsk Group of the CSCE (now OSCE) (S/25184). While reaffrming Security Council Resolution 822, Resolution 853 expressed the UN Security Council’s deep concern about the deterioration in relations between the two parties to the confict, the Republic of Armenia and the Azerbaijan Republic, and the tensions between them, which had the potential of endangering peace and security in the region. According to Resolution 853, the Security Council reaffrmed the sovereignty and the territorial integrity of the Azerbaijan Republic, condemned the capture of the Aghdam region and other occupied areas of Azerbaijan, and demanded the immediate cessation of all hostilities and the withdrawal of the occupying forces from Aghdam and other occupied regions of the Azerbaijan Republic without any conditions. Furthermore, in order to achieve a peaceful solution to the confict, the Security Council endorsed the continuing efforts of the Minsk Group, including efforts to implement previous resolutions, and requested that the Secretary-General, in consultation with the Chairman-in-Offce of the CSCE as well as the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The UN Security Council Resolutions 137 Chairman of the Minsk Group, continue to report to the Council on the situation (Resolution 853). It is noteworthy that when the Security Council adopted Resolution 853, it did so using its authority under Articles 33 and 34 in Chapter VI of the Charter of the United Nations (Sadigbeyli 2009, 366), which indicates that the Security Council may investigate any dispute if there is a threat to the maintenance of international peace and security; shall seek a solution by negotiation, inquiry, mediation, conciliation, arbitration, judicial settlement, resort to regional agencies or arrangements, or the peaceful means of their own choice; and call upon the parties to settle their disputes by such means (Chapter VI of the United Nations Charter). As mentioned above, Resolution 853 was accepted following the occupation of the Aghdam region of Azerbaijan on July 23, 1993. Geographically situated outside the boundaries of former NKAO about 30 kilometers northeast of Stepanakert, it covers an area of 1,094 sq. km and, until the occupation, had a population of approximately 153,000 people, who were mainly ethnic Azerbaijanis (Babanly 2013). Capturing Aghdam gave Armenians the chance to control a strategic strip of territory on the east side of Nagorno-Karabakh, and it was also important for the Armenian leaders, who considered it a key area for attacks from Azerbaijan against Armenian military objectives situated in Askeran, Agdere and Khankendi. Additionally, Armenians thought that by occupying one of the largest regions of Azerbaijan in the eastern part of Nagorno-Karabakh, they “would change the course of the whole war” (Babanly 2013). Therefore, the Armenians used the political turmoil and disarray in the capital city of Azerbaijan in the summer of 1993 as an opportunity, and they managed to capture Aghdam after the withdrawal of the Azerbaijani military units from the front line. These units were led by Surat Huseynov, a revolutionary military leader who demanded the resignation of President Elchibey. After a long and heavy fghting that lasted over a month, the Armenian forces fnally seized Aghdam on July 23 (Cornell 2001, 89). According to Human Rights Watch, after capturing Aghdam the Armenian forces perpetrated serious violations of the rules of war, including “hostage-taking, indiscriminate fre, and the forcible displacement of civilians” (Human Rights Watch 1994, 19). Human Rights Watch also reported that for several weeks, Aghdam and the villages surrounding it were looted and burned systematically (Human Rights Watch 1994, 27). On this last point, The New York Times wrote that “a soldier strutted out of a house carrying a porcelain sink and a wrench in one hand, while another flled the sidecar of his motorcycle with the contents of someone's garage. A tanker truck wheeled into town and headed for the wine and cognac factory” (Bonner 1993). Quoting a Western diplomat active in the OSCE Minsk Group, Human Rights Watch said that “the burning and looting of Aghdam was not the result of undisciplined troops, but was a well-orchestrated plan Uploaded by S. M. Safi
138 Shamkhal Abilov and Ceyhun Mahmudlu organized by Karabakh authorities in Stepanakert” (Human Rights Watch 1994, 27). During the offensive, Armenian aggressors occupied 883 sq. km. of the total 1094 sq. km. territory of Aghdam, including one city and 80 villages. The material damage caused by the occupation of Aghdam was estimated at $6.179 billion (Trend, July 23, 2020). During the one-month offensive by the Armenian forces, 5,897 Azerbaijanis died in Aghdam, considered one of the deadliest episodes of the Nagorno-Karabakh War between Azerbaijan and Armenia. According to a report by the US Refugee Committee, 128,584 residents of Aghdam became IDPs (Babanly 2013; Global IDP Database of the Norwegian Refugee Council 2005, 29). The Armenians denied the offensive against the Aghdam region of Azerbaijan. They argued that their forces had just taken defensive action. Referring to the Armenian government, Vafa Guluzade, a senior adviser to the then President of Azerbaijan, Abulfaz Elchibey, said that I spoke with Yerevan today… And offcials there are once more hiding behind the fction that they do not control the forces in Karabakh. It is clear that they are trying to stir up more chaos in Azerbaijan as a pretext not to fulfll the terms of the peace plan. (The New York Times, June 13, 1993) Human Rights Watch also reported that “eyewitness accounts, however, clearly refute their denials” (Human Rights Watch 1994, 21). The US State Department stated that the Aghdam attack “cannot be justifed on the grounds of legitimate self-defense” (Migdalovitz 2003, 4). As a result, following the occupation of Aghdam on July 23, 1993, the UN Security Council adopted its Resolution 853, which was based on the report by the Chairman of the Minsk Group. For its part, Azerbaijan immediately declared that it accepted the Resolution. However, Armenia accused the Minsk Group of favoring Azerbaijan and said that the decision in Resolution 853 was biased. Therefore, despite the demands by the UN Security Council to cease all hostilities and immediately withdraw from all occupied territories of Azerbaijan, the Armenians strengthened their offensive and occupied further Azerbaijani territories in the following months (Gurbuz 2003). UN Security Council Resolution 874 UN Security Council Resolution 874 was adopted unanimously on October 14, 1993 at the 3292nd Security Council session. The Resolution was based on a letter dated October 1, 1993 by the Chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group on Nagorno-Karabakh and addressed to the President of the Security Council (S/26522). Essentially, it mainly addressed the message contained in Security Council Resolutions 822 of April 30, 1993 and 853 of July 29, 1993. After reaffrming Resolutions 822 and 853, the Security Council expressed its Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The UN Security Council Resolutions 139 concern regarding developments in the confict in the Nagorno-Karabakh region between the Republic of Armenia and the Azerbaijan Republic, which would endanger peace and security in the region, as well as threaten the inviolability of international borders and the inadmissibility of the use of force for the acquisition of territory. The Resolution also called upon the parties to the confict to observe the ceasefre established as a result of the direct contacts undertaken with the assistance of the Government of the Russian Federation, in support of the CSCE Minsk Group. The Council also requested the Secretary-General, the Chairman-in-Offce of the CSCE and the Chairman of the CSCE Minsk Conference “to continue to report to the Council on the progress of the Minsk process and on all aspects of the situation on the ground, and on present and future cooperation between the CSCE and the United Nations in this regard” (Resolution 874). It is noteworthy that while accepting Resolution 874, the Security Council exercised its authority under Article 34 in Chapter VI of the UN charter, which deals with regional peace and security (Sadigbeyli 2009, 366). While reiterating its support for the peace process, the Security Council called “for the immediate implementation of the reciprocal and urgent steps provided for in the CSCE Minsk Group’s Adjusted timetable, including the withdrawal of forces from recently occupied territories and the removal of all obstacles to communications and transportation” (Resolution 874). According to Human Rights Watch, Armenia agreed to the proposal, but the authorities of Karbakh delayed responding. However, Azerbaijan rejected it because the “Adjusted Timetable” that was set by the Minsk Group “linked the withdrawal of Karabakh Armenian forces from occupied Azerbaijani territory with the lifting of Azerbaijan’s embargo of Armenia. The Azerbaijani government complained of being treated like “the defeated side” (Human Rights Watch 1994, 39). As mentioned above, the content of Resolution 874 was similar to that of previous resolutions that were adopted after the occupation of the Kalbajar and Aghdam regions of Azerbaijan. The issue was still highlighted as a confict between Azerbaijan and Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians and did not describe the Republic of Armenia as an aggressor country. On the other hand, it is controversial that unlike previous resolutions, which were adopted directly after the occupation of two different regions of Azerbaijan, namely Kalbajar and Aghdam, which are geographically located beyond the border of the former NKAO, Resolution 874 did not mention anything about the three regions of Azerbaijan occupied between August and October 1993. However, the names of the captured regions were also mentioned in Resolutions 822 and 853. Despite UN Security Council Resolutions 822 and 853, which demanded an immediate withdrawal of Armenian forces from the occupied Kalbajar and Aghdam regions, Armenian forces seized three more provinces of Azerbaijan that are located south of Nagorno-Karabakh between August and October 1993 (Babanly 2012). As soon as Aghdam was captured on July Uploaded by S. M. Safi
140 Shamkhal Abilov and Ceyhun Mahmudlu 23, 1993, Armenian forces began their offensive on Fuzuli, which was important for both sides because of its geopolitical location, as it was the gateway to the southwestern regions of Azerbaijan: Jebrail, Qubatli and Zengilan. If such a land strip were in the hands of Azerbaijan, Armenia would have to fght in two fronts (Cornell 2001, 90–91). Therefore, Armenia concentrated all its forces in this area. Consequently, Armenian forces seized Fuzuli and Jebrail on August 23 and Qubatli on August 31, 1993 (Babanly 2012). Despite the accusation of Armenia by Azerbaijan for occupation of large territory of Azerbaijan that situated outside the border of NKAO, Armenia was arguing that Nagorno-Karabakh forces, not forces of Armenian Republic, did the capturing (The New York Times, August 19, 1993). However, according to Human Rights Watch, “during the August 1993 Karabakh Armenian offensive, there were several reports of involvement by troops from the Republic of Armenia. These forces reportedly committed serious human rights abuses” (Human Rights Watch 1994, 30). The Armenians justifed their occupation of these provinces by arguing that they had to defend themselves from hostile artillery fre originating in those regions. However, their forces took these large, strategically vital areas without facing almost any resistance. In this regard, Thomas de Waal explains that the Armenians preceded all their offensives with a crude propaganda campaign, insisting that they were acting in self-defense against heavily defended positions. In fact, on most occasions, they walked into empty towns and villages after the Azerbaijanis had fed. (De Waal 2003, 215) A Western diplomat who visited the region during the offensive defned the Azerbaijani defenses as “nil”: “It is not a matter of whether the Armenians can take the region, but when” (The New York Times, August 24, 1993). During the occupation of these three provinces, the Armenian forces systematically committed several violations of the rule of law, including forced displacement, indiscriminate fre, taking hostages, and burning and looting (Human Rights Watch 1994, 29). The occupation caused the second-largest refugee crisis in Azerbaijan after the infux of the civilian population from Lachin, Kalbajar and Aghdam. Tens of thousands of civilians were displaced, including 133,725 people in Fuzuli, 58,834 in Jebrail, and 31,276 in Gubadli (Global IDP Database of the Norwegian Refugee Council 2005, 29). Following the occupation of the southern regions of Azerbaijan, Iran denounced Armenian aggression and demanded the immediate withdrawal from all occupied regions. The Iranian Foreign Minister also stressed that Tehran “would not remain silent vis-a-vis growing unrest across Iranian borders” (The New York Times, September 8, 1993). Turkey also reacted to the Armenian aggression against Azerbaijan. According to The New York Times, Turkey’s Prime Minister, Tansu Chiller, warned Armenia when she Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The UN Security Council Resolutions 141 said that Turkey would not “sit with its arms crossed” if the Armenians continued their “aggression” against the Azerbaijanis, who are ethnically akin to the Turks (Schmemann 1993). Russia also demanded cessation of the military action, “noting that it was unjustifed because Azeris were no longer a threat” (Migdalovitz 2003, 4). The Russian government also mediated a ceasefre agreement between the parties to the confict on August 31 (Babanly 2013). As the result of the occupation of three southern regions Azerbaijan also issued a letter to UN, which resulted in the acceptance of the Resolution 874 by the Security Council on 14 May 1993 that was expressing its general views about the situation in the region. Nevertheless, the Armenian forces developed its offensive toward the Zangazur region of Azerbaijan again considering these entire attempts as “null”. As it was stated, similar to the previous two resolutions, “the Security Council’s appeal was put to the test shortly thereafter, when a new round of fghting broke out along the Azerbaijani-Iranian border in late October” (Croissant 1998, 64). UN Security Council Resolution 884 At its 3313th meeting, on November 12, 1993, the UN Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 884 that was based on the letter from the Chairman-in-Offce of the Minsk Group on Nagorno-Karabakh, particularly on the occupation of the Zengilan district and the city of Goradiz in the Azerbaijan Republic, to the President of the Security Council and its enclosures (S/26718), which was dated 9 November 1993. While reaffrming its previous Resolutions 822 of April 30, 1993, 853 of July 29, 1993, and 874 of October 14, 1993, in this Resolution the Security Council also expressed its serious concern at how the confict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan had developed, and at how the tensions between the parties to the confict, Armenia and Azerbaijan, could endanger regional peace and security. Furthermore, the Security Council reaffrmed the inviolability of international borders and the inadmissibility of acquiring territory by force, and also the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Azerbaijan Republic. It demanded the immediate cessation of armed hostilities and other hostile acts, as well as the withdrawal of military forces from all the occupied regions of Azerbaijan, including Zengilan and the city of Goradiz, in accordance with the adjusted timetable. Moreover, the Security Council reiterated its request to the Secretary General, the Chairman-in-Offce of the CSCE, and the Chairman of the Minsk Group to continue reporting to the Council about the progress of the Minsk process and all aspects of the confict (Resolution 884). As mentioned earlier, Resolution 884 was adopted after the Zengilan district and the Azerbaijani city of Goradiz had been overrun in the joint offensive from Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh in late October 1993. According to Human Rights Watch, the main objective of the offensive was Uploaded by S. M. Safi
142 Shamkhal Abilov and Ceyhun Mahmudlu to seize the rail junction at Goradiz and therefore leave the inhabitants of Zengilan and military units of Azerbaijan without their main escape route. By doing this, Armenian forces would control a major bridge into Iran. Referring to several foreign aid workers and diplomats in Zengilan, Human Rights Watch indicated that, before the offensive on Zengilan, Armenians ordered the region’s population to leave the area, broadcasting their message on the radio on October 23. Inhabitants, who got information about this managed to escape to Iran by the Goradiz Bridge. However, later on, the bridge was subsequently destroyed and refugees of Zengilan were forced to fee across the Aras River, where most of them drowned, becoming part of the 1 million-refugee camp of Azerbaijan (Human Rights Watch 1994, 40). Zengilan, with 33,890 inhabitants and a territory of 707 sq. km., was the last occupied region of Azerbaijan (Today.az, October 29, 2009). As a result of this offensive, all the remaining territory of Azerbaijan between Karabakh and the Aras River was in the hands of Armenian forces. During the occupation of Zengilan, Armenians forced the civil population to evacuate the region, took many hostages, killed civilians by fring indiscriminately, and looted and burned their property (Human Rights Watch 1994, 39). According to the Norwegian Refugee Council’s Global IDP Database, 34,797 inhabitants of Zengilan became IDPs and settled in the various regions of Azerbaijan (Global IDP Database of the Norwegian Refugee Council 2005, 29). During the offensive 9 pre-school establishments, 19 primary schools, 15 secondary schools, technical schools, music schools, 35 libraries, 8 culture houses, 23 clubs and 22 flm projectors were destroyed in Zengilan region (Today.az, October 29, 2009). Following the offensive against the last occupied regions of Azerbaijan, the Chairman of the CSCE Council expressed his concern over the development of the confict and highlighted that the “[a]cquisition of territory by force can never be condoned or accepted as a basis for territorial claims” on October 26, 1993. Regarding to the offensive, a declaration that was approved by the nine countries of the Minsk Group on November 4, 1993, stood on the same line and stated, “no acquisition of territory by force can be recognized, and the occupation of territory cannot be used to obtain international recognition or to impose a change of legal status”. In addition, three days later, on November 9, the European Union in its statement reiterated, “the importance it attaches to the territorial integrity and sovereignty of the Republic of Azerbaijan, in accordance with the principles of the CSCE” (Annex to the letter from the Permanent Representative of Azerbaijan to the United Nations, addressed to the Secretary-General, 23 May 2013, 8). The Minsk Group also issued a new timetable for “urgent measures”. Resolution 884, accepted on November 12, 1993 by the Security Council, condemned the offensive on Zengilan and called on the parties to the confict to implement the “urgent measures” issued by the Minsk Group in order to end the confict (Human Rights Watch 1994, 79–80). However, this had no positive impact on the withdrawal of occupying forces from the territories Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The UN Security Council Resolutions 143 of Azerbaijan. During that time, the Armenians already reached their maximum territorial extension and occupied 20% of Azerbaijan’s territory. Conclusion During the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, that lasted 44 days between 27 September and 10 November 2020, there was a saying that ‘while liberating the occupied territories of Azerbaijan, the Azerbaijan National Army is fulflling the UN Security Council resolutions, that have been on paper for 27 years’. In this regard, the questions arise, why were UN Security Council resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh not implemented? Or why didn’t the members of the UN Security Council push parties of the confict for the implementation of the above-mentioned 4 resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh? Thus, it is important to mention briefy that there are legal and political factors that led to the failure of the UN Security Council to implement its resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh in order to end the confict between the two parties and end the violation of the internationally recognized territories of Azerbaijan. While analyzing legal factors that avoid the implementation of the UN Security Council resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh it is signifcant to look at their nature, whether they have binding effect or not. According to the scholars the binding effect of the resolutions accepted by Security Council of the UN is related to international peace and security, which includes enforcement under Chapter VII of the UN Charter that indicates “the Security Council shall determine the existence of any threat to the peace, breach of the peace, or act of aggression and shall make recommendations, or decide what measures shall be taken in accordance with Articles 41 and 42, to maintain or restore international peace and security” (Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter). The effects of the resolutions differ in accordance to their type and characteristics. It is assumed that the word ‘resolution’ is used in the practice of the UN in a generic meaning, which covers ‘recommendations’ and ‘decisions’ that also are vague and changeable in meaning. However, the generally accepted approach is that ‘decision’ is mainly used for the binding resolutions while ‘recommendations’ for non-binding resolutions. “All in all, it seems that the binding or non-binding nature of a resolution (decision or recommendation) also covers determinations made therein; a determination made in a recommendation is not binding, whereas a determination made in a decision is” (Oberg 2006, 880–891). In this regard, it is argued that even though the strong and decisive language is used in the Security Council resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh in order to show the frm position of the UN on the confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, these resolutions were not accepted under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, but as it mentioned before under the Article 34 of Chapter VI of the UN Charter (Sadigbeyli 2009, 366), which indicates that the Security Council may investigate any dispute if there is a threat to the maintenance of international peace and security; shall seek a solution by Uploaded by S. M. Safi
144 Shamkhal Abilov and Ceyhun Mahmudlu negotiation, inquiry, mediation, conciliation, arbitration, judicial settlement, restore to regional agencies or arrangements, or the peaceful means of their own choice; and call upon the parties to settle their disputes by such means. Therefore, while referring to the above-mentioned analysis it is possible to generalize that the UN Security Council resolutions on NagornoKarabakh have a recommendation character, which means that they do not have binding effect. However, the main argumentation of this study is that the main obstacle for the implementation of the UN Security Council resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh is political rather than legal, which is related to the political interests of the Security Council members on the conficts, mainly Russia, the USA, and France that are also co-chair countries of the OSCE Minsk Group and act as a peace broker over the dispute of NagornoKarabakh since the frst Nagorno-Karabakh War. It was assumed that the aim of these countries was to keep the stability in order to preserve their national interests in the region rather than to provide a forum for the ongoing negotiation process and bring out the peaceful settlement of the confict. By participating in the negotiation process Russia wanted to strengthen its hegemony as one of the main regional players and play an active role in the regional issues in order to persuade national interests in its “Near Abroad”. This became particularly apparent from the beginning that while involving the mediation process by the Minsk Group, Russia intended not to let any international institution or state to hamper its interest toward the region. The conduction of unilateral mediation attempts and signing of the cease-fre under the auspice of Russia is a clear example for this aim of Russia (Cornell 2001, 99). On the other hand, the interests of the USA in the region connected with the hope to expand its political and economic infuence to the region and diversify its oil productions and transportation routes (Jacoby 2005, 32). After the 9/11, the USA was seeing the region as a signifcant geo-political area for its position in the Middle East. Therefore, it began to intensify its military presence in the region and conduct military cooperation with the new independent states of the region (Laruelle and Peyrouse 2009, 29). France in its turn supported the interests of the European Union since “some kind of European intercession was required to resolve the region’s major economic problems” (Nuriyev 2011). Meanwhile, the large Armenian Diasporas existing in these countries play signifcantly crucial roles in the policy and commitment of these countries toward the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict. Thomas de Waal, in this regard, states that, “Powerful Armenian lobbies in France, Russia and the United States also make relations with Yerevan a matter of domestic politics and not just foreign policy in each country” (De Waal 2010). Along with possessing large Armenian Diasporas, these countries also sided with Armenia during the Nagorno-Karabakh War. Russia, which is the main political and military ally of the Armenia, was not only the main supporter during the Nagorno-Karabakh War, but also directly involved in Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The UN Security Council Resolutions 145 occupation of the territories of Azerbaijan and massacred the civil Azerbaijanis in Khojali. It is also noteworthy to mention that Armenia is a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), an intergovernmental military alliance that was initiated by Russia after the collapse of Soviet Union with the aim of maintaining its political and military interests in the region (Abilov 2018, 156). Besides, Russia also possesses a military base in the Gyumri region of Armenia, situated next to the border of Azerbaijan. It is also said that Russia will set up a joint air force in Armenia within the framework of the CSTO (Kucera 2013) and Yerevan “frequently claimed to have de facto protectorate-metropolis relations with Moscow” (Garibov 2015, 89). In this regard, Armenia is literally joining its military forces with Russia. On the other hand, the USA government backed Armenia during the Nagorno-Karabakh War and accepted Azerbaijan as an “aggressor” country. With the support of the Armenian Diaspora the USA Congress approved the Section 907 that restricted governmental assistance of the USA to Azerbaijan through the Freedom Support Act. This unfair decision of the USA Congress continued until 2001, when the USA president George W. Bush decided to waive it due to its military cooperation with Azerbaijan. However, it does not mean that the Congress will not reassert its policy on Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act. As for France, it revealed itself as a best supporter of Armenia in its “holy war” for the recognition of the events of 1915 in the Ottoman Empire as genocide and illustrated its pro-Armenian position in the Nagorno-Karabakh confict. Among the legal and political obstacles for the implementation of the UN Security Council resolutions, the Armenian side also never put forward a constructive approach for the resolution of the confict peacefully and consistently violated the ceasefre agreement of 1994 while targeting civilians along the borderlines. This was one of the main factors for the failure of the negotiation process and hindered the implementation of the resolutions. Armenian ferocities and arbitrariness reached its peak in the last two years, signifcantly blocking peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict. Examples include, the more aggressive and intractable action of the Armenian government, like an intention to cement the acquisitions of those occupied territories beyond Nagorno-Karabakh permanently, repudiation of the “Basic Principles” that had been initiated by the OSCE Minsk Group and accepted by both parties to the confict, planning to move the administrative center of the so-called Nagorno-Karabakh Republic from Khankendi to Shusha, the cultural capital of Azerbaijan, illegal settlement of Armenians from different part of the world in the internationally recognized territories of Azerbaijan, as well as changing the toponyms and falsifcation of the historical monuments triggered the tension between the sides. In addition, at a rally in Khankendi on August 5, 2019, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan declared, “Artsakh is Armenia, and that’s it”. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
146 Shamkhal Abilov and Ceyhun Mahmudlu This destroyed the possibility of serious further negotiation. Furthermore, Armenian Defense Minister David Tonoyan said in New York in March 2020 that the policy “new war for new territories” replaced that of “territory for peace”, still further undermining any peaceful resolution. However, the attack against the Tovuz region in the summer of 2020 that is situated out of the conficting zone and violating internationally recognized borders of Azerbaijan since that time became the last straw to break the status-quo in the region. Targeting oil and gas export pipelines passing through the Tovuz district was threatening European energy security. In this regard, a fragile ceasefre was established, although frequently broken in subsequent months by Armenia. That is why, as a countermeasure of the Armenian aggression against Azerbaijan, on September 27, with the counter-offensive operation along the entire front the Azerbaijani Army started the liberation of the territories, which had been occupied by Armenia in the wake of the First Nagorno-Karabakh War in the early 1990s. The war that lasted 44 days depicted the strength of the Azerbaijani Army and ended with the decisive victory of Azerbaijan. By December 1, Azerbaijan had restored its territorial integrity as the result of the Trilateral Statement between Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Russia that was signed on November 10, 2020, right after the liberation of Shusha, the cultural capital of Azerbaijan. This “44-Days War” brought an end to the long-lasting occupation of all occupied territories of Azerbaijan. References “27 Years Pass since Occupation of Azerbaijan’s Agdam Region.” Trend, July 23, 2020. Accessed October 2, 2020. https://en.trend.az/azerbaijan/karabakh/3273698. html. Abilov, Shamkhal. 2018. “OSCE Minsk Group: Proposals and Failure, the View from Azerbaijan.” Insight Turkey 20 (1): 143–163. Abilov, Shamkhal and Isayev, Ismayil. 2016. “The Consequences of the Nagorno-Karabakh War for Azerbaijan and the Undeniable Reality of Khojaly Massacre: A View from Azerbaijan.” Polish Political Science Yearbook 45: 291–303. Altstadt, Audrey L. 1992. The Azerbaijani Turks: Power and Identity under the Russian Rule. California: Hoover Institution Press. Avetisyan, Aram. 2012. “Karabakh Knot: Myths and Realities.” Foreign Policy Journal, March 10. Accessed October 2, 2020. http://www.foreignpolicyjournal. com/2012/03/10/karabakh-knot-myths-and-realities/. Annex to the Letter Dated May 23, 2013 from the Permanent Representative of Azerbaijan to the United Nations, Addressed to the Secretary-General. “Azerbaijan Says Armenians Are Gaining Ground in Heavy Fighting.” The New York Times, June 13, 1993. Accessed October 2, 2020. http://www.nytimes. com/1993/06/13/world/azerbaijan-says-armenians-are-gaining-ground-in-heavyfghting.html. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The UN Security Council Resolutions 147 Babanly, Yusif. 2012. “Fizuli, Jabrayil and Qubadli, the Unfortunate History of War.” Foreign Policy News, August 30. Accessed October 2, 2020. https://foreignpolicynews. org/2012/08/30/the-unfortunate-history-of-war-fzuli-jabrayil-and-qubadli/. Babanly, Yusif. 2013. “Why and How Agdam Fell.” Foreign Policy News, July 22. Accessed October 2, 2020. https://foreignpolicynews.org/2013/07/22/why-andhow-agdam-fell/. Baguirov, Adil. 2008. “Nagorno-Karabakh: Basis and Reality of Soviet-Era Legal and Economic Claims Used to Justify the Armenia-Azerbaijan War.” Caucasian Review of International Affairs 2 (1): 11–24. Baser, Bahar. 2008. “Third Party Mediation in Nagorno-Karabakh: Part of the Cure or Part of the Disease?.” Journal of Central Asian & Caucasian Studies 3 (5): 86–114. Bonner, Raymond. 1993. “War in Caucasus Shows Ethnic Hate’s Front Line.” The New York Times, August 2. Accessed October 2, 2020. http://www.nytimes. com /1993/08/02/world /war-in- caucasus-shows- eth nic-hate-s-front-line. html?pagewanted=all&src=pm. “Caucasus City Falls to Armenian Forces.” The New York Times, August 24, 1993. Accessed October 3, 2020. http://www.nytimes.com/1993/08/24/world/caucasus-city-falls-to-armenian-forces.html. “Chapter VI: Pacifc Settlement of Disputes.” Charter of the United Nations. Accessed October 2, 2020. https://www.un.org/en/sections/un-charter/chapter-vi/ index.html. “Chapter VII: Action with Respect to Threats to the Peace, Breaches of the Peace, and Act of Aggression.” Charter of the United Nations. Accessed October 3, 2020. https://www.un.org/en/sections/un-charter/chapter-vii/index.html. Cornell, Svante E. 2001. Small Nations and Great Powers: Study of Ethnopolitical Confict in the Caucasus. London and New York: Routledge Curzon. Cornell, Svante E. 2011. Azerbaijan since Independence. Armonk, New York: M. E. Sharpe. Croissant, Michael P. 1998. The Armenia-Azerbaijan Confict: Causes and Implications. United States of America: Praeger Publisher. De Waal, Thomas. 2003. Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan through Peace and War. New York and London: New York University Press. De Waal, Thomas. 2010a. The Caucasus: An Introduction. United States of America: Oxford University Press. De Waal, Thomas. 2010b. “Remaking the Nagorno-Karabakh Peace Process.” Carnegie Europe, August 1. Accessed October 3, 2020. http://carnegieeurope. eu/2010/08/01/remaking-nagorno-karabakh-peace-process-pub-41367. Dədəyev, B. et al. 2014. Qarabağ 99 Sualda. Bakı: CBS. Garibov, Azad. 2015. “OSCE and Confict Resolution in the Post-Soviet Area: The Case of the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh Confict.” Caucasus International 5 (2): 75–90. Goltz, Thomas. 1998. Azerbaijan Diary: A Rogue Reporter’s Adventures in an OilRich, War-Torn, Post-Soviet Republic. Armonk, New York: M.E. Sharpe. Gurbuz, Vedat. 2003. “The Nagorno Karabakh Confict and Azeri Policies, 1988– 1994.” Review of Armenian Studies 4 (4): 55–80. Human Rights Watch. 1994. Azerbaijan: Seven Years of Confict in Nagorno-Karabakh. United States of America: Human Rights Watch. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
148 Shamkhal Abilov and Ceyhun Mahmudlu Huseynov, Javid. 2009. “Karabakh Peace Process Must Be Fully Inclusive.” RFE/ RL, September 1. Accessed October 2, 2020. http://www.rferl.org/content/Karabakh_Peace_Process_Must_Be_Fully_Inclusive_/1812056.html. “Iran Warns Armenians Over Azerbaijan Issue.” The New York Times, September 8, 1993. Accessed October 3, 2020. http://www.nytimes.com/1993/09/08/world/ iran-warns-armenians-over-azerbaijan-issue.html. Jacoby, Volker. 2005. “The Role of the OSCE: An Assessment of International Mediation Efforts.” Accord: An International Review of Peace Initiative 17: 30–33. Kucera, Joshua. 2013. “Russia Announces Upgrades to CSTO Military Presence in Armenia.” EURASIANET.org, July 4. Accessed October 3, 2020. http://www. eurasianet.org/node/67216. Krüger, Heiko. 2010. The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict: A Legal Analysis. Heidelberg: Springer. Laruelle, Marlène and Peyrouse, Sébastien. 2009. “The Militarization of the Caspian Sea: “Great Games” and “Small Games” Over the Caspian Fleets.” China and Eurasia Forum Quarterly 7 (2): 17–35. Letter from the Charge d’Affaires a.i. of the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran addressed to the Secretary-General, U.N. Doc. S/26387, August 31, 1993. McDowall, David. 2004. A Modern History of the Kurds. London: I.B. Tauris. Migdalovitz, Carol. 2003. “Armenia-Azerbaijan Confict.” CRS Issue Brief for Congress, Order Code IB92109, August 8. Nuriyev, Elkhan. 2011. “OSCE Minsk Group in Crisis: A New Look at Nagorno-Karabakh Impasse.” The Journal of Turkish Weekly, May 6. Retrieved from: Aydın, Ülviyye Sanılı. 2015. “May the European Union Undertake Any Role in Nagorno-Karabakh Confict Resolution?.” Azerbaijan Journal of Economics and Social Studies 4: 46–59. Oberg, Marko Divac. 2006. “The Legal Effects of Resolutions of the UN Security Council and General Assembly in the Jurisprudence of the ICJ.” The European Journal of International Law 16 (5): 879–906. “Profle of International Displacement: Azerbaijan.” Global IDP Database of the Norwegian Refugee Council, February 25, 2005. Sadigbeyli, Rovshan. “The Implications of the 1993 U.N. Security Council Action for the Settlement of the Armenia-Azerbaijan Confict.” Caucasian Review of International Affairs 3 (4): 342-370. Saparov, Arsène. 2012. “Why Autonomy? The Making of Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region 1918–1925.” Europe-Asia Studies 64 (2): 281–323. Schmemann, Serge. 1993. “Turkey Holds Talks on Caucasus War.” The New York Times, September 10. Accessed October 3, 2020. http://www.nytimes. com/1993/09/10/world/turkey-holds-talks-on-caucasus-war.html. Sheets, Lawrence Scott. 2012. “A ‘Frozen Confict’ That Could Boil Over.” The New York Times, March 8. Accessed October 2, 2020. http://www.nytimes. com/2012/03/09/opinion/a-frozen-confict-that-could-boil-over.html?_r=1&. Shiriyev, Zaur and Davies, Celia. 2013. “The Turkey-Armenia-Azerbaijan Triangle: The Unexpected Outcomes of the Zurich Protocols.” Perceptions 18 (1): 185–206. “Sixteen Years Pass Since Occupation of Azerbaijan’s Zengilan Region by Armenia.” Today.az, October 29, 2009. Accessed October 3, 2020. http://www. today.az/news/politics/57018.html. United Nations Security Council, “Resolution 822.” s/RES/822, April 30, 1993. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The UN Security Council Resolutions 149 United Nation Security Council, “Resolution 853.” s/RES/853, July 29, 1993. United Nation Security Council, “Resolution 874.” s/RES/874, October 14, 1993. United Nation Security Council, “Resolution 884.” s/RES/884, November 12, 1993. “U.N. Demands Armenians Give Up Conquests.” The New York Times, August 19, 1993. Accessed October 2, 2020. http://www.nytimes.com/1993/08/19/world/ un-demands-armenians-give-up-conquests.html. “You Too, Armenia.” Kurdish Life, No. 9, 1994. Published by Kurdish Library, Brooklyn, New York. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
7 The Politics of Ceasefre and the Occupation Araz Aslanli Introduction The war, which resumed between Armenia and Azerbaijan on September 27, 2020 and ended on November 10, 2020, illuminated the reasons behind failed diplomatic attempts for achieving a longer lasting ceasefre along with resolving defnitively the Armenia-Azerbaijan confict and its critical issues. The frst serious mediation attempt to halt persistent skirmishes in the Nagorno-Karabakh confict zone, which was propelled as the Soviet Union dissolved, was initiated by Boris Yeltsin and Nursultan Nazarbayev in September 1991. Although this mediation generated some bilateral compromises, the downing of a helicopter on November 20, 1991, carrying Azerbaijani high-ranking offcials, accompanied by Kazakh and Russian observers from the area under Armenian occupation, not only ended this diplomatic process, but also exacerbated tensions. Some subsequent attempts such as Iran’s, as analyzed below, also failed without signing any agreement, and others failed even after agreements were signed. The war atmosphere, which intensifed consistently since 1992, was eased with an armistice negotiated through Russian mediation in May 1994. However, this agreement did not actually halt warzone fre. Ceasefre violations frequently occurred, gradually eroding the validity and intent of the armistice while increasing the probability of a new round of war. The Minsk Group process, which started in 1992, seemed more hopeful until the end of the 1990s, as mediators presented general principles of peace and options to solve the confict conclusively. In late 1997, prospects appeared reasonable for resolving outstanding issues that had infamed hostilities in the past. This was an important moment as Armenia’s president Levon Ter-Petroyan stopped just short of agreeing to the principle of territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. In the 2000s, the Minsk Group shifted its efforts primarily toward freezing the confict in its status quo under the aegis of the tripartite chairmanship representing France, Russia, and the US. But, the nine-day Russo-Georgian War in August 2008 between Georgia, Russia and the Russian-backed self-proclaimed republics of South Ossetia and Abkhazia DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-10 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Politics of Ceasefre and Occupation 151 awakened observers to the problems and complacency of allowing a confict to remain dormant or frozen without pursuing a defnitive resolution. It was only natural to assume the Armenia-Azerbaijan confict would ignite inevitably within the near future, which was the case when a new round of violence erupted on the frontlines in April 2016. The renewed violence subsided after four days, but with no progress in negotiations as the tripartite chairing nations stayed with the status quo in the confict. From 2016 to the outbreak of war in 2020, there were numerous exchanges of threatening military rhetoric and signs of combat preparations, but there also were signs that Russia and the Western powers desired a path for peace and resolution coinciding with the rise of Nikol Pashinyan’s power in Armenia. This chapter will summarize the various attempts to achieve a ceasefre and a lasting peace during the 20 years leading up to the 2020 war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and why they persistently failed. The Nature of the Armenia-Azerbaijan Confict In order to set the stage for why attempts to resolve and reconcile the two states involved failed repeatedly, some background is essential. Although there are numerous claims regarding the historical roots of why the confict remained frozen or dormant during the time of the USSR, the foundations point to the beginning of the twentieth century. While there had been relatively small conficts occasionally, the confict only escalated in tandem with the USSR’s dissolution in 1991 and led quickly afterward to the 1992 War. The claims about the confict’s durability range from those who have seen it as a tool of Russia’s policy of keeping the Caucasus under its control to Armenia’s expansionist aspirations (i.e. the dream of establishing a Greater Armenia reaching to the coast of three seas). There are those who claim that the current status of the Armenian population is the result of the struggle they waged for exclusive rights as well as those who believe that the confict is entirely due to the persecution of the Armenians by the Turks throughout history or the unifcation of the Karabakh region with Azerbaijan during Stalin’s rule. Finally, there are those who interpret it more broadly as part of imperialist games in the region or as a Huntingtonian clash of civilizations. Taking a technical view of the confict within the international law framework, one can clearly notice that Armenia’s expansionist policy of and its occupation of Azerbaijani territories constituted the greatest tensions at the confict’s core. Undoubtedly, the confict emerged at the time when Russia sought to establish an outpost in the region, aided by a fow of migrants and the signing of agreements after the wars between Russia and the Ottomans as well as between Russia and the Gajars. At the end of the nineteenth century, the relations of the imperialist powers with the region coincided with the desire of some Armenian organizations to manifest the dream of a Greater Uploaded by S. M. Safi
152 Araz Aslanli Armenia. Subsequently, the disputes between nations, fomented by Tsarist Russia, added tension to the confict’s foundation. The creation of an artifcial entity—the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast/NKAO)— at the time of the Soviet Union’s formation defed Azerbaijan’s will and interests. The historical dynamics would return 75 years later as the USSR collapsed and fractured. When the confict escalated in the latter part of the 1980s, the intensifed tensions were due to Armenia’s insistence on annexing the Karabakh region, which historically had been determined to be part of Azerbaijan. This would set the stage for the confict in the closing years of the twentieth century. In examining the core of the fve initiatives of Armenia between 1920 and 1965, everyone has dictated that Azerbaijan’s Karabakh region be absorbed into Armenia. For example, demonstrations in 1988 were dominated by the slogan proclaiming “Miatsum”, the Armenian word for unifcation. On February 20, 1988, tensions fared when the [former] NKAO of Azerbaijan decided to leave Azerbaijan and join Armenia (Kocharyan 2018). On December 1, 1989, the Armenian parliament voted to annex the disputed territory, a decision that technically remains in effect. Incidentally, it was illegal from the perspective of Soviet law at the time, and it should be mentioned that the Supreme Soviet annulled this decision. On one hand, Armenia laid bare its expansionist intentions but, on the other hand, modulated its tactics in the hopes of quelling any challenges by international legal experts, particularly as Armenia joined the United Nations as an independent member. Armenia, which earlier did not hesitate to express that reasons for the confict with Azerbaijan were connected to its own ambitions for acquiring and expanding its territorial boundaries, decided on an indirect approach. The Republic of Armenia’s offcial position was to deemphasize the presence of a military confict and instead make the case that Azerbaijan had hampered Armenia’s quest for its integrity as an independent nation-state. Yet, the words of a moderate temperament were not refected in Armenia’s foreign policy objectives which emphasized an aggressive, expansionist approach. On September 26, 2015, Armenia’s former president Serzh Sargsyan, speaking on the 100th anniversary of the Armenian allegations of genocide, proclaimed that Nagorno-Karabakh belongs to Armenia. In August 2019, the Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan reinforced the sentiment, declaring that “Artsakh [Karabakh] is Armenia!” essentially negating attempts to negotiate a peaceful resolution. This occurred despite widespread acknowledgment by international organizations, including the UN, in formal resolutions, that Armenia had occupied unlawfully territories that belonged rightly to Azerbaijan. Although Armenia characterized the Azerbaijani territories under its occupation as equivalent to an independent state, it went ahead regardless, acting to annex them de facto, a move obviously acknowledged as such by the political actors, economic players and the general public of Armenia. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Politics of Ceasefre and Occupation 153 Initiatives in the Dissolution Process of the USSR When the USSR was being dissolved, Moscow offcials acted to de-escalate tensions arising from Armenia’s territorial claims against Azerbaijan. On February 20, 1988, the [former] NKAO’s Regional Council parliament, in which all but 30 of the 140 members were Armenians, voted to leave Azerbaijan and unite with Armenia (Cornell 1999). On the following day, the Soviet Union’s Central Committee of the Communist Party rejected the request as illegal considering the existing legal arrangement which stipulated the NKAO’s status (Pravda, February 24, 1988). On July 12, 1988, NKAO, acting independently of the regional assembly, moved to separate from Azerbaijan and unite with Armenia. The Presidential Council of the Supreme Soviet convened six days later and ruled out the possibility of changing the borders and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and Armenia. The Council cited the Soviet Constitution’s Article 78, which specifed that “the border of any Soviet republic cannot be changed without its consent”. A few months later (January 12, 1989), Moscow offcials created the provisional Special Management Committee to act as the region’s administrators. On November 28, 1989, the responsibilities were shifted to the Azerbaijani government. Armenia’s parliament responded on December 1, 1989 by approving the annexation of NKAO, a decision not supported in the international legal community (de Waal 2003, 290). Until August 1991, when the USSR collapsed, Moscow offcials sought to prevent the Armenia-Azerbaijani confict from becoming a full-blown war but there was no consistent strategy to address the most urgent concerns of territorial integrity. Following the respective declarations of independence for the two former Soviet states, the new Russian Federation’s frst attempt at offcial mediation occurred, when Russian president Boris Yeltsin and Nursultan Nazarbayev, Kazakhstan’s president, met in Baku on September 20, 1991. Both leaders also visited Khankendi and Yerevan in the hopes of formalizing the negotiations and peace talks began three days later in the southern Russian city of Jeleznovodsk. The Russian and Kazakhstan presidents guaranteed the subsequent agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan (UN 1991), which included terms for a ceasefre, Armenia’s recognition of the former NKAO as part of Azerbaijan and provisions for the region’s autonomy in governance. Following a second round of talks, held in a small village in the Ijevan region on the Azerbaijan-Armenia border, a statement was released, indicating that “the vicious circle based on murder and revenge must be stopped”. Meanwhile, Azerbaijan’s representatives invited observers from Russia and Kazakhstan to investigate claims that Armenia had violated the terms of the original ceasefre, which were confrmed. Tragedy, however, short circuited any progress that could have been realized from the new round of talks. On November 20, 1991, an air contingent carrying members Uploaded by S. M. Safi
154 Araz Aslanli of the Azerbaijani government, justice and security offcials (including State Secretary Tofg Ismailov, Deputy Prime Minister Zülfü Hacıyev, Interior Minister Mehemmed Esedov, Attorney General İsmet Qayıbov); Kazakh and Russian observers (including Kazakhstan’s Deputy Interior Minister Sanlal Dasumovich Serikov and two Russian generals); journalists and others was shot down over Armenian-controlled territory. Not one passenger survived. Diplomatic efforts collapsed entirely, negating the progress gained from the frst two rounds of talks (BBC 2005). 1992: Internationalization and Transformation of the Confict into War Parallel to Peace Initiatives At a January 30, 1992 meeting in Prague for the organization now known as the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which included Armenia and Azerbaijan, the confict became a priority issue. Proposals for mediation drafted by Iran were rejected by both countries in February 1992. Later that month, the European Parliament convened in Strasbourg and decided to send observers to the region. On February 20, 1992, the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia met with their counterpart in Moscow, where they announced their agreement to end hostilities and lift the blockade over the settlement areas. However, Armenia did not respond to diplomatic efforts, including a February 24, 1992 visit by the Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayeti, who attempted to mediate the terms for a new ceasefre. Two days later, one of the largest massacres related to the confict occurred, when Armenia’s armed forces and the 366th CIS regiment murdered between 200 and an estimated 1,000 ethnic Azerbaijani civilians in Khojaly (Human Rights Watch 1992; Newsweek, March, 16, 1992; The New York Times, March, 3, 1992; The Guardian, September, 2, 1993). Just a few days later, the confict garnered attention at the highest international diplomatic levels when the UN General Assembly agreed to admit Azerbaijan and Armenia as members. Immediately afterward, citing Article 39 of the UN Charter, Azerbaijan appealed to the UN Security Council to intervene and facilitate negotiations to end hostilities as soon as possible. In mid-March 1992, the UN Secretary General dispatched a delegation headed by the former US Secretary of State Cyrus Vance to observe and compile a follow up report. Meanwhile, the OSCE Council of Foreign Ministers (then known as the CSCE), with representatives of both countries involved in the confict as well as nine other nations, including the US, met in Helsinki on March 24, 1992. They met to assess the Khojaly massacre and to implement the declaration for an international conference to be held in Minsk, Belarus, during July of that year, for resolving the confict (OSCE 1992), and with Italian representative Mario Rafaelli appointed to chair the conference. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Politics of Ceasefre and Occupation 155 Deciding not to intervene directly, the UN Security Council backed the Minsk Conference efforts (Sarkisyan 1998, 59), and the frst meeting took place in Rome on April 1, 1992, while another set of delegates went to Baku. Meanwhile, Iran sought to try again setting up mediation in late April 1992, and on May 7, a trilateral meeting was held in Tehran with Azerbaijani Parliament Speaker (also then deputy president) Yagub Mammadov, Armenian President Levon Ter-Petrosyan and Iranian President Hashimi Rafsanjani. The meeting led to a formal statement of eight articles for Armenia and Azerbaijan but just one day later, on May 17, the Armenian army occupied Shusha, a strategic city in the Karabakh region, and Lachin, which connected the region to Armenia. The sudden hostilities left many skeptical about Iran’s genuine desire for mediation along with Armenia’s disregard for patience to see if the diplomatic process could take hold. When the OSCE Senior Offcials Committee convened in Helsinki on May 21, the representatives of 51 countries, but not Armenia, voted in favor of the draft document proposed by the Vance team, emphasizing Azerbaijan’s claim to territorial integrity as well as the withdrawal of all foreign military forces from the region. However, the proposal did not advance to a conclusive vote, as the members split on Armenia’s request for including former NKAO Armenians—in effect, representing an autonomous Nagorno-Karabakh Republic—in the third round of the Rome talks, which were to begin in late June, followed by a fourth round in July. On August 26, 1992, Nazarbayev, then the Kazakhstan president, tried to organize a new ceasefre agreement, which was codifed a day later in the Alma-Ata Declaration and a week afterward in the Ijevan protocol, signed on September 3 by the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Kazakhstan. But, as with previous diplomatic efforts, Armenia withdrew shortly after from the Alma-Ata Declaration, leaving behind yet another path for a peaceful resolution. Russia stepped in with its own attempt almost immediately after, and, on September 25, defense ministers of Azerbaijan, Armenia, Russia and Georgia signed yet another ceasefre agreement in Sochi (Aslanli 2015, 67). This agreement fell apart quickly, as Armenia and Azerbaijan exchanged accusations about ceasefre violations while Armenia demanded the former NKAO Armenians who were residing in Azerbaijan be allowed to send representatives to the diplomatic negotiations. The process continued to founder for the remainder of 1992, despite persistent efforts to restart the negotiations. There also were further delays in the Minsk Conference efforts, as Armenia did not retreat from the demands, including the participation of former NKAO Armenians, which had short-circuited every previous attempt at negotiations since the beginning of the year. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
156 Araz Aslanli Failed Minsk Process, Invasion and Ineffective UNSC Resolutions In early 1993, nations along with regional and international organizations continued to explore options for resolving the Karabakh confict but they also collapsed as with previous efforts. One of the most prominent efforts occurred on January 3, 1993, when then US President George H. W. Bush and Russian president Boris Yeltsin jointly invited the parties to negotiate a solution within the framework of the principles outlined in the OSCE (formerly CSCE) efforts (Los Angeles Times, January 5, 1993). This set the stage for talks in Rome on February 20, 1993, with representatives of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Russia, and the US, along with Mario Rafarelli representing the Minsk Conference. The agreement stipulated observers being permitted to assess the actions in the region along with a ceasefre. A month later, on March 27, hostilities erupted, when Armenian forces attacked the Kalbajar district of Azerbaijan. A week later, on April 3, the district was under Armenian occupation, which was widely condemned abroad (Cafersoy 2001, 85). When the OSCE (then CSCE) Senior Offcials Committee met in late April in Prague, it called for Armenia to leave Kalbajar as a condition for proceeding with peace talks within the Minsk Conference framework. But, Armenia’s vote against the proposal blocked it from being formally adopted. At the same time, on April 30, the UN Security Council unanimously approved Resolution 822 calling upon Armenian forces to withdraw immediately from Kalbajar as well as other occupied areas. It also reiterated UN support for the principles of inviolability of internationally recognized borders, independence of all states and respect for territorial integrity and rejection of the practice of land acquisition by force (UN 1993a). Three days later, Yeltsin announced that Russia, Turkey and the US would renew efforts to negotiate a peace under the OSCE (CSCE) framework as well as call for the withdrawal of Armenian forces from Kalbajar by May 14. Azerbaijan accepted the terms of the negotiated deal on May 17 but Armenia refused once again. Another attempt came in early June with a two-day meeting of representatives from nine OSCE (CSCE) countries, which resulted in an emergency action plan to implement UN Resolution 822 and to continue attempts to locate a resolution within the OSCE framework. The agreement again called upon Armenia to withdraw by June 15 and complete the process fve days later, to be followed by the arrival of 50 international observers at the beginning of July (Chorbajan, Donabedian and Mutafan 1995, 36). The intentions were to resume negotiations on points as highlighted in the Minsk Conference framework, by August 7. This time, Armenia signed the plan but also noted that some forces in the occupied regions were out of its control, and it would require an additional month to carry out the evacuation of Kalbajar. Meanwhile, Azerbaijan’s government was in turmoil. In 1993, the fourth government since Azerbaijan had gained independence in 1991 collapsed Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Politics of Ceasefre and Occupation 157 on June 4 after government forces failed to disarm paramilitary forces. Armenia saw this as an opportunistic distraction so it could renew its efforts to lay claim to the Nagorno-Karabakh territories. By June 28, Armenian forces occupied the Aghdere district of Azerbaijan and by July 24, they occupied a large part of the Azeri Aghdam district. Five days later, the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 853 (UN 1993b), augmenting its earlier one calling upon Armenian forces to withdraw from Kalbajar as well as districts of Aghdere and Aghdam. Armenia, meanwhile, continued advancing its invasion, launching attacks in August on the Fuzuli and Jabrayil districts, renewing the alarm of the UN Security Council. Madeline Albright, the US representative, asked that Armenia should take steps in the implementation of UN Security Council Resolutions 822 and 853 regarding the conficts in the NagornoKarabakh region of Azerbaijan, end the attacks on the Fuzuli districts of Azerbaijan, and abandon the previously occupied Kalbajar, Aghdam and other districts. Every diplomatic effort seemed powerless and moot, despite visits to Armenia and Azerbaijan by Rafarelli as head of the Minsk Conference Group. Armenia rejected all initiatives as it advanced forces in other districts including Gubatly. Meanwhile, in Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev was positioned to become the country’s new president, promising that his administration would be committed to regaining district territories that had been lost to Armenia. Another Minsk Group attempt to implement an emergency action plan failed in late September. The UN Security Council adopted yet another statement on the crisis: Resolution 874 on October 14. In summarizing 13 items, this latest UN Security Council resolution cited the two previous resolutions related to the previous occupation of Azerbaijani districts as well as materials from the Minsk Group and statements reinforcing the acknowledgment of the independence and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and other states, and the call for the “immediate and unconditional withdrawal from the occupied territories” of Azerbaijan. Without a specifed set of sanctions, the diplomatic efforts did not dissuade Armenia from continuing its attacks. With the occupation of Horadiz on October 23 and the Zengilan district by November 1, nearly all of the historical territories encompassing the Karabakh region including the former NKAO districts were occupied by Armenian forces. At the Minsk Group meeting held in November 1993, the nine nations unanimously condemned the hostilities, demanding that the occupation end immediately to clear the way for actions specifed in the UNSC resolutions to be implemented and negotiations to start on the territories in question. The proposal essentially replicated the terms of earlier attempts that had been rebuffed by Armenia. After Armenian forces had occupied Horadiz Uploaded by S. M. Safi
158 Araz Aslanli and Zangilan, the UN Security Council added Resolution 884 on November 11, the fourth adopted in 1993 and again resembling the ineffectual preceding resolutions (UN 1993d). Every effort had fallen without making an impact, revealing how impotent both the Minsk Group and the UN Security Council had been in persuading both parties to come mutually to the table for diplomatic negotiations. Armenia barely acknowledged the legitimacy of any declaration or resolution calling for the end to the hostilities. Meanwhile, Azerbaijan, in the midst of its own domestic political crisis triggered by military setbacks in attacks against rebel warlords, was not suitably prepared to reverse the advances the Armenian forces had made. The Process to a Ceasefre in 1994 Prior to negotiating an armistice that would hold as hostilities ebbed in the Karabakh confict, one could assume that Armenia and Azerbaijan were caught up in their own psychological traps. Armenia insisted that a military campaign would be the only way to place its demands directly into the negotiations for a peace and ceasefre. Azerbaijan had initially sought a diplomatic settlement but then the country also had to contend with lingering remnants of old Soviet authority. Suret Huseynov, a former troop commander in Nagorno-Karabakh, was fred by then Azerbaijani president Abulfaz Elchibey, a former Soviet dissident. But, Huseynov gathered the paramilitary forces that ousted Elchibey and cleared the way for Heydar Aliyev to become acting president. Aliyev had committed to defending militarily Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and reclaiming the districts that Armenian forces had occupied. The war persisted in the frst months of 1994 but combat fatigue eventually affected the respective domestic political environments in both countries. The costs had outweighed the gains and both countries’ resolve would pivot in the spring of 1994, leading to the frst ceasefre to hold in May. Russia had attempted to keep the war under its control, preferring to mediate and monitor the ceasefre as an external player while embedding its own military and regional political power interests in shaping the direction for a stable peace (Cafersoy 2000). These factors became critical in the 1994 armistice with Russian and OSCE participation, which included Russia as a member state of the Minsk Group. But, Russia also leveraged its presence in the process as an opportunity to reclaim some of the geopolitical infuence it had prior to the collapse of the Soviet Union. Azerbaijan, on the other hand, did not want to enhance Russian infuence nor allow Russia to set the parameters for negotiations primarily as opposed to allowing Russia to operate only within the framework of international or regional organizations. In this context, the President of the Supreme Council of Kyrgyzstan (operating as the representative of the Inter-Parliamentary Council of the Commonwealth of Independent States) and the Special Representative of the Russian President visited Azerbaijan and Armenia, respectively, between Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Politics of Ceasefre and Occupation 159 March 31 and April 4 to set the broader outlines of mediation (Toropygin 2019, 73) When the CIS Presidents’ Summit convened in Moscow on April 15, the heads of the Armenian and Azerbaijani governments met with Yeltsin, which followed with a declaration focusing on the status of events in the Nagorno-Karabakh region. The pace of diplomatic background activity picked up, with an OSCE delegation visiting the region at the end of April. On May 4, representatives from the Kyrgyzstan parliament and the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs met with the heads of parliament from Armenia and Azerbaijan, along with representatives of the Azerbaijani and Armenian communities of the former NKAO in Bishkek. The meeting which followed the framework of the CIS Inter-Parliamentary Council led on May 5 to the Bishkek Protocol, which would form the basis of the ceasefre agreement (UN 1994). At the outset, the protocol acknowledged the authorities of Azerbaijan and Armenia, the mediator states, and, most notably, only the Armenian representatives (separatists) of the former NKAO. Responding to the omission of Azerbaijanis with regard to the former NKAO, Afyaddin Jalilov, vice-chairman of the Azerbaijan National Assembly, returned to Baku without signing the protocol, despite prior assurances that the document would only involve the signatories of the two nations involved in the confict. Vladimir Kazimirov, a Russian Foreign Ministry offcial, went to Baku in the hopes of securing Azerbaijan’s approval. The protocol was signed as Azerbaijan had originally intended and the NKAO would be referenced in the document with the lesser status of interested party, and by having the representative of the Azerbaijani community included as well. Rasul Guliyev, chairman of the Azerbaijan National Assembly, signed the amended version. The Bishkek Protocol briefy stated that the confict in and around the former NKAO had harmed the Azerbaijani and Armenian peoples and other peoples of the region and, therefore, supported the cessation of hostilities and the reconciliation process, as outlined at the CIS Presidents’ Summit on April 14, as well as the efforts of the Inter-Parliamentary Council. The protocol also indicated the decisions taken by the UN Security Council and the OSCE on the resolution of the confict (mainly UNSC’s resolutions 822, 853, 874 and 884) should be implemented. The protocol essentially encompassed the language of earlier attempts to end the confict, including the protocol signed in Moscow by the defense ministers of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia on February 18. The protocol outlined the ceasefre beginning on May 8 as well as a broader call for displaced refugees to return to their homes. The ceasefre took hold on May 12, three days after the respective defense ministers formally signed the document. From the 1994 Ceasefre to the 2020 War The ceasefre, nevertheless, did not quell the respective efforts of both countries from ascertaining their interests. Armenia and Azerbaijan saw Uploaded by S. M. Safi
160 Araz Aslanli the ceasefre as an opportunity to replenish their severely depleted military resources and rehabilitate their economies. For Azerbaijan, the objectives were eliminating internal political instabilities, developing energy projects and strengthening its foreign policy profle, including an active presence in regional and international organizations. Armenia saw the ceasefre as an opportunity to perpetuate its military gains and to gain legal status for the territories it occupied during the war. Vladimir Kazimirov, the Russian representative to the Minsk Group, frequently visited Azerbaijan and Armenia in June and July of that year, in the hopes of strengthening the terms of the ceasefre and concluding negotiations on a grand political agreement to resolve the confict (Abasov and Khachatrian 2006, 46). Although Azerbaijan, under this agreement, would have gained the opportunity to liberate other territories from Armenian occupation, the Azerbaijani delegation refused because the proposal excluded the former NKAO and Lachin districts, including Shusha, from its sovereign control. Furthermore, Azerbaijan hesitated to permit Russia to have too large a military and political presence in the affairs of the affected region. Subsequently, Azerbaijani leaders in Baku reached out to Western powers and the OSCE in helping mediate the terms of a fnal agreement. The Western states opposed Russia’s attempts to increase its infuence in the Caucasus, and, expectedly, they objected to Russia’s demand to grant its military forces the status of a UN peacekeeping force. Likewise, statements by the governments of the US, the UK, Germany and Turkey amplifed this point. The US’ CIS representative James Collins declared that the American government would not allow the deployment of armed forces of any state to the confict zone to act solely and that they prioritized seeking the solution for the confict within the framework as defned by the OSCE. The concerns would be echoed in the OSCE’s Budapest Summit in December, which followed the failure of the Moscow negotiations in the summer of 1994 when Russian offcials had hoped to ink a grand political bargain for the confict while acting as sole mediator. The OSCE Senior Offcials Committee agreed on September 16 with the concerns which had been voiced variously by the Azerbaijani government as well as Western powers that any peacekeeping forces dispatched to the region should be multinational (Gasparyan 1999). A month later, the rotating president of OSCE at the time, Italian Deputy Foreign Minister Antonio Martino, coordinated the terms of the peacekeeping operations, which would include 3,000 soldiers and essential military hardware. Any participating nation-state in the peacekeeping force would be allowed a maximum of 30% representation and the Minsk Group would be responsible for coordinating the operations and fow of personnel for the purposes of peacekeeping. In the OSCE Budapest Summit at the end of 1994, the organizational structure of the Minsk Group was revamped from a single-term presidency to a co-chair system. While Russia was conferred the status of permanent co-chair, the summit delegations also decided that NATO and Russia should Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Politics of Ceasefre and Occupation 161 form a joint peacekeeping force to be placed frst in the confict zone between Armenia and Azerbaijan (specifcally, in the Azerbaijani territories occupied by Armenia). The OSCE hoped that this arrangement would be seen as a mutually acceptable compromise between those who were concerned that Russia might exert far more infuence than other nation-states in resolving the confict and those who wanted to strengthen the viability of the OSCE framework in reconciling the problems between Armenia and Azerbaijan with regard to the Nagorno-Karabakh region (Sarkisyan 1998, 55). Meanwhile, the question of making the ceasefre permanent had yet to be resolved. Prior attempts had barely lasted long enough to make the necessary corrections. This led to yet another multilateral agreement on February 6, 1995, achieved with the co-chairs representing Russia and Sweden leading the Minsk Group efforts (Nezavisimaya Gazeta, May, 13, 2019). The ceasefre, more or less, lasted until a new outbreak of hostilities in April 2016, although in the interim, there always were occasional bursts of fre between both sides. The scope of some ceasefre violations had been defned so widely that many observers wondered between 1994 and 2016 when a new war would be launched. One skirmish occurred in March 2008, following a vigorously contested presidential election in Armenia, which led to the UN General Assembly adopting Resolution 62–243 on March 14 demanding the immediate withdrawal of all Armenian forces (UN 2008). In January and September 2009, Armenia again attempted to attack in the direction of Aghdam but withdrew with losses in both instances. More skirmishes occurred after unsuccessful mediation attempts in Moscow in 2010, once again incurring heavy losses for Armenia. Despite calls from the Minsk Group for restraint, additional skirmishes took place in August and September. Fears of a new war also were heightened in November 2014, when the Armenian army was conducting military exercises in the territory of Azerbaijan in violation of international law. An Armenian army helicopter fying close to Azerbaijani civilian settlements was shot down by the Azerbaijani army (BBC 2014), leading to some of the most prolonged exchange of fre in the confict since 1994. Although the ceasefre was violated almost every day after May 1994, the worries about a full-blown war peaked in the April 2016 skirmishes (Shiriyev 2017). The war, which Azerbaijan and Armenia accused each other of instigating, lasted four days before Russia’s mediation took hold. Both sides suffered approximately the same number of casualties, estimated between 100 and 500 for each country. Numerous governments and international organizations including the UN, OSCE and EU along with the governments of US, Russia and Turkey condemned the renewed war. Many regional states including Turkey, Ukraine, Georgia, Belarus and Pakistan also expressed their support for Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. After the April 2016 War, Russia intensifed its mediation efforts between the parties, with Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov leading the plan. Both sides saw the plan as Uploaded by S. M. Safi
162 Araz Aslanli hopefully positive but nevertheless not coming to fruition as both countries did not trust each other in their capacity to honor the terms. The latest round of negotiations took on a similar environment of uncertainty as had been the case in the early 1990s. The most substantial efforts in negotiations during the interim occurred with the Madrid Principles, as adopted by the OSCE Minsk in 2009. The principles included returning the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh territories to Azerbaijani control, along with provisional guarantees for security and self-governance in setting an interim status for the affected territories. The Principles also stipulated a corridor to connect Armenia to the Karabakh area. The Principles left open the process for a permanent determination of the legal status through a “legally blinding expression of will”, as well as legal provisions to allow all displaced individuals and refugees to return to their original locations of residence. Finally, the Principles called for international security guarantees up to and including a peacekeeping force (https://www.osce.org/mg/51152. 10 July 2009). In the spring of 2020 Pashinyan and the Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs abandoned the Madrid Principles, thereby ending ten years of negotiation on the document which both sides had accepted in principle. This followed Pashinyan’s August 5, 2019 exhortation for unifcation (that is Karabakh is Armenia) and an earlier declaration by Defence Minister David Tonoyan referencing a new war about new territories (March 30, 2019). By July 2020, the probability of new hostilities increased dramatically. Azerbaijani offcial sources, who were confrmed by their Turkish and Russian counterparts as well as former Armenian President Robert Kocharyan, said that Armenian forces provoked the newest skirmishes (ARKA 2020). Armenia countered, indicating that clashes started on July 20 because Azerbaijan forces breached the Armenian border with Jeeps but the claim was not ascertained. Some observers believed that a target was in the Tovuz region of Azerbaijan, which represents the energy transit corridors connecting Azerbaijan to the West via Georgia. An Azerbaijani high-ranking general’s death in the latest round of hostilities also sparked emotions in Azerbaijani public opinion briefy. After the July provocation, Azerbaijan voiced its dissatisfaction about the transportation of military munitions from Russia to Armenia, an indicator that Armenia, indeed, was preparing for a broader war. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, in a phone conversation with Russian president Vladimir Putin in August, asked to clarify the issue. Aliyev also spoke about his country’s worries that Armenia was preparing for a new war before the UN General Assembly in September. He asked that the UN put more pressure on Armenia to abide by and act accordingly upon the four existing resolutions regarding the Karabakh confict. Diplomatic pleas went unanswered and a new Karabakh War began in the early hours of September 27. The latest hostilities accelerated at a faster Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Politics of Ceasefre and Occupation 163 pace than in the frst war during the 1990s. Three ceasefre attempts (October 10, 17 and 26) with Russia, France and the US acting as mediators also went unanswered (New York Times, October 17, 2020). The prospects for compromise were bleak. Armenia advanced its case for its national foreign policy as carrying out new wars for new territories, which this time targeted civilian settlements far from the confict zone. Azerbaijan, meanwhile, insisted that any agreement take into account the four standing resolutions passed by the UN Security Council, which called for the repatriation of the Armenian-occupied territories to Azerbaijan’s control. Thus, the probability that one side would prevail with a far more defnitive result than in the last war was high as well. Unlike, in the 1990s, when its domestic political situation was unstable and its military was not well equipped or funded, Azerbaijan entered the 2020 war in a stronger position, while enjoying a favorable ally in Turkey to counteract Russia’s infuence and presence. In the war’s fnal days, the outcome became apparent, as Azerbaijani forces liberated Shusha, a strategic victory with acute symbolic meaning for Azerbaijani identity, and cleared the way to retake Khankendi a few kilometers away. On November 9, the expectations that the war was about to end with a total military defeat of Armenia were confrmed by three incidents. First, a Russian helicopter was shot down on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border with an Azerbaijani missile. Second, Armenian-launched Iskander missiles targeting Shusha and Baku were intercepted and destroyed before landing. Third, messages on social media from Armenian Prime Minister Pashinyan indicated that a “peace agreement under heavy conditions” was being signed, which occurred on November 10. The agreement terms confrmed Azerbaijan’s conclusive defeat of Armenia, with the liberation of all contested and occupied territories and the deployment of a Russian peacekeeping force in the region. Armenian governmental offcials attempted to frame the terms as positively as possible, noting that the agreement preserved Armenian sovereignty, albeit without the territories it had occupied since 1994. Nevertheless, the latest armistice, when viewed in context with what transpired in the last quarter century, makes evident that much work remains to be accomplished in drafting a comprehensive plan for a sustainable, durable peace. Conclusion Although one can trace the historical roots of the Armenia-Azerbaijan confict back at least two centuries, the most consequential period occurred in short periods at both ends of the twentieth century—in particular, the ten years spanning the latter half of the 1980s and the frst half of the 1990s. While the confict escalated particularly in the last four years of the Soviet Union’s existence, the skirmishes in 1990 and 1991 accelerated into a fullscale war in 1992. Regional and international powers had hoped to keep Uploaded by S. M. Safi
164 Araz Aslanli the confict at a simmering stage while preventing it from boiling over into a full-blown war, even as there were diplomatic opportunities to explore solutions through negotiations in a geopolitical climate that had shifted the spheres of infuence with the Soviet collapse. When the parties acted with the feeling of “completing their historical missions” or “compensating what they paid for”, the war was prosecuted, only to end with a ceasefre in 1994 that did not come about easily, save for the reason of combat fatigue amidst circumstances of depleted resources for both the Armenian and Azerbaijani militaries. In the 1990s, Azerbaijan claimed that the Nagorno-Karabakh region legally and historically belonged to her, believing that diplomatic means would affrm this. On the other hand, Armenia sought to exercise its own claim through invasion, concluding that the Karabakh region was naturally a part of Greater Armenia, a position supported by Russia and Iran, both militarily and diplomatically. Azerbaijan, on the other hand, had the diplomatic and military support of Turkey, although such backing was not as pronounced or as direct as in the case of Russia with Armenia. Another key counterpoint centered, respectively, on economic and political concerns, with Western powers eying prospects of lucrative partnerships with Azerbaijan because of the country’s generous stock of natural resources as well as the political infuence of a deeply coordinated network of Armenian lobby groups with legislatures and parliaments in the Western powers. The pall of exhaustion led to the signing of the armistice in 1994 but there also was no articulated path to negotiating a sustainable peace. The situation ended in a deadlock, a frozen state where likely a new war eventually would be triggered. There are numerous reasons why so many ceasefre attempts, peace negotiations and solution processes failed, in addition to just those directly involving Armenia and/or Azerbaijan. Undoubtedly, the unconditional extremes respectively taken up by both nations made compromise extremely diffcult to achieve. Both countries were responding to embedded, subconscious traces of untreated and unresolved historical traumas, entrenched ethnic nationalism and fresh wounds opened up from decades-old scabs that accompanied the destruction of community and widespread casualties on both sides. Together, these factors constituted a foreboding psychological obstacle in terms of preparing a mindset conducive to effective bilateral diplomatic engagement. Meanwhile, foreign powers, inadvertently and deliberately in some instances, have perpetuated this complex of psychological obstacles through their misinformed intentions of intervention in the confict, without acknowledging that their acts could trigger mutual hatred and ignite uncontrollable forces of extreme nationalism. Thus, mediators failed to uphold their duty by appreciating clearly such embedded manifestations in the affairs and interests defning the nations in the South Caucasus. Global rivalries were translated into struggles for controlling the diplomatic engagement in the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Politics of Ceasefre and Occupation 165 region, mainly for the purpose of status quo, which inhibited the process and the environment for fostering a durable resolution to a confict that had stood for at least two centuries. In particular, Russia had dodged the confict’s entrenched parameters, at the beginning and the end of its 75-year existence as the Soviet Union. Simply, Russia, by successfully implementing a strategy of divide and rule, kept control in the South Caucasus, exploiting the factors of Armenia’s territorial claims against Azerbaijan and the always present probability of hostilities or full-blown war. But, the situation also was never mitigated by the approach nor the diplomatic stances taken up by the UN, OSCE and other international and regional organizations, which believed they could resolve the confict. The UN Security Council failed to make serious attempts to implement the four resolutions adopted in 1993 or to advocate sanctions that might have compelled Armenia to come in good faith to the bargaining table. In 2020, as the Second Karabakh War erupted, the four resolutions were still active but they barely registered as a usable foundation in attempts to prevent war from erupting. Despite efforts and resolutions calling upon Armenia to vacate the affected territories by the UN General Assembly, the European Parliament, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, Armenia did not cede even a modicum of consideration to the efforts. Furthermore, none of the great powers or regional actors followed up by persuading Armenia to reconsider their stance or even to chastise Armenian efforts to sabotage any of the mediation attempts, which often were serious and substantial. Ceasefre violations were generally smaller in scale and reconcilable without jeopardizing ongoing efforts to achieve a comprehensive sustainable peace plan. After 1994, the closest the parties arrived at an acceptable plan was in 1997 with a progressive solution proposed by the OSCE Minsk Group and which was accepted by both countries. However, Armenia’s president Ter-Petrosyan, who accepted the plan, resigned in February 1998 and his successor Robert Kocharyan immediately renounced the process. In 1999, direct (non-mediator) negotiations between the parties, which were facilitated by a proposal from the Clinton Administration in Washington, D.C., were on the verge of culminating in a peace agreement at the OSCE Istanbul Summit. But, a domestic terrorist attack by Armenians against their country’s parliament on October 27 abruptly ended the negotiations (New York Times, October, 28, 1999). In the second half of the 2000s, negotiations proceeded more along the lines of preserving the frozen confict status than in resolving the issues at the heart of the confict. The political will for reconciliation had been diluted, with frustrations being vented in occasionally hot outbursts on the frontlines. In its place, Azerbaijani offcials spoke more often about military action to ensure the implementation of the UN Security Council resolutions, while Armenia government representatives talked more about the objective of new wars for new lands. The war, which began on September 27, 2020, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
166 Araz Aslanli was inevitable, given that every nation-state, including the two at the heart of the confict, defaulted to actions and rhetoric, which merely preserved a status quo without resolving any of the entrenched issues in the context of realistic policies. References Abasov, Ali, Haroutiun Khachatrian. The Karabakh Confict Variants of Settlement: Concepts and Reality, 3rd ed. (Baku-Yerevan, 2006): Areat-Noyan Tapan. ‘Armenian Authorities Did Everything to Make War in Nagorno-Karabakh Inevitable, Ex-President Kocharyan Says,’ Arka (5 December 2020), http://arka. am/en/news/politics/armenian_authorities_did_everything_to_make_war_in_ nagorno_karabakh_inevitable_ex_president_kocharya/ Aslanli, Araz. Karabağ Sorunu ve Türkiye-Ermenistan İlişkileri [Karabakh Confict and Turkey-Armenia Relations] (Ankara, 2015): Berikan. ‘Azerbaijan Downs Armenian Helicopter,’ BBC (12 November 2014), https://www. bbc.com/news/world-europe-30025296. ‘The Bishkek Protocol,’ United Nations (1994), https://peacemaker.un.org/ armeniaazerbaijan-bishkekprotocol94 Bloodshed in the Caucasus: Escalation of the Armed Confict in Nagorno Karabakh (Helsinki, 1992): Human Rights Watch. Boudreaux, Richard. “Despite Appeals, Karabakh Battles Rage”, Los Angeles Times (5 January 1993). Cafersoy, Nazim. Elçibey Dönemi Azerbaycan Dış Politikası (Haziran 1992–Haziran 1993) [Azerbaijan Foreign Policy during the Elchibey Period (June 1992–June 1993)] (Ankara, 2001): ASAM. Cafersoy, Nazim. Eyalet-merkez düzeyinden eşit statüye: Azerbaycan-Rusya ilişkileri (1991–2000) [From Region-Center Relationship Level to Equal Status: Azerbaijan-Russia Relations (1991–2000)] (Ankara, 2000): ASAM. Chorbajan, Levon, Patrik Donabedian and Claude Mutafan. The Caucasian Knot: The History and Geopolitics of Nagorno Karabagh (London, 1995): Zed Books. Cornell, Svante E. The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict. Report No. 46 (Uppsala, 1999): Uppsala University, Department of East European Studies. de Waal, Thomas. Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan through Peace and War (New York, 2003): New York University Press. ‘The Face of a Massacre,’ Newsweek (16 March 1992). Gasparyan, Arsen. ‘Dinamika Karabakskovo Konfikta; Rol Rossiskoy Federasii v Evo Uregulirovanii,’ Central Asian and the Caucasus (1999), 6, https://www.ca-c. org/journal/cac-06-1999/gasparyan.shtml ‘General Assembly Adopts Resolution Reaffrming Territorial Integrity of Azerbaijan, Demanding Withdrawal of All Armenian Forces,’ United Nations (14 March 2008), https://www.un.org/press/en/2008/ga10693.doc.htm. ‘Helsinki Additional Meeting of the CSCE Council 24 March 1992 Summary of Conclusions,’ OSCE (1992), http://www.osce.org/documents/mcs/1992/03/4150_ en.pdf. ‘Ilham Aliyev Delivered a Speech at General Debates of 75th Session of United Nations General Assembly in a Video Format,’ President of the Republic of Azerbaijan (24 September 2020), https://en.president.az/articles/40937. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Politics of Ceasefre and Occupation 167 ‘Joint Statement of the Heads of State in Tehran,’ United Nations (1992), https:// peacemaker.un.org/sites/peacemaker.un.org/files/ArmeniaAzerbaijanIran_ JointStatementHeadsofState1992.pdf К Событиям В Нагорном Карабахе. Pravda (24 February) Карабах: Хронология Конфликта [Karabakh: Chronology of the Confict], BBC (28 August 2005), http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/russian/news/newsid_3681000/3681079. stm Kocharyan, Robert. Жизнь и свобода: Автобиография экс-президента Армении и Карабаха [Life and Freedom: Autobiography of ex-President of Armenia and Karabakh] (Moscow, 2018): Интеллектуальная литература. ‘Massacre by Armenians,’ The New York Times (3 March 1992). Mnatsakanyan, Zohrab. ‘Хрупкий Мир Нагорного Карабаха’ [The Fragile Peace of Nagorno-Karabakh], Nezavisimaya Gazeta (13 May 2019). ‘Nowhere to Hide for Azeri Refugees,’ The Guardian (2 September 1993). ‘Resolution 822,’ United Nations (1993a), http://unscr.com/en/resolutions/822. ‘Resolution 853,’ United Nations (1993b), http://unscr.com/en/resolutions/853. ‘Resolution 874,’ United Nations (1993c), http://unscr.com/en/resolutions/874. ‘Resolution 884,’ United Nations (1993d), http://unscr.com/en/resolutions/884. Sarkisyan, Manvel. Политические проблемы Кавказа и Армения: Политика Армении в регионе [Political Problems of the Caucasus and Armenia: Armenia’s Politics in the Region] (Yerevan, 1998): Армянский Центр Стратегических и Национальных Исследований. Shiriyev, Zaur. ‘The “Four-Day War”: Changing Paradigms in the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict,’ Turkish Policy Quarterly (2017), 15 (4), 53–64. Toropygin, A. V. and Торопыгин, А. В. ‘Бишкекский протокол. Как это было: воспоминания и комментарии’ [Bishkek Protocol. How It Was: Memories and Comments], Eurasian Integration: Economics, Law, Politics (2019), 1(1), 71–78. Trianovski, Anton. ‘Armenia and Azerbaijan Reach New Cease-Fire for Nagorno-Karabakh,’ The New York Times (17 October 2020), https://www. nytimes.com/2020/10/17/world/europe/armenia-azerbaijan-truce-nagornokarabakh.html Wines, Michael. ‘Prime Minister and Others Slain in Armenian Siege’. The New York Times (28 October 1999). ‘Zheleznovodsk Declaration,’ United Nations (1991), https://peacemaker.un.org/ sites/peacemaker.un.org/fles/Azerbaijan_ZheleznovodskDeclaration1991.pdf Uploaded by S. M. Safi
8 The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict International Law Appraisal Farhad Mirzayev History of the Confict The confict over Nagorno-Karabakh, a historic land of Azerbaijan, started after collapse of the Russian Empire in the beginning of the twentieth century, when Armenia brought territorial claims against Azerbaijan and heavy fghts took place all over the borders of two unrecognised states. At the end of WWI in 1918, before consideration of its recognition as an independent state by the League of Nations, Azerbaijan was mandated to Britain.1 The British Governor-General Thomson of Baku, who was representing the allied forces of the Entente, recognised Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan, and approved the appointment of an Azerbaijani national as a Governor of Karabakh.2 Thompson called upon Armenian armed forces to immediately leave Nagorno-Karabakh and Zangezur (currently the Syunik region of Armenia) and assisted in the restoration of Baku’s administration in the regions.3 Immediately after granting the British mandate and restoration of Azerbaijani control over Karabakh, the Armenian elders of Karabakh offcially recognised the jurisdiction of Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh upon the condition of a national-cultural autonomy to the Armenian population of Karabakh.4 The Paris Peace Conference later accepted and recognised Azerbaijan’s claims to the region.5 However, after the occupation of Azerbaijan and Armenia by Soviet Russia in 1920, Armenia brought new claims with respect to Karabakh. After lengthy debates and pursuant to the opinion of Armenian leaders supporting the existence of strong economic ties of Karabakh with Azerbaijan on 5 July 1921, the Caucasian Bureau of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party of Bolsheviks made a decision to keep the Nagorno-Karabakh region within Azerbaijan’s boundaries.6 The decision also instructed the Azerbaijan authorities to determine the boundaries of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO).7 In December 1922 the Presidium of the Central Committee of the Azerbaijan SSR Communist Party made a decision on the establishment of autonomy covering only the mountainous part of Karabakh. This decision was reaffrmed in the Resolution of the Committee of 2 July 1923.8 DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-11 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 169 As a result, autonomy with the total area of 4,400 square kilometres without any territorial connection with Armenia was established within the Azerbaijan SSR. The territory and boundaries of the NKAO were defned with an intention of encompassing the majority of the Armenian population through including Armenian villages and settlements and excluding Azerbaijani ones.9 As a result, by 1989 the Armenian population of the NKAO constituted over 76% versus 21% of the Azerbaijani population.10 During the late 1980s, the last years of the Soviet Empire, the nationalistic forces came to power in Armenia and commenced an aggressive campaign on the occupation of Karabakh. Armenia was characterised as more violent and chaotic at the beginning of the confict in 1988 where the innocent Azerbaijanis were killed during pogroms in November and December.11 The hostility between Azerbaijan and Armenia commenced in 1987 with the forceful expatriation of ethnic Azerbaijanis from their historic lands in Armenia, and as a result, over 300,000 Azerbaijanis left the Armenian SSR and over 200 people were killed in this violent exodus.12 The initial stage of the “war of laws” started when on 20 February 1988 the 20th Congress of NKAO’s Armenian Delegates made a decision to secede from the Azerbaijan SSR and unify with the Armenian SSR.13 The decision was made without the Azerbaijani delegates. The Congress of Armenian Delegates appealed to the Supreme Soviet of the USSR with the request to approve the secession decision. However, on 13 June 1988, acting in full compliance with the norms of Soviet legislation, the Supreme Soviet of the Azerbaijan SSR declared illegal the decision of the Congress of Armenian Delegates of Nagorno-Karabakh.14 In response, the radical nationalistic authorities of the Armenian SSR undertook reciprocal measures. On 15 June 1988 the Supreme Soviet of the Armenian SSR enacted the Resolution approving the decision of the Congress of Armenian Delegates on unifcation of the NKAO of the Azerbaijan SSR with the Armenian SSR, and submitted a request to Moscow’s leadership to support this decision.15 The follow-up resolution of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Azerbaijan SSR recognised as void and unconstitutional the secession decision of the NKAO’s legislature as contradicting Azerbaijan’s and the USSR’s legislation.16 The culmination of the confict took place when the Supreme Soviet of the Armenian SSR adopted the Act “On unifcation of the Armenian SSR and the NKAO”.17 In January 1990 the Armenian Supreme Soviet voted to include Nagorno-Karabakh in the programme of its budget and this step was another move by Armenia within the “war of laws”. It is notable since Armenia, which had been denying its direct involvement in the Nagorno-Karabakh confict since its commencement, undertook certain provocative illegal steps for the legitimisation of its claims to NKAO and made a unilateral decision on unifcation. It can be argued that the 1 December 1989 Decision of the Supreme Soviet of the Armenian SSR and other acts were evidence of the direct involvement of Armenia in the Nagorno-Karabakh confict since the frst days. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
170 Farhad Mirzayev Soviet Constitutional Law Since international law refers the issues of self-determination to the internal jurisdiction of states it is important to briefy analyse the USSR’s domestic legislation.18 Armenia’s action within the “war of laws” was an unprecedented step contradicting the norms and principles of the USSR Constitution and Soviet laws. The Supreme Soviet authorities expressly recognised the absence of any grounds for a change of the boundaries and territorial frameworks of the Azerbaijan SSR and the Armenian SSR. In fact, Armenia’s actions were unprecedented attempts to redraw the territorial map of the USSR.19 On 23 March 1988 the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR in its Resolution “On measures relating to the application of the Union republics with respect to the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Azerbaijan SSR and the Armenian SSR” recognised it as being unacceptable to resolve the complicated territorial issues through the self-established entities that were trying to affect decisions of the supreme state authorities of the USSR.20 Thus, the Presidium declared void and null the actions aimed at the illegal change of the Soviet republics’ boundaries, which were in confict with the USSR Constitution.21 During the plenary session of the USSR Supreme Soviet on 18 July 1988 it was reaffrmed that the NagornoKarabakh region had to be preserved within the Azerbaijan SSR and the Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev blamed Armenians in undermining the communist regime and his policy of perestroika.22 In the Resolution dated 18 July 1988 “On decisions of the Supreme Soviets of the Armenian SSR and the Azerbaijan SSR regarding NagornoKarabakh issue” the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR declared the change of the boundaries of the Azerbaijan SSR and the Armenian SSR as being constitutionally inadmissible under Article 78 of the USSR Constitution stipulating that territories of the union republics could not be changed without their consent.23 Finally, the Resolution of the Presidium of 10 January 1990 “On incompliance of the acts of the Supreme Soviet of the Armenian SSR on Nagorno-Karabakh of 1 December 1989 and 9th January 1990 with USSR Constitution” reaffrmed that the declaration on unifcation of Nagorno-Karabakh with the Armenian SSR without the consent of the Azerbaijan SSR was a serious breach of Article 78 of the USSR Constitution.24 On 27 November 1991 the Constitutional Supervisory Committee of the USSR declared the 1 December 1989 Act of the Armenian SSR on unifcation with the NKAO void and illegal.25 The positions of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet and the Constitutional Supervisory Committee of the USSR are strong grounds to argue that since the beginning the actions of Armenia against Azerbaijan were illegal and a grave violation of the Soviet legislation. The central Moscow authorities reacted with mass criticism and called it an extremist attempt to violate Soviet laws.26 Pursuant to Article 78 of the USSR Constitution that imposed a restriction on territorial changes of Soviet republics without their express consent, the Supreme Soviet of the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 171 USSR on 18 July 1988 made a decision to keep Nagorno-Karabakh within the Azerbaijan SSR.27 However, the Soviet leadership established a direct central administration of Moscow in the NKAO. On 24 March 1988 the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union made a decision to appoint Arkady Volsky as a representative of the central Soviet Government in the NKAO.28 Having established a direct administration of the Moscow central authorities and through support of the Armenian forces, Volsky created favourable conditions for the Armenian militarised groups to serve as foundation for further occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh.29 On 28 November 1989 the Supreme Soviet of the USSR abolished Volsky’s commission and replaced it with the Republican Organisation Committee (Orgcom) of the Azerbaijan SSR.30 The main goal of the Orgcom was the restoration of the Azerbaijan SSR’s jurisdiction over the autonomous region and the re-establishment of the local self-governing bodies. However, facing the military resistance of the Armenian armed groups Orgcom was not able to achieve its main goal. On 10 December 1991 immediately after the proclamation of independence by Azerbaijan, the Armenian separatists of Nagorno-Karabakh held a referendum without the participation of the Azerbaijani population of Nagorno-Karabakh, which at that time constituted 20% of the total population of Nagorno-Karabakh and proclaimed independence from Azerbaijan.31 The so-called “referendum” on unifcation with Armenia was just a collection of signatures from the NKAO’s farms and factories.32 The Declaration of Independence of “the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic” (“NKR”) of 2 September 1991 proclaiming the secession from Azerbaijan was a serious breach of the Soviet Constitution since legislation providing for those territories of the Union republics could not be changed without their consent and their boundaries could be changed only upon the achievement of mutual consent of the relevant republics that had to be approved by the offcial authorities of the USSR. Like the USSR Constitution, both the Azerbaijan SSR and the Armenian SSR constitutions prohibited the change of territory or boundaries without the express consent of these Soviet republics.33 Under the Law of the Azerbaijan SSR on the NKAO the boundaries of this autonomous region could not be changed without Azerbaijan’s consent. Immediately after the collapse of the USSR, Armenia and its military proxy forces in Nagorno-Karabakh fnanced by the Armenian diaspora and with great support of the former Soviet and now Russian regular armed forces still stationed in the region, commenced the active military phase against Azerbaijan through portraying it as a liberation movement of the Karabakhi Armenians. NKAO and seven adjacent regions of Kalbajar, Lachin, Aghdam, Fizuli, Zangilan, Qubadli and Jabrail were occupied by the Armenian armed forces and its proxies. The UN Security Council reacted to this occupation by its four Resolutions Nos. 822, 853, 874 and 884 demanding the immediate withdrawal of the Armenian armed forces Uploaded by S. M. Safi
172 Farhad Mirzayev from the occupied territories.34 It resulted not only in the loss of 20% of Azerbaijan’s territory constituting 890 towns, villages and settlements, 1 million refugees and IDPs, but also in multibillion losses and the deaths of 25,000 and the injury of 50,000 Azerbaijanis.35 The exodus of IDPs in Azerbaijan as a result of the Armenian occupation was the biggest one in Europe since the end of WWII.36 The 1977 USSR Constitution preceded by the 1924 and 1936 constitutions explicitly determined the holders of the secession right, limiting their number to the 15 Soviet republics, constitutional parts of the USSR.37 NKAO was an autonomous region within the Azerbaijan SSR and clearly had no secession right under the 1977 USSR Constitution in contrast to the Azerbaijan SSR and the Armenian SSR along with the other 13 Soviet republics. Only after the declaration of independence by Azerbaijan in response to the illegal actions of the Armenian Supreme Soviet and the declaration of independence by Nagorno-Karabakh on 2 September 1991, did the Azerbaijan legislature pass the Act revoking the NKAO on 26 November 1991.38 Azerbaijan justifed it as a response to the aggressive and illegal actions of Armenia.39 International Law One of the main arguments of Armenia was that there were not any grounds for newly independent Azerbaijan to claim succession to Azerbaijan SSR’s boundaries even though modern independent Azerbaijan had declared itself as a successor state of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (ADR) that existed in 1918–1920 in its 1991 Independence Declaration.40 Based on this contorted reasoning, it is claimed that Nagorno-Karabakh was not a part of ADR and was a disputed territory.41 In this case it should be referred to the principle of stability of boundary treaties that was further incorporated in Article 62 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties.42 The stability of boundary treaties regardless of the fundamental change of circumstances is a norm of customary international law.43 This has been incorporated into the 1969 Vienna Convention on the Law of International Treaties (Article 62) which is widely recognised as a scope of norms of customary international law.44 Although there are some views that the principle on the stability of boundary treaties can be applied only with respect to the external boundaries of the USSR, in this case it also should be applied to the status of Soviet republics under Soviet legislation. All republics of the USSR being parts of the Union had exact internal borders with each other. It was affrmed in Article 78 of the USSR Constitution that the territories and boundaries of Soviet republics could not be changed without their consent and all boundaries between them should be changed only in accordance with their mutual consent and under the bilateral treaties which should be approved afterwards by the Union’s central authorities. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 173 No agreements regarding the change of the territories or boundaries between Azerbaijan and Armenia were ever signed and ratifed. The boundaries between these two Soviet republics were clearly defned in the beginning of the last century.45 The numerous boundary treaties between these republics affrmed the fnal demarcation and delimitation of the borders between them. In the case of Azerbaijan, along with such internal agreements with respect to the change of borders with three Soviet republics (RSFSR, Armenian SSR and Georgian SSR), there is still a valid multilateral treaty referred to as the Treaty of Kars concluded among Azerbaijan, Georgia and Armenia with the Turkish Republic.46 In fact, neither Azerbaijan SSR, nor independent Azerbaijan ever expressed its consent to the secession of Nagorno-Karabakh or its territorial transfer to Armenia or its predecessor, the Armenian SSR. It is necessary to refer to the Soviet laws providing an express right to secession to the 15 Soviet republics, which can be defned based on the 1977 USSR Constitution (article 72) and the established internal administrative borders among these republics. The administrative borders of the former 15 USSR republics encompassed the territories which they proclaimed as their state territories after their declaration of independence upon the collapse of the Soviet Union. Most of self-proclaimed separatist units in the post-Soviet area who declared their secession from the former USSR republics were integral parts of those republics under the latest 1977 Soviet Constitution.47 Under the 1977 USSR Constitution, Nagorno-Karabakh was an autonomous region of the Azerbaijan SSR. The Badinter Commission on Yugoslavia in its Opinions No. 2 and 3, clearly stressed that only those Yugoslav republics were entitled to exercise the right to secession who were granted it under the SRFY Constitution.48 As it has been already emphasised, NKAO did not and could not exercise such right under the USSR’s 1991 Secession Law. In the case of the USSR, the Constitution of which prohibited the change of territory and boundaries of the union republics (Article 78), such reference should be considered as a ground for the application of uti possidetis juris towards the boundaries of Azerbaijan inherited from the Azerbaijan SSR. As it was mentioned previously, the same provisions were in the SFRY Constitution, and the Badinter Commission took it as a ground for strengthening the justifcation for the application of uti possidetis juris towards the administrative boundaries of the former constitutional units of SFRY.49 The provision on the right of secession by the Soviet Constitution granting such right to the Union republics is essential for application of the principle uti possidetis juris. Professor Malcolm N. Shaw rightly comments that uti possidetis is operable only in cases where the internal administrative borders were expressly defned, especially in a federal state.50 In fact, in the federative-type states, administrative units enjoyed much autonomy and possessed clearly defned administrative borders. In the case of the USSR, the references to the constitutional right to secession are important Uploaded by S. M. Safi
174 Farhad Mirzayev for determining the status of the administrative units and the scope of their rights over the territories that they possessed. It can be argued that the provisions of the USSR Constitution stipulating the right to secession of the “sovereign Union republics” as well the ones proclaiming the impossibility of the change of such republics’ territories, served as a solid ground for consensual application of the principle of uti possidetis juris transforming the former administrative borders into the international boundaries of the newly independent states. The reference to the secession right and other relevant provisions of the USSR Constitution, at the top of the hierarchy of legal instruments, should not raise any doubts about the explicit delimitation of the administrative boundaries within the Soviet Union and at the highest state level. The Republic of Azerbaijan was recognised by the international community within its existing boundaries that include also the Nagorno-Karabakh region. Such position has been explicitly expressed by the PACE Special Rapporteur David Atkinson who emphasised that the boundaries of Azerbaijan were recognised by the international community in 1991 upon the recognition of its independence and defnitely included the Nagorno-Karabakh region.51 The Armenian side often refers to the right to external self-determination of the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh as a justifcation for the territorial claims to Azerbaijan. There are some thoughts that self-determination is a strong ground for the changes of boundaries in the post-Soviet area.52 It should be frst defned whether the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh is a people for the purposes of the right to self-determination. As it was mentioned before there is no explicit defnition of “people” under International Law. However, it should be argued that the Armenian population could not be regarded as a “people” since it does not include the Azerbaijani population forcefully expelled from NagornoKarabakh. It is obvious that under International Law the right to external self-determination cannot be granted to all peoples, groups or minorities. This has been clearly addressed by UN Special Rapporteur Asbjorn Eide who emphasised that it is highly negative to claim that all peoples of all territories have the right to such self-determination.53 If to go far beyond the existing interpretation of the term “people” in modern International Law and refer to Hans Kelsen’s understanding of “people” as a state,54 then no legitimate grounds for the self-determination of the Armenian population of the Nagorno-Karabakh region can be produced by Armenia. Even the “remedial theory” to external self-determination granting the secession right to minorities arising as a response to the gross violation of their rights or prevention of their right to exercise their internal selfdetermination55 is not applicable to the case of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict. There are suffcient facts and arguments confrming the absence of any evidence on the violation of the rights of the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh by the central Azerbaijan authorities. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 175 Therefore, it should be argued that if no grounds for the external selfdetermination exist, the reference should be made to the principle of uti possidetis preserving Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and boundaries. It can be argued that in the case of Azerbaijan the Council of Europe explicitly defned that in case of a confict between these two principles, the right to self-determination can be exercised only without violation of the principle of territorial integrity and only through the peaceful means. In response to the request of Azerbaijan’s delegation, the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe stated that exercise of the right to self-determination should comply with all norms and principles of International Law including the principle of territorial integrity.56 The Committee further stated that the right to self-determination can be exercised only through peaceful negotiations, and the use of force for the occupation of territory cannot be recognised as legal.57 Therefore, after the UNSC the Council of Europe was the second authoritative organisation that confrmed that in the case of Nagorno-Karabakh the use of force is not acceptable for the exercise of external self-determination by the Armenians through the violation of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. It should be noted that the NagornoKarabakh Armenians did not try even to negotiate peacefully their right to self-determination with the central Baku authorities. Instead they chose the military way to secede from Azerbaijan and even went far beyond this through the occupation of additional surrounding Azerbaijani territories. Since the beginning of the confict Azerbaijan has chosen a denial policy through non-recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh as a party to the confict and rejecting all arguments in favour of external self-determination of the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh. For instance, the 10 December 1991 referendum in Armenian populated Nagorno-Karabakh that announced NKAO as an independent state was never accepted or approved by Azerbaijan or any of its state authorities. Azerbaijan basically demanded the liberation of the occupied territories and the negotiation of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, but with the primary condition of preserving its territorial integrity and inviolability of internationally recognised boundaries that includes also Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan has been relying much on International Law and the position of the international community recognising its territorial integrity and boundaries. The occupation of Azerbaijani territories was expressly condemned in the UN SC Resolutions 822, 853, 874 and 884, UN GA Resolutions 48/11, 60/285 and 62/243; PACE Resolutions 1059, 1119, 1416, 1553 and 2085, EU Parliament Resolutions 2216 and 2315; OIC Resolutions 21/9, 25/9, 10/11, 10/37, 9/39, 10/42, 10/43, 4/43 and 12/46, etc.58 Moreover, by occupying the Azerbaijani territories for many years which resulted in ethnic cleansing, mass destruction of Azerbaijani cultural and religious establishments, heritage and property in those occupied territories Armenia is in a breach of its obligations to prohibit and eliminate discrimination, and guarantee enjoyment of cultural rights by Azerbaijanis under Uploaded by S. M. Safi
176 Farhad Mirzayev Articles 1, 2 and 5 of the 1969 International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD). Both Armenia (1993) and Azerbaijan (1996) joined and ratifed CERD and accepted International Court of Justice (ICJ) jurisdiction, which gives grounds to Azerbaijan to bring Armenia to the ICJ. Effective Control and Occupation by Armenia In accordance with international law, if a territory is under occupation, then the norms of international humanitarian law are applied, and the party occupying this territory is fully responsible for violation of the norms of international law. Despite Armenia’s denial of its role, and intention to introduce Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent party of the confict, the former’s direct involvement in the occupation of the Azerbaijani territories and the exercise of control over them never caused any doubts. The landmark case in this regard is the Decision of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in the case of Chiragov and others v. Armenia (2015), where pursuant to the claim of the Azerbaijani IDPs from Lachin, the ECHR clearly determined that from the very frst day of the confict Armenia exercised effective control over the self-proclaimed “NKR” and the latter entity can in no way be considered an independent state, and there is the highest degree of integration between Armenia and the “NKR”.59 The ECHR in its earlier Zalyan, Sargsyan and Serobyan v. Armenia case in 2016 also confrmed this fact about “complete political, military and fnancial control” by Armenia over the so-called formation of “NKR”.60 This was again reaffrmed by the ECHR in 2016 in the case of Muradyan v Armenia, where the Court reaffrmed Armenia’s full responsibility for international violations in the occupied territories, including the European Convention on Human Rights.61 For almost 30 years of the occupation of the Azerbaijani territories, Armenia committed various crimes under international law62 including illegal settlement of Syrian and Lebanese Armenians in the occupied territories for the purposes of changing the demographic situation and attempting to create a fait accompli,63 drug traffcking,64 illegal arms trading,65 money laundering,66 urbicide by wiping out completely Azerbaijani cities and other settlements,67 pillage, destruction of historical and cultural heritage68 and environmental crimes.69 Territorial Integrity and Uti Possidetis v. Self-Determination The issues of changing borders as a result of secession without the intervention of other states are the subject falling under the scope of the constitutional law of a concerned state.70 As a clear example the reference should be made to Catalonia’s attempts to secede from Spain, where the issue was considered exclusively within the framework of the constitutional law of Spain, which Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 177 is confrmed by the decision of the Constitutional Court of Spain from 2017 on the non-constitutionality of the secession of Catalonia.71 A similar situation was in the case of Quebec’s attempts to secede from Canada, where the Supreme Court of Canada also confrmed the inadmissibility of such secession within the framework of Canadian constitutional law.72 In addition, the need for a constitutional right to secession was especially emphasised by the Badinter Commission in the case of recognition of the legitimacy of secession on the part of only six former constitutional units of the SFRY, but not individual autonomous subjects.73 The international community has recognised that only those units that have been granted such a right by the Yugoslav constitution have the right of secession.74 Similarly, the Soviet Constitution granted the right of secession to only 15 union republics. Therefore, Armenia’s arguments that Nagorno-Karabakh was never a part of Azerbaijan and it lawfully seceded from the USSR under the Soviet laws are groundless. The Badinter Commission’s opinions on the confict of external selfdetermination and uti possidetis in the case of Yugoslavia confrm the inadmissibility on the use of external self-determination for the change of existing boundaries of newly independent states that were constitutional units of the SFRY.75 Undoubtedly, there are many similarities between these two socialist federations, their constitutions and federative organisation structures. Like the collapse of Yugoslavia,76 in the course of the USSR’s dissolution the international community did not recognise the right of autonomous republics and oblasts to external self-determination.77 In the case of Yugoslavia, it was expressly stated that the former autonomous units, being parts of the six former constitutional units of the SFRY, were entitled to the right to external self-determination neither under the SFRY Constitution (which lacked any provisions on secession right of the autonomous units) nor under modern international law protecting territorial integrity and internationally recognised boundaries of sovereign states.78 The Badinter Commission referred to the 1974 SFRY Constitution, which stipulated that territories and borders of the four constitutional units of the SFRY could not be changed without their consent.79 An identical stance can be applied to the USSR republics, where article 78 of the 1977 USSR Constitution expressly provided that the territories of the Soviet republics could not be changed without their consent.80 While the NKAO was not entitled under the Soviet Constitution to the secession right, claims on the exercise of the right to secession from Azerbaijan upon the USSR’s dissolution are groundless. As opined by some commentators, there could be no “secession from secession” by the autonomous units of the former Soviet republics since these units have a right to secession neither under domestic laws nor under international law.81 As mentioned above, the position of various states and international organisations remains unchanged and there is no support for external self-determination impairing the territorial integrity of existing sovereign states.82 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
178 Farhad Mirzayev In fact, the dissolution of the USSR was more peaceful than that of the SFRY. Under the provisions of the Soviet Constitution which granted the secession right to the former 15 constitutional units of the USSR within their former administrative borders, they peacefully agreed on the transformation of such borders into the international boundaries of newly independent states. Such decision was expressly refected in numerous bilateral and multilateral treaties and instruments initiated and signed within the CIS format. Armenia signed and joined all these agreements without a single reservation, which means an express agreement to recognise Azerbaijan’s international boundaries within the former administrative borders of the Azerbaijan SSR. Under the principle of uti possidetis Nagorno-Karabakh is a part of the Republic of Azerbaijan. Considering the historical background of the USSR collapse, the whole process of delimitation of the boundaries of the former Soviet republics clearly indicates that the former constitutive parts of the USSR agreed to apply the principle of uti possidetis juris with respect to their boundaries and territories. Debates over the determination of boundaries of the newly established CIS member states strongly encouraged the parties involved to fx their positions in the agreements that would guarantee the inviolability of boundaries existing within the former USSR.83 Most of the former Soviet republics supporting the idea of inviolability of frontiers relied on instability in the region, threats to the peace and security, and common principles of international law. Even the EC Guidelines on Recognition of New States in Eastern Europe and Soviet Union of 16 December 1991 explicitly stated the respect of all existing boundaries that could be changed only through and upon achievement of mutual consent.84 Therefore, it can be argued that uti possidetis juris has a consensual nature in the case of the post-Soviet area, since upon exercising their right to self-determination the former USSR republics agreed on the transformation of the former administrative borders into the international boundaries of the newly independent states. Due to the fact that internal administrative borders within the USSR as a federative state were explicitly determined and expressly guaranteed by the constitutional right to secession and the states further agreed on transformation of such borders into the international boundaries, it can be argued that the principle of uti possidetis juris was indeed applied and that it has solid grounds to prevail over the right to external self-determination by former autonomous units. The same approach is taken by scholars who argue that in the case of the USSR and the SFRY it was nothing but the application of the principle of uti possidetis juris.85 Article 5 of the 8 December 1991 Agreement on the establishment of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) signed in Minsk proclaimed that the Parties should recognise and respect the territorial integrity and the inviolability of existing boundaries within the CIS.86 It was reaffrmed in the 21 December 1991 Alma-Ata Declaration signed by the 11 former Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 179 republics of the former USSR with a follow-up upon Georgia’s joining to all these instruments. This Declaration affrms the obligations of member states of the CIS to recognise and respect the territorial integrity and the inviolability of the existing boundaries of the member states.87 The CIS Charter signed and approved by all member states on 22 January 1993 in Minsk in article 3 affrms a respect of the territorial integrity of member states and recognition of the existing boundaries, i.e. the transformation of the former administrative borders of the former USSR republics into international boundaries.88 Moreover, in 1994 the member states of the CIS signed the new Declaration “On Respect of Sovereignty, Territorial Integrity and Inviolability of Boundaries of Member States” which reinforced the application of the principle of uti possidetis juris to the territory and boundaries of the former USSR republics.89 It is surprising that Armenia violated its obligations both under the UN Charter and the CIS Charter as well as numerous international treaties signed and entered within the CIS through the occupation of 20% of Azerbaijan’s territory through the use of force90 and also kept those territories under occupation for some 30 years. Obviously, by signing the UN Charter, the CIS Foundation Agreement, the Almaty Declaration, the CIS Charter and a number of other relevant legal instruments without any reservations, Armenia has recognised the territorial integrity and inviolability of boundaries of the Republic of Azerbaijan, which certainly legally implies that Nagorno-Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan.91 International law recognises any attempts to infringe the peace and the security as a serious violation of the UN Charter. Such actions will be declared illegal by the UNSC as occurred in the case of the Katangese province of Congo.92 Moreover, international law does not permit secession as a tool for the re-drawing of the recognised international boundaries as was expressed in Advisory Opinion No 2 of the Badinter Commission.93 One should also refer to the position of the international community in the Aaland dispute, where it was stated that the compromise to national minorities with respect to the secession from the society and the state to which they belong on the basis of lingual, religious and ethnic differences would result in the accession of anarchy in the international arena which in its own turn contradicts the concept of state as a territorial and political unit.94 In the Reference re Secession of Quebec case the Supreme Court of Canada stated that although the population of Quebec could be qualifed as a people, it was not entitled to the right of external self-determination under international law impairing the territorial integrity of sovereign Canada. However, it should seek self-determination within the existing state.95 In the Katangese People’s Congress v. Zaire case the African Commission of Human Rights emphasised that the exercise of self-determination by Katanga should comply with the factors of sovereignty and territorial integrity of Zaire.96 The same position was taken by the ECHR in the United Communist Party of Turkey and Others v. Turkey where it was stated that the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
180 Farhad Mirzayev minorities’ rights to self-determination should be exercised within the state boundaries of Turkey on a mutual basis with the democratic restructuring and without damaging the territorial integrity of Turkey.97 Clearly, the self-proclaimed “NKR” never exercised self-determination and has no statehood features under the Montevideo Convention. The ECHR in various cases expressly defned that the Republic of Armenia is exercising a full effective control over the “NKR” and the latter lacks any attributes of statehood.98 Three Decade Long Peace Talks and OSCE Minsk Group’s Failure With the mediation of Russia in May 1994 the conficting sides signed the Bishkek Protocol on Cease-Fire that put an end to the First Karabakh War.99 Under pressure of the world’s leading states the Nagorno-Karabakh confict was then submitted to the CSCE (OSCE) for further peaceful settlement. For these purposes, the OSCE established the Minsk Group on 24 March 1992 in the course of the meeting of the ministers of foreign affairs in Helsinki.100 Italy was the frst Chair of the Minsk Group and undertook several attempts to settle the confict in 1993.101 However, the aggressive military campaign of Armenia diminished the attempts of the peace mediation by the Minsk Group in early 1993. Another subsequent chairman of the Minsk Group was Sweden. During the Budapest summit on 5–6 December 1994, Russia became a permanent co-chairman.102 On 21 April 1995 Sweden was replaced by Finland, but after the Lisbon summit on 2–3 December 1996 the number of permanent co-chairmen became three. Since the Lisbon summit Russia, France and the US have become permanent co-chairmen of the Minsk Group.103 Other regional players like Turkey and Iran proposed their mediation services. However, due to certain problems between Armenia and Turkey and between Azerbaijan and Iran such mediation was never able to positively effect the settlement of the conficts.104 Since 1994 all the confict resolution proposals of the mediators were based on either the “package deal” or the “phased deal” settlement.105 While the “package deal” settlement implied fnding simultaneous solutions for all aspects of the confict, including the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, the “phased deal” referred to resolution in stages starting with de-occupation of the surrounding regions by Armenia, restoring communications and only after all negotiating the status of the breakaway region. In fact, the “package deal” meant the status for Nagorno-Karabakh in exchange of other occupied surrounding territories, while the “phased deal” implied the liberation of the territories in exchange of the status. Thus, for over three decades of its mediation services the OSCE Minsk Group was not able to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh confict and the UN Security Council resolutions remained unenforced. The “Key West Talks” took place in 1999. They referred to the withdrawal of Armenian troops from the six surrounding occupied Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 181 territories of Azerbaijan, granting a special status to Nagorno-Karabakh within Azerbaijan, and keeping the Lachin corridor in the latter’s control. This plan was to be guaranteed by international peace-keeping forces.106 However, the “Key West Talks” became another lost opportunity due to the non-constructive position of Armenia, which opted out from all “Key West” agreements.107 In addition, the various so-called “Goble Plan”, “Common State”, “Kazan formula”, “Madrid principles” and “Lavrov Plan” confict settlement proposals were never mutually accepted by the parties.108 Most of these peace plans were never disclosed to the public and some were even offcially denied, but information from various diplomatic and political sources provides an overall impression what was a subject of each such settlement proposal. “Goble Plan” (1994). This plan named after the American diplomat implied the fnal solution of the Karabakh confict based on the exchange of equal size territories between Armenia and Azerbaijan. It envisaged the return of the occupied regions of Azerbaijan and exchange of a part of the Meghri region in the south of Armenia (border of Iran) with the Lachin corridor linking Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia.109 “Common State” (1998). Implied creation of a confederative state between Azerbaijan and so-called “NKR”. It was immediately rejected by Azerbaijan as the one contributing into independence of Nagorno-Karabakh. Under this plan all outstanding issues should be settled simultaneously.110 “Key West Talks” (1999). Implied liberation of fve or six occupied territories and their return to Azerbaijan except for Lachin and immediate discussion on conducting an independence referendum in Nagorno-Karabakh and its timing.111 “Madrid Principles” (2007). The Basic Principles set up demilitarisation of the confict zone and provided an interim status for NagornoKarabakh with guarantees for security and self-governance for local Armenians. Under this plan it was required to guarantee the security of the Lachin corridor and determine its status through a referendum. The plan also provided the return of all IDPs and a necessity of deploying peacekeeping forces.112 “Kazan Formula” (2011). This implied the liberation of all occupied regions surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh in exchange for Azerbaijan’s lifting the economic blockade of Armenia with a full resumption of the economic and humanitarian cooperation. This plan also provided for the return of all IDPs and refugees to their homes, demilitarisation of the liberated districts, signing of a non-use of force agreement, deploying peacekeepers and postponing the status issue for an uncertain time.113 “Lavrov Plan” (2018–2019). This plan provided a phased withdrawal by Armenia from the occupied surrounding territories and deploying the Russian peacekeeping forces as a guarantee for the Karabakh Armenians’ security. Under this plan 5 out of 7 occupied surrounding territories except for Lachin and Kalbajar which would remain under Armenian control to Uploaded by S. M. Safi
182 Farhad Mirzayev guarantee a safety of transit from Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh had to be returned to Azerbaijan. It also provided that Nagorno-Karabakh’s fnal status and the return of Azerbaijani IDPs should be postponed.114 Only once in 1997 did Armenia and Azerbaijan come close to the settlement of the confict when the former Armenian President Levon Ter-Petrosyan expressed consent with the OSCE Minsk Group proposal on the “phased deal”, a stepwise plan implying the liberation of six occupied Azerbaijani regions, returning of IDPs, determining the status of Shusha and Lachin, and, fnally determining the legal status of NagornoKarabakh.115 However, the Armenian opposition comprised of the ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh and led by Robert Kocharyan forced Ter-Petrosyan to resign. Armenia offcially negated all the arrangements made by Ter-Petrosyan previously expressed on behalf of Armenia during the Minsk Group peace process. The Karabakhi Armenians’ reign commenced in Armenia from that time, which lasted until Nikol Pashinyan’s election as prime minister of Armenia in 2018. As a party who strongly committed to the principle of amicable settlement of disputes and patiently waiting for this confict’s peaceful settlement for almost 26 years, Azerbaijan was not satisfed with no progress in the peace talks and heavily criticised the Minsk Group for passiveness and lack of actions.116 It could be argued that the OSCE Minsk Group’s failure contributed to the 2020 war between Armenia and Azerbaijan. It was clearly stressed by the Azerbaijani president during his meeting with the Minsk Group co-chairs in the aftermath of the war that they had failed to prevent this war and solve the confict for all these years.117 2020 Escalation, Second Karabakh War and 10 November Tripartite Ceasefre Agreement At the peak of the global war with the COVID-19 pandemic, starting from 12 July 2020 the world was also witnessing a tragic escalation of the confict between the two former Soviet republics in the South Caucasus. Both countries faced serious challenges and the negative coronavirus statistics had been rather stable for some time. However, in July 2020 the Armenian regular armed forces attacked Azerbaijani border territory in the Tovuz region. Although the two countries had had an unresolved confict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan for decades, and at that time Armenia still illegally occupied 20% of Azerbaijani territory, the clash provoked by Armenia took place at the Azerbaijani-Armenian border. This was quite unusual, since for all these years any escalations between the rivals took place only in and around Nagorno-Karabakh. In 2020, Armenia proclaimed the so-called “Tonoyan Doctrine”, a strategy to capture further territory of Azerbaijan in a bid to force the latter to accede to the occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh and its surrounding regions.118 Further, Armenian PM Pashinyan’s statement Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 183 “Artsakh [Karabakh] is Armenia, and that’s it!” and attendance at “NKR President” Arayik Arutunyan’s inauguration in Shusha heavily contributed to the escalation with Azerbaijan.119 This strategy was further juxtaposed with continued attacks on Azerbaijan’s civilian population in the border regions. The July events in the Tovuz region of Azerbaijan were qualifed as military aggression against Azerbaijan.120 This was a violation of the fundamental principles of international law enshrined in the UN Charter such as the principle of the non-use of force, the principle of inviolability of state frontiers, the principle of the territorial integrity of states and the principle of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms. It is also necessary to recall the numerous conventions and regional agreements to which Armenia had joined within the framework of the Council of Europe, OSCE and other international organisations. Numerous warnings by Azerbaijan and calls to the international community to urge Armenia to stop continuous attacks on Azerbaijani civilians and military objectives were not heard. President Ilham Aliyev addressed these issues and Azerbaijan’s concerns at the 75th Session of the United Nations General Assembly, where he noted that legal action would be taken against those responsible.121 Armenian attacks – including those carried out by their proxies – continued after President Ilham Aliyev’s address. An attack on Azerbaijani armed forces between July-September 2020 was qualifed by the latter as an act of aggression.122 The position of the International Court of Justice for such cases was clearly expressed in the Nicaragua case, where the Court determined that military action of regular armed forces of one state in relation to the international borders of another state is an armed attack and aggression.123 Therefore, the attacks by the regular Armenian armed forces and their proxies against Azerbaijani armed forces and civilians were precisely qualifed as an act of aggression against Azerbaijan. The military action initiated by Azerbaijan on 27 September 2020 was an adequate and proportionate response to the continued act of aggression by Armenia. Azerbaijan in its turn invoked its inherent right to self-defence under Article 51 of UN Charter.124 All Azerbaijani military operations were conducted strictly within the requirements of the international humanitarian laws and the Geneva Conventions. The civilian population of Nagorno-Karabakh was warned to stay away from any military facilities and infrastructure of the occupying forces.125 However, between 27 September 2020 and 10 November 2020, the Armenian attacks on Azerbaijan’s cities, villages and settlements resulted in losses among civilians and extensive damages to civilian property and infrastructure.126 The world’s leading international criminal law experts have qualifed these attacks as war crimes incurring individual criminal responsibility under international law, since they killed 100 Azerbaijani civilians and injured 416 others.127 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
184 Farhad Mirzayev The 2020 war phase commenced from the implementation of unlawful Armenian policies and the hostilities took place exclusively on Azerbaijan’s sovereign soil.128 Azerbaijan argued that the deployment of a large number of Armenian troops and armaments in Azerbaijan’s sovereign territory, qualifes Armenia as the aggressor pursuing annexationist objectives.129 Azerbaijan claims that Armenia attempted to unlawfully incorporate the occupied Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven adjacent districts, change their demographic composition, prevent the return of Azerbaijani IDPs to their homes, and exploit and pillage their natural resources and other wealth.130 Along with ongoing destruction and appropriation of property, and the targeting of civilians and civilian objects, Armenia was responsible for the committing of war crimes during the First Karabakh War (1988– 1994) and the Second Karabakh War (27 September 2020–10 November 2020). During such attacks Armenia ignored international humanitarian law requirements, the principle of distinction prohibiting indiscriminate attacks on non-combatants (civilians) and destruction of civilian objects.131 Such indiscriminate attacks may be qualifed as an intentional attack directed against civilians.132 Direct attacks on civilians and civilian objects in Ganja, Barda, Tartar and other cities of Azerbaijan can be clearly seen from the indiscriminate character of the weapons used such as reactive and ballistic missiles.133 Launching Iskander ballistic missiles of mass destruction on Azerbaijan attempting to destroy the whole cities of Baku and Shusha is another vivid example of the deliberate character of Armenia’s war crimes.134 The Second Karabakh War, also called the “44 days war”, ended up with the Russian brokered ceasefre agreement signed on 10 November 2020 by Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia.135 The tripartite statement itself is a short and ambiguous agreement demonstrating the uncompromising position the parties took and what efforts were made to urge them to sign such an agreement. There is no doubt that this is not the standard humanitarian ceasefre agreement that the parties have concluded three times before. In the meantime, it hardly could be qualifed as a peace agreement. It is rather an act of capitulation with the participation and guarantees of a third party.136 The referred Agreement establishes an immediate ceasefre, placing the Russian peacekeeping forces between the conficting parties for the period of fve years, and put an obligation on the parties to unblock the communication blockade by granting a “Lachin corridor”137 to the Armenians under the control of Russian peacekeepers and a “Zangezur (Sunyik) corridor”138 to Azerbaijan to unblock the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic of Azerbaijan. Under the Agreement the “Center for Control over the Ceasefre” has been established with joint military representations of Russia and Turkey monitoring the overall situation.139 The Agreement itself does not contain anything about the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, while a small portion of Karabakh is still controlled by Armenia backed up now by the Russian peacekeepers. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 185 Remedial Secession? For the implementation of a legitimate secession, several grounds are required: (i) the existence of clearly provided constitutional and legislative mechanisms and/or (ii) the consent of the parent state itself to the implementation of the secession on the part of a particular entity.140 The frst case is the USSR and SFRY, where the right to secede of the constitutional units was enshrined at the constitutional level.141 The second case is a successful secession took place as a result of obtaining approval from the parent states like separation of Singapore from Malaysia in 1965,142 Eritrea from Ethiopia in 1993143 and breakaway of Montenegro from the Yugoslav union state with Serbia.144 In the case of Nagorno-Karabakh none of these grounds ever existed, since under the Soviet law, there was no constitutional right to secession for the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO). In addition, since the beginning of the confict until today, the Azerbaijani authorities have never expressed support and consent to the secession of Nagorno-Karabakh from Azerbaijan. Today we often come across the groundless statements that Nagorno-Karabakh was never a part of independent Azerbaijan and that it allegedly exercised its right to self-determination and seceded from Azerbaijan.145 First, as we can see, there was not one of the conditions for the legitimate secession of the NKAO in accordance with the Soviet and Azerbaijani constitutional law. Second, in accordance with uti possidetis principle, the former administrative borders of the Soviet republics were transformed into the international borders of newly independent states.146 In the absence of legal grounds for legitimate secession, Armenia actively promotes the so-called theory of “remedial secession” that allows certain groups (minorities) to create their own independent state if they are subject to grave human rights violations.147 The “Remedial Secession” is qualifed as a right to unilateral secession as a response to “most extreme case” of severe violations of fundamental human rights as a last resort. Supporters of this theory refer to the Quebec case where the Supreme Court of Canada ruled: “A right to external self-determination (which in this case potentially takes the form of the assertion of a right to unilateral secession) arises in only the most extreme of cases and, even then, under carefully defned circumstances”.148 According to the supporters of this theory, the denial of the right to internal self-determination, mass scale crimes against peace and security and crimes against humanity and war crimes by the mother state are serious grounds for “remedial secession”. Proponents of this theory refer to the statements of two judges, Risdal and Wildhaber (not the decision itself, but the position of individual judges) in the Luizidou v Turkey case (1995), considered by the European Court of Human Rights, where they stated that the peoples can exercise the right to external self-determination (secession) if their rights are systematically and fagrantly violated or if they are removed Uploaded by S. M. Safi
186 Farhad Mirzayev from government by non-democratic and discriminatory methods.149 A relatively small number of international lawyers believe that the right to secession can arise only if the central authorities of a sovereign state stubbornly deny and obstruct the people in the exercise of their rights and freedoms, periodically violate them and reject the idea of coexistence within the existing state. As other justifcations, the supporters of this theory cite the case of the declaration of independence of Kosovo and the secession of South Sudan, which allegedly exercised the right to secession in connection with the scale of crimes against these subjects.150 It should be noted right away that this theory has not received wide support in international law and is strongly criticised due to its inconsistency, which gives an additional reason for various speculations and poses a serious threat to the sovereignty of existing independent states. The right to “remedial secession” is not a peremptory or even a norm of customary international law.151 In addition, there is no extensive practice of states whose interests are directly affected by this issue (affected states) in relation to such a right to give it the character of a rule of customary international law. Even references to those isolated cases, the “remedial secession” application is not convincing enough from the international law perspective. According to the supporters of this theory, the most critical case is Kosovo’s independence which was a result of the grave war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by the Serbian armed forces.152 However, practically all countries in their declarations on the recognition of Kosovo have declared that this is a “special case”, i.e. is not a general rule. In addition, the International Court of Justice in its 2010 Advisory Opinion on the declaration of independence of Kosovo generally found it inappropriate to consider the issue of “remedial secession”, apparently due to the lack of support for this theory in international law.153 Despite Armenia’s claims, the “remedial theory” granting the secession right to minorities arising as a response to the grave violation of their rights or prevention of their rights to exercise their right to internal selfdetermination, it is not applicable to the case of the Nagorno-Karabakh. There are suffcient facts and arguments confrming the absence of any evidence on such violation of rights of the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh by the central Azerbaijan authorities. Nevertheless, it is absolutely clear that in the case of Nagorno-Karabakh, since the establishment of the autonomous unit within Azerbaijan SSR in 1923, the Armenian population that became a majority during the twentieth century for the whole history of NKAO until commencement of the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan had a wide scope of rights and freedoms. No serious gross violations of the rights of the Armenian population of NKAO were recorded at that time. The rights of the Armenian population of NKAO to internal self-determination were exercised in full scope without any limitations and obstacles from Azerbaijan central authorities. The rights to use the Armenian language and culture were confrmed in Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 187 almost all legal acts of the Azerbaijan SSR starting from the Constitution up to specifc codes of the republic.154 The activity and paperwork of all state organs, including but not limited to the prosecutor’s offce, courts, and administrative managements of public organisations, education institutions and cultural centres were in the Armenian language. Moreover, the radio and TV broadcasting as well as newspapers and magazines were also in the Armenian language.155 Since the establishment of NKAO most of the public administration, legislative and communist party’s managerial positions were in the hands of Armenians, and Armenian was the offcial language of the public management and economic activity in NKAO.156 Therefore, it can be strongly argued that no mass scale discrimination took place in NKAO by the central Azerbaijan authorities. On the other hand, all of these Armenian rights seriously contributed to the immigration of the Azerbaijani population from the region. It is accepted and supported by some writers that even if any problems existed within NKAO in the past, any claims had not to be put forward against Baku, but against the local Armenians who ruled in NKAO since the frst days of its creation.157 The fact of there being a majority of Armenians in NKAO also played a huge role in such prevailing positions of Armenians in the autonomous region. There was also no evidence of violence in the region by the Azerbaijani population. In contrast, the historical facts testify that the massive settlement of Karabakh by the ethnic Armenians took place by Tsarist Russia and Soviet communist authorities.158 Such policy of the massive resettlement of various minorities all around the USSR carried out by Stalin was exercised against the background of unreal “Soviet communist brotherhood of nations”.159 It is interesting that even Robert Kocharyan, the former leader of the “NKR” and later the president of Armenia in his interview confrmed that Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh were not living in bad conditions both from political and socio-economic points of view. He specifcally pointed out that “something unexplainable [had] driven Armenians to independence”.160 Nothing in the historical and factual evidence argue in favour of the long fght of the Armenian population of NKAO for the exercise of their right to external self-determination which they have deserved due to the gross violation of their rights by Azerbaijani authorities. As one Western commentator emphasised, the “Armenian campaign had been carefully planned well in advance”, and the intensifed militarisation of the Armenian community of Nagorno-Karabakh was a part of such plan, and, obviously “Azerbaijanis were caught unaware” by such sudden development of the situation around NKAO.161 Even if “remedial secession” is recognised in international law, then the most critical question would be what kind of violations by Azerbaijan could Armenia be in a position to refer to for such remedial secession of Nagorno-Karabakh. As it has been mentioned above, in the case of the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
188 Farhad Mirzayev Armenian national minority of Nagorno-Karabakh, there are compelling arguments indicating the absence of any such facts of infringement of the rights of the Armenian ethnic minority by the Azerbaijani authorities. Since the formation of the NKAO as part of the Azerbaijan SSR in 1923, the Armenian population of the region, which turned into the majority during the twentieth century, throughout the entire time until the beginning of hostilities in the early 1990s of the last century, had broad rights and freedoms. There was no evidence of the violation of the rights of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh. In contrast, they exercised in full their right to internal self-determination without any impediments from the Azerbaijani authorities. Unlike Armenia neither in the First Karabakh War in the early 1990s, nor in the Second Karabakh War, were there massive and fundamental violations of international law committed by Azerbaijan. There is no evidence that Azerbaijan committed grave crimes against peace and humanity or war crimes against civilians in Nagorno-Karabakh. On the other hand, Armenia did commit the Khojaly massacre in 1992 and the 2020 shelling of the civilian population in various cities of Azerbaijan. The violent actions of Armenia and its proxies in Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding regions which led to death of thousands people and exodus of 700,000 people were nothing, but intentional ethnic cleansing similar to those committed in former Yugoslavia or Rwanda.162 All these have been recognised and affrmed by many leading international organisations. The assertions of the Armenian side that, having started the current military campaign, Azerbaijan has granted Nagorno-Karabakh the right to “remedial secession” does not stand up to criticism. Azerbaijan’s actions were the exercise of its inherent right to self-defence under Article 51 of the UN Charter aimed at liberating the occupied territories in response to 30 years of occupation and continuing attacks against civilians and military objectives. In the course of the Second Karabakh War, Azerbaijan transparently demonstrated to the whole world that even in a military operation, it remains committed to the norms and requirements of international humanitarian law and its only target is the army and military equipment of the occupying forces. To summarise, it can be argued that there are no grounds for demanding the “remedial secession” for Nagorno-Karabakh under international law. No Grounds for Recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh The process of creation of a state in International Law (i) must not be the result of a violation of international law and (ii) must strictly comply with the legal criteria of statehood.163 However, the recognition of a state is not a state-forming factor. In other words, states do not arise by virtue of their recognition by other states. The EC’s Badinter Commission in its conclusions No. 1 and 10, clearly defned that recognition is a purely “declarative Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 189 action carried out at the discretion of states”, which also “must comply with the mandatory requirements of general international law”.164 As part of customary international law, the obligation of States not to recognise the consequences of misconduct is enshrined in article 41 (2) of the Articles on Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts.165 The referred Article states that “No State shall recognize as lawful a situation created by a serious breach within the meaning of article 40, nor render aid or assistance in maintaining that situation”.166 In turn, a serious violation under article 40 means violations of peremptory norms of general international law, which also include norms regarding the non-use of force. This is also confrmed in the offcial commentary on article 40 of the Articles on State Responsibility, which considers aggression as one example of a serious violation by States of an obligation arising from a peremptory norm of general international law.167 Considering that the very process of the formation of the “NKR” was the outcome of the use of force, violent ethnic cleansing of Azerbaijanis, violation of the territorial integrity and internationally recognised borders of Azerbaijan, as well as the violation of the fundamental rights of about 700,000 displaced Azerbaijanis, the recognition of the “NKR” by any state would contradict its international legal obligations.168 The process of creating the “NKR” is a consequence of the use of force, ethnic cleansing and military aggression,169 and the fact of the aggression and occupation of these territories by Armenia was confrmed by numerous international resolutions and declarations.170 The classic historic example of illegal recognition is the recognition of the state of Manchukuo (Manchuria) by El Salvador, Germany, Hungary, Italy and Japan.171 The Lytton Commission examined this for the purposes of inadmissibility of the recognition of territorial acquisitions by military means as well as their consequences.172 It is a similar situation in case of the “NKR”, where the full effective control by Armenia was confrmed by the European Court of Human Rights in the case of Chiragov and others v. Armenia173 and some other previously referred cases.174 In this case, the recognition of the “NKR” as an independent state, which arose as a result of illegal territorial acquisitions through the use of force resulted in ethnic cleansing, will be qualifed as a violation of the sovereignty, as well as the territorial integrity and international borders of the Republic of Azerbaijan. It shall be also referred to the ICJ’s 2010 Kosovo Advisory Opinion.175 In its Opinion the Court clearly determined that the declaration of independence through the unlawful use of force and violation of fundamental norms of international law would always be contrary to international law.176 If any entity unilaterally declares its independence, but does not meet the criteria for statehood, then its recognition will be considered premature recognition and contrary to international law.177 In other words, before making a decision on recognition, the states shall determine for themselves how such an entity, which has declared itself independent, meets the requirements of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
190 Farhad Mirzayev statehood. The criteria for statehood are refected in the Montevideo Convention on the Rights and Duties of States of 1933.178 In accordance with Art. 1 of the Montevideo Convention, the state must meet the following criteria: (a) permanent population; (b) a certain territory; (c) government and (d) the ability to enter into relationships with other states.179 If we apply these criteria to the “NKR”, then at this stage there is no compliance with any criterion. As discussed above the territory of the “NKR” is the territory of a sovereign Azerbaijani state occupied by the use of force. The population of the “NKR” can hardly be referred to as a people for the purposes of the right to self-determination, since the will of the Azerbaijani part of the population living in these territories before the occupation is not taken into account due to ethnic cleansing by Armenians, and moreover, some of the so-called people of the NKR are illegally settled Armenians from Lebanon and Syria, which fundamentally contradicts the requirements of the 1949 Geneva Conventions on international humanitarian law.180 In the case of “NKR”, serious questions also arise about the existence of an independent government capable of making decisions independent of external forces. As for the ability to enter into relations with other states, this feature also requires a level of independence and the manifestation of independent will, since in the absence of free will and the subordination of the will to another state, there can be no question of such an ability. This was clearly confrmed by the Permanent Court of International Justice in the 1931 Austro-German Custom Union case.181 The lack of sovereign will of the “NKR” and its complete subordination to the will of the Republic of Armenia was confrmed by the ECHR in Chiragov and others v. Armenia case.182 In the ECHR opinion, Armenia’s effective control over the “NKR” is expressed in all manifestations of state administration, which undoubtedly excludes the existence of independent will for the goals of an effective government, as well as the ability to enter into relations with other states.183 Therefore, the recognition of the “NKR” will be considered premature and consequently violating the requirements of international law. However, even if Nagorno-Karabakh is recognised by any state, everything will end up with the same scenario as for Kosovo, Abkhazia or South Ossetia which can in no way be considered as effective and well-established states. End of the Story? Despite execution of the 10 November 2020 Tripartite Agreement, the Nagorno-Karabakh confict is far from any fnal settlement. A small part of Nagorno-Karabakh is still controlled by Armenia and its proxies, who now have external protection from the Russian peacekeepers. Nor has its status been agreed between the conficting parties; it remains one of the most critical unresolved questions. The current delimitation and demarcation of boundaries between Armenia and Azerbaijan is another diffcult challenge Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 191 on the way to the establishment of peace and stability in the South Caucasus region. Moreover, landmines planted by Armenian armed forces in every single inch of formerly occupied Azerbaijani territories and refusal to share the landmine maps constitute another serious war crime by Armenia undermining the whole confict settlement process. For example, in the de-occupied Aghdam region, the Armenian armed forces had planted 97,000 landmines (12 lorries), and the map indicating their location was only handed over to Azerbaijan in an exchange for 15 Armenian war prisoners.184 Since Azerbaijan has a quite solid base of arguments and evidence on committed war crimes and crimes against humanity, and economic and environmental damages caused by almost 30 years of Armenian occupation, Azerbaijan shall endeavour to hold the Armenian leadership responsible under international law. Only the full de-occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh from the Armenian armed forces and restoring jurisdiction of Azerbaijan over its internationally recognised territory, deblocking the communications and return of all IDPs to their homes could bring the conficting parties very close to a fnal settlement and end of this sanguinary confict. Notes 1 Балаев, A. (1990). Национальное Демократическое Движение в 1917–1929 [Balayev, A. National Democratic Movement in 1917–1929]. Baku: Elm, pp. 40– 51. (In Russian). 2 Swietochowski, T. (1995). Russia and Azerbaijan: A Borderland in Transition. New York: Columbia University Press, pp. 75–76. 3 Altstadt, A. (1992). Azerbaijani Turks: Power and Identity under Russian Rule. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, p. 100; Arslanian, A.H. (1996). Britain and the Transcaucasian Nationalities during Russian Civil War. In: R.G. Suny, ed., Transcaucasia, Nationalism and Social Change. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, p. 303. 4 Altstadt (n 3), p. 102; Swietochowski (n 3), pp. 75–76; Галстян, Д. (2021). Признанием Советских Границ Армения Признает Карабах Азербайджаном [Galstyan, D. By Recognising Soviet Borders, Armenia Recognises Karabakh Being Azerbaijani]. Sputnik Armenia, [online]. Available at: https://m. ru.armeniasputnik.am/politics/20210521/27630901/Priznaniem-sovetskikhgranits-Armeniya-priznaet-Karabakh-Azerbaydzhanom.html [Accessed 25 May 2021] (In Russian). 5 Potier, T. (2001). Confict in Nagorno-Karabakh, Abkhazia, and South Ossetia: A Legal Appraisal. The Hague, Boston: Kluwer Law International, p. 2; Cornell S. (1999). The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict. Uppsala, Department of East European Studies, [online]. Available at: https://is.muni.cz/el/fss/jaro2019/POL587/um/ Cornell_The_Nagorno-Karabakh_Confict.pdf [Accessed 18 June 2021]. 6 Protocol of the Meeting of the Plenum of the Transcaucasian Bureau of Central Committee of the Communist Party of RSFSR (5 July 1921). Baku: State Historical Archives of Azerbaijan Republic. f1, op 2, d 25. p. 16 (In Russian); Correspondence between Mikoyan, Ordjonekidze and Narimanov. (1920). Baku: Central State Archives of Soviet Azerbaijan Republic (ЦГАОР). АР, ф.28, оп.1, д.99. p. 115 (In Russian). 7 Altstadt, A. (1988). Nagorno-Karabakh – ‘Apple of Discord’ in Azerbaijan SSR. Central Asia Survey, 7, p. 66. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
192 Farhad Mirzayev 8 ИсторияСозданияНагорно-КарабахскойАвтономнойОбласти Азербайджанской ССР 1918–1925 Документы и Материалы [History of Establishment of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast of Azerbaijan SSR 1918–1925] (1989). Documents and Materials. Baku: Azerneshr. pp. 152–153 (In Russian). 9 Chorbajian, L. et al. (1994). The Caucasian knot: The History and Geopolitics of Nagorno-Karabakh. London: Zed Books, p. 13. 10 Национальный Состав Населения СССР Статистика Переписи Населения Союза [The National Composition of USSR. Statistics of the Union’s Population Census]. Baku: Azerneshr 1989. p. 22 (In Russian). 11 Юнусов, А. (1991). Погромы в Армении в 1988–1989 [Yunusov, A. Pogroms in Armenia in 1988–1989]. Journal Ekspress-Khronika, 9(186), p.19. (In Russian); De Waal, T. (2003). Black Garden. Armenia and Azerbaijan through Peace and War. New York, London: New York University Press, p. 60. 12 Azərbaycanda Qaçqınlar və Məcburi Köckünlər haqqında Statistik Məlumatlar [The Statistical Information about Refugees and IDPs in Azerbaijan]. (2000). Baku: State Statistics Committee. p. 2 (In Azerbaijani). 13 NKAO Decision on Unifcation with the Armenian SSR. (21 February 1988). Sovetsky Karabakh. Stepanakert. (In Russian). 14 Izvestiya Newspaper. (19 June 1988). Moscow. (In Russian). 15 Арутюнян, В (1990). События в Нагорном Карабахе: Хроника, Февраль 1988 – Январь 1989 [Arutyunyan, V. Events in Nagorno-Karabakh: Chronicle, February 1988–January 1989. Vol I. Yerevan: Armenian SSR Academy of Sciences Publishing House, p. 38. (In Russian); Resolution of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of Azerbaijan SSR ‘On Abolition of the Decision of Soviet of People’s Deputies of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast’. (12 July 1988). Bulletin of the Supreme Soviet of Azerbaijan SSR. 13–14, Baku. pp. 14–15. (In Russian). 16 Resolution of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of Azerbaijan SSR ‘On Unconstitutional Action in NKAO’. (26 August 1989). Bulletin of the Supreme Soviet of Azerbaijan SSR. 15–16. Baku. pp. 21–22. (In Russian). 17 Resolution of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of Armenian SSR ‘On Unifcation of Armenian SSR and Nagorno-Karabakh’. (2 December 1989). Communist Newspaper. Baku. (In Russian). 18 Mirzayev, F. (2014). Abkhazia. In: C. Walter, A. Sternberg and K. Abushov eds., Self-Determination and Secession in International Law. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 191–213; Мирзоев Ф. (2017). Применение принципа uti possidetis при дезинтеграции СССР [Mirzayev, F. Application of Uti Possidetis Principle upon USSR Disintegration]. Law and Politics, 8, pp. 12–23. (In Russian) 19 De Waal (n 11), pp. 10–11. 20 Resolution of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of USSR ‘On measures relating to the application of the union republics with respect to the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan SSR and Armenian SSR’. (23 March 1988). Bulletin of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. 13. Moscow. pp. 27–28. (In Russian). 21 Mirzayev, Application of Uti Possidetis (n 19), pp. 14–18. 22 Malkasian, M. (1996). Gha-ra-bagh!: The Emergence of the National Democratic Movement in Armenia. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, pp. 116–117. 23 Resolution of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of USSR ‘On decisions of the Supreme Soviets of Armenian SSR and Azerbaijan SSR regarding Nagorno-Karabakh issue’. (18 July 1988). Bulletin of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. 29. Moscow. pp. 20–21. (In Russian). 24 Resolution of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of USSR ‘On Incompliance of the acts of the Supreme Soviet of the Armenian SSR on Nagorno-Karabakh of December 1, 1989 and January 9, 1990 with the USSR Constitution’. (1990). Bulletin of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. 3. Moscow. pp. 38–42. (In Russian). Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 193 25 Text in Барсегов, Ю. (2008). Нагорный Карабах в Международном Праве и Мировой Политике Документы и Комментарии [Barsegov, Y. Nagorno-Karabakh in International Law and World Politics Documents and Commentaries]. Vol. I. Moscow: KRUG Publishers, pp. 709–711. (In Russian). 26 TASS Information Agency. (1988). In: J. Libaridian. 1st ed. Documents and Facts on the Region of Mountainous Karabagh, 1918–1988. Cambridge, MA: Zoryan Institute for Contemporary Armenian Research & Documentation. pp. 98–99. 27 Resolution of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet (n 24). 28 Ibid. 29 Moscow Home Service. (18 January 1989) at 16:00 GMT. SU/0364 B/4. (In Russian). 30 Мирзоев, Ф. (2004). Актуальные Проблемы Изменения Государственных Границ в Международном Праве: Теория и Практика [Mirzayev, F., Contemporary Problems of Change of State Boundaries in International Law: Theory and Practice]. Baku: Ganun Publishing, 2004. 31 Russian Radio. (13 December 1991) at 22:00 GMT. SU/1256 B/9. (In Russian). 32 De Waal (n 11), pp. 19–20. 33 Маркедонов, С. (2007). Советский Кавказ в 1970-е годы: Предчувствие Гражданской Войны [Markedonov, S. Soviet Caucasus in 1970s: Presentiment of Civil War]. Untouchable Reserve, 2(52), p. 32. 34 UN SC Res. 822 (1993) (30 April 1993) UN Doc. S/ES/4; UN SC Res. 853 (1993) (29 July 1993) UN Doc. S/ES/853; UN SC Res. 874 (1993) (14 October 1993) UN Doc. S/ES/874; UN SC Res. 884 (1993). 35 State Committee on Refugees and IDPs of the Republic of Azerbaijan (2005). IDP and Refugee Population in Azerbaijan. Baku: State Committee on Refugees and IDPs. pp. 8–9. (In Azerbaijani); UNGA (1996). Letter dated 25 October 1996 from the Permanent Representative of Azerbaijan to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General. UNGA 51st Session, Third Committee Agenda item 110 (30 October 1996). UN Doc Supp (A/C.3/51/9); EU TACIS (2006). Discussion Paper: Assistance to Internally Displaced Persons (IDP). Helsinki Consulting Group, BBJ Consult and Ėmergencies, pp. 2–3. 36 UNHCR (2002). Statistical Yearbook. UNYB 20–22. [online]. Available at: http://www.unhcr.org/home/STATISTICS/41206f762.pdf [Accessed 12 June 2021]; International Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (2003). Azerbaijan Appeal’ No. 01.78/2003 Appeal 2003–2004. [online]. Available at: http://www. ifrc.org/docs/appeals/annual03/017803.pdf [Accessed 12 June 2021]. 37 Unger, A. (1981). Constitutional Development in USSR. London: Methuen, p. 60. 38 Law of the Republic of Azerbaijan No 279-XII “On Revoking the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast” (26 November 1991). [online]. Available at: http://www.e-qanun.az/framework/6783 [Accessed 19 June 2021]. 39 Zverev, A. (2021). Ethnic Conficts in the Caucasus 1988–1994. In: B. Coppieters, ed., Contested Borders in the Caucasus. Brussels: VUB University Press. [online]. Available at: http://poli.vub.ac.be/publi/ContBorders/eng/ch0101.htm [Accessed 02 May 2021]. 40 Gzoyan, E. (2020). The Issue of Nagorno-Karabakh in the League of Nations. The Armenian Weekly. [online]. Available at: https://armenianweekly. com/2020/07/23/the-issue-of-nagorno-karabakh-in-the-league-of-nations [Accessed 15 June 2021]. 41 Ibid. 42 Namibia Case (Advisory Opinion) [1971] ICJ Reports. 16; Fisheries Jurisdiction Case (United Kingdom v Iceland) (Merits) [1951] ICJ Reports. 18, 21; McNair, A. (1961). The Law of Treaties. Oxford: Clarendon Press, p. 656; Sinclair, I. (1984). The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties. 2nd ed. Manchester: Manchester Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 195 55 Raic, D. (2002). Statehood and the Law of Self-Determination. Leiden, Boston: Martinus Nijhoff, pp. 366–372. 56 Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe (2001). Reply to the Written Question No 396 by Mrs Hajiyeva to the Committee of Ministers ‘Recognition of the Territorial Integrity of Azerbaijan by Armenia’. [online]. Available at: https://wcd.coe.int/ViewDoc.jsp?id=222923&Site=COE [Accessed 19 June 2021]. 57 Ibid. 58 UN Security Council Resolutions No 822, 853, 874 and 884 (n 35); UN GA Res. 60/285 (15 September 2006) (2006) A/RES/60/285; UN GA Res. 62/243 (25 April 2008) (2008) A/RES?62/243; PACE Resolution No 1119 (1997); PACE Resolution No 1416 (2005); PACE Resolution No 2085 (2016); EU Parliament Resolution No 2216 (2009); EU Parliament Resolution No 2315 (2012); OIC Resolution No.21/9-P (2000); OIC Resolution No. 25/9-c (20000; OIC Resolution No 10/11 (2008); OIC Resolution No 10/37 (2010); OIC Resolution No 9/39 (2012); OIC Resolution No. 10/42 (2015); OIC Resolution No 10/43 (2016); OIC Resolution No 4/43 (2016); OIC Resolution No 12/46 (2019). 59 Chiragov and Others v. Armenia [2015] ECHR. 176; Cornell, S. and Shaffer, B. (2020) Occupied Elsewhere. Selective Policies on Occupations, Protracted Conficts, and Territorial Disputes. Washington, DC: FDD Press, pp. 21–23. 60 Zalyan, Sargsyan and Serobyan v. Armenia [2016] ECHR. 214. 61 Muradyan v Armenia [2016] ECHR, 124. 62 Azercosmos OJSC and Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Azerbaijan (2019). Illegal Activities in the Territories of Azerbaijan under Armenia’s Occupation: Evidence from Satellite Imagery [online]. Available at: https://mfa. gov.az/fles/shares/Azercosmos.pdf [Accessed 22 June 2021]. 63 Letter of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs to the OSCE Permanent Council on the OSCE Minsk Group Fact-Finding Mission to the Occupied Territories of Azerbaijan Surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh (2010). OSCE Field Assessment Mission Report (NK)(A/59/747-S/2005/187, Annex I, p. 5. [online]. Available at: http://www.osce.org/mg/76209?download=true [Accessed 01 June 2021]; Press-Release of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Azerbaijan (29 March 2011). A/65/801-S/2011/208, Annex. [online]. Available at: https:// undocs.org/en/A/65/801 [Accessed 02 June 2021]; Mirzayev, Abkhazia. pp. 191– 213; Мирзоев, Ф. (2020). Переселение Ливанских Армян на Оккупированные Территории Азербайджана Является Серьезным Нарушением Международного Права [Mirzayev, F. Settlement of Lebanese Armenians to the Occupied Territories of Azerbaijan is a Grave Violation of International Law]. 1News.az. [online]. Available at: https://1news.az/news/20200908115358723-Ekspert-Pereselenie-livanskikh-armyan-na-okkupirovannye-territorii-Azerbaidzhana-yavlyaetsya-sereznym-narusheniem-mezhdunarodnogo-prava [accessed 15 June 2021]. 64 Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Azerbaijan (2004). Drug Enforcement. [online]. Available at: https://m.mia.gov.az/index.php?/en/content/29824 [Accessed 21 June 2021]; US Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (2014). International Narcotics Control Strategy Report. [online]. Available at: https://2009–2017.state.gov/j/inl/rls/nrcrpt/2014/vol1/222846. htm [Accessed 21 June 2021]; Cane, H. (2019). Narco Karabakh. Inside the Global Nexus of Transnational Crime. [online]. Available at: https://www.narcokarabakh.net/en/stories [Accessed 22 June 2021]. 65 UNSC (2013). Final Report of the Panel of Experts Established Pursuant to Resolution 1973(2011) Concerning Libya. UN Doc S/2013/99. 66 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Azerbaijan (2016). Report on Illegal Economic and Other Activities in the Occupied Territories of Azerbaijan. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 197 85 Shaw, Peoples, Territorialism and Boundaries (n 51), pp. 478–507; Mirzayev, Abkhazia (n 19), pp. 191–213. 86 Agreement on the Establishment of the Commonwealth of Independent States Signed on 8 December 1991 in Minsk (1992). International Law Materials, 31, p. 138. 87 Alma-Ata Declaration (1992). International Law Materials, 31, p. 148. 88 The Charter of the Commonwealth of Independent States Adopted on 22 January 1993 (1995. International Law Materials, 34, p. 128. 89 15 April 1994 CIS Declaration on Respect of Sovereignty, Territorial Integrity and Inviolability of Boundaries of Member States of (1994). Bulletin of International Agreements, 7, pp. 9–10. (In Russian). 90 Mirzayev, F. (2005). Azerbaijan on the Crossroads: Legal Evaluation of the Contemporary Territorial Issues Self-Determination v Territorial Integrity. Fribourg, University of Fribourg Summer University’s Best Papers’ Digest, pp. 53–72. 91 İbayev, V. (2006). Ermənistan-Azərbaycan Dağlıq Qarabağ Münaqişəsi Beynəlxalq Hüquq Müstəvisində [İbayev, V. Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh Confict within International Legal Framework]. Baku, Elm Publishing, pp. 78–123. (In Azerbaijani). 92 UNSC Res. 169 (24 November 1961) UN Doc. (S/5002). 93 Opinion No 2 (n 49), pp.183–185. 94 Reports of International Commission of Jurists and the Committee of Rapporteurs of the League of Nations (1921). League of Nations Council Documents. Doc No B7:21/68/106 9–21. p. 28. 95 Secession of Quebec (n 70), p. 217. 96 Katangese People’s (n 82), p. 389. 97 United Communist Party of Turkey (n 83), pp. 26–27. 98 Chiragov (n 60), pp. 168, 181–185; Sargsyan v Azerbaijan (2015), Zalyan (n 61), p. 214; Muradyan (n 62), p. 124. 99 Full Text in Russian in Barsegov (n 26), pp. 709–711. 100 Abilov, S. (2018). OSCE Minsk Group: Proposals and Failure, the View from Azerbaijan. Insight Turkey, 20, pp. 143–164. 101 Ibid. 102 Cavanaugh, C. (2016). OSCE and the Nagorno-Karabakh Peace Process. Security and Human Rights, 27, pp. 422–441. 103 Ibid. 104 Mekhtiyev, A. (1994). The Karabakh Problem Has Finally Been Internationalised. Current Digest of the Post-Soviet Press, 14 (45), pp. 23; Croissant, M. (1998). The Armenia-Azerbaijan Confict. Causes and Implications. Westport: Praeger. p. 88; de Courcy, J. (1993). It Looks as if Iran is Coming off the Fence on the Question of Nagorno-Karabakh. Intelligence Digest, p. 8. 105 Carley, P. (1998). Nagorno-Karabakh. Searching for a Solution. Washington, DC: US Institute of Peace. pp. 5–18. 106 International Crisis Group (2007). Nagorno-Karabakh: Risking War. Europe Report No. 187. [online]. Available at: http://www.esiweb.org/pdf/armenia_ ICG_risking_war_Nov2007_187_nagorno_karabakh___risking_war.pdf [Accessed 12 May 2021]; US Department of State (2001). Armenia and Azerbaijan: Key West Peace Talks. Briefng by Three Co-Chairs on Key West Peace Talks. [online]. Available at: http://2001–2009.state.gov/p/eur/rls/rm/2001/2098.htm [Accessed on 7 May 2021]. 107 Cavanaugh, C. (2011). Both Presidents Were Sincere in Their Desire to Move Forward. Interview of the Former US Ambassador Cavanaugh to the OSCE Uploaded by S. M. Safi
198 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 Farhad Mirzayev Minsk Group. Mediamax News Agency. [online]. Available at: https://mediamax.am/en/news/keywest/514 [Accessed 7 May 2021]. Shiriyev, Z. (2016). Azerbaijan’s Perspectives on the osce Minsk GroupComplicity in the Status Quo? Security and Human Rights, 27, pp. 442–466; Cheterian, V. (2016). Three Principles, Six Elements, Madrid, Kazan and “Lavrov’s Document”. MediaMax. [online]. Available at: https://mediamax.am/en/news/ parzabanum/18714 [Accessed 12 May 2021]. Caucasus Report. (2000) How the ‘Goble Plan’ Was Born. Radio Free Europe. [online]. Available at: https://www.rferl.org/a/1341946.html [Accessed on 17 July 2021]. OSCE. Minsk Group. (1998) ‘Common State Deal’ Proposal. [online]. Available at: https://www.legal-tools.org/doc/f2c2f3/pdf [Accessed on 17 July 2021]. Cavanaugh, C., Goldstein, J. and de Waal, T. (2011). Nagorny Karabakh: Halting a Slide to Confict. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. [online]. Available at: https://carnegieendowment.org/2011/03/28/nagorny-karabakh-halting-slide-to-confict-event-3218 [Accessed on 17 July 2021]; Cutler, R. (2001). The Key West Conference on Nagorno-Karabakh: Preparing Peace in the South Caucasus? Institute for Policy Studies. [online]. Available at: https:// ips-dc.org/the_key_west_conference_on_nagorno-karabakh_preparing_ peace_in_the_south_caucasus [Accessed on 17 July 2021]. OSCE. Minsk Group. (2007). Madrid Document. [online]. Available at: https:// www.legal-tools.org/doc/0b80bb/pdf [Accessed on 15 July 2021]. Solash, R. (2011). Kazan Summit: Time for Breakthrough in Nagorno-Karabakh Peace Process? Radio Free Europe. [online]. Available at: https://www. rferl.org/a/nagorno-karabakh_kazan_summit_breakthrough_in_peace_process/24244645.html [Accessed on 12 July 2021]. Preobrazhensky, I. (2020). Is There a Peace Plan for Karabakh? Riddle. [online]. Available at: https://www.ridl.io/en/is-there-a-peace-plan-for-karabakh [Accessed on 15 July 2021]; de Waal, T. (2020). A Precarious Peace for Karabakh. Carnegie Moscow Center. [online]. Available at: https://carnegie.ru/commentary/83202 [Accessed on 15 July 2021]. De Waal (n 12), pp. 258–261. Rehimov, R. (2020). Azerbaijan Criticizes OSCE Minsk Group on Karabakh. Anadolu Agency. [online]. Available at: https://www.aa.com.tr/en/azerbaijan-front-line/azerbaijan-criticizes-osce-minsk-group-on-karabakh/2074973 [Accessed 12 May 2021]. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s 12 December 2020 Meeting with OSCE Minsk Group. (2020). [video]. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=8ApDkMgiaVQ [Accessed 18 June 2021]. Asbarez New Agency (2019). “New Territories in the Event of New War, Says Defence Minister”. [online]. Available at: https://asbarez.com/new-territories-in-the-event-of-new-war-says-defense-minister [Accessed 19 June 2021]; Wilson, J. (2020). Caucasus: Armenia’s ‘New War for New Territories’. Euractiv. [online]. Available at: https://www.euractiv.com/section/azerbaijan/opinion/caucasus-armenias-new-war-for-new-territories [Accessed 4 May 2021]. Kucera, J. (2019) Pashinyan Calls for Unifcation between Armenia and Karabakh. [online]. Available at: https://eurasianet.org/pashinyan-calls-for-unifcation-between-armenia-and-karabakh [Accessed 19 June 2021]. Mirzayev, F. (2020). What Stands Behind Escalation of the Confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Modern Diplomacy. [online]. Available at: https:// moderndiplomacy.eu/2020/08/07/what-stands-behind-escalation-of-the-confict-between-armenia-and-azerbaijan [Accessed 10 June 2021]. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 199 121 Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s Address at 75th Session of the United Nations General Assembly. (2020). [video]. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=yQOr6XF3xxY [Accessed 2 June 2021]. 122 Ibid. 123 Military and Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragua (Nicaragua v United States) [1986] ICJ Reports, 14. 124 In Nicaragua v. United States (n 124), the ICJ expressly determined that military action of regular armed forces of one state in relation to the international borders of another state is an armed attack and aggression. 125 Warnings to the civilian population were broadcasted in three languages (Armenian, Russian and Azerbaijani) through all possible communication means and published in media through the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence. 126 Kay, S., Becker, D. and Kern. J. (2021). Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh Confict. Targeting of Civilians in Azerbaijan (September–November 2020). Interim Report. London: 9 Bedford Row, p. 7. 127 Ibid., p. 7. 128 Azerbaijan’s political and military authorities issued statements that the Republic of Azerbaijan had no military targets in the territory of Armenia. See Second Interim Report of the Human Rights Commissioner (October 2020), p. 5. [online]. Available at: https://ombudsman.az/en/view/news/1946/the-second-interim-report-of-the-commissioner-for-human-rights-ombudsperson-of-the-republic-of-azerbaijan-on-recent-armenian-provocations [Accessed 22 June 2021]. 129 Letter dated 1 October 2020 from the Permanent Representative of Azerbaijan to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General United Nations (16 October 2020). A/75/379-S/2020/965. 130 Letter dated 10 July 2020 from the Permanent Representative of Azerbaijan to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General United Nations (13 July 2020). A/74/946–S/2020/704. 131 Prosecutor v Martić, [2007] ICTY IT-95-11-T, 116. 132 Prosecutor v. Pavle Strugar (Appeals Judgement) [2008] ICTY IT-01–42-A, 275; Prosecutor v. Stanislav Galić (Appeals Judgement) [203] ICTY CVO/P.I.S/ 807e, 132. 133 Galić (n 133), p. 132; Targeting of Civilians in Azerbaijan (n 127), p. 18. 134 Foreign Policy News (2021). Russia Allegedly Used Iskander-M Ballistic Missiles Against Azerbaijan. [online]. Available at: https:// foreignpolicynews.org/2021/04/05/russia-allegedly-used-iskander-m-ballistic-missiles-against-azerbaijan [Accessed 17 June 2021]; Aliyev, J. (2021). Azerbaijan: Armenia Hit Shusha with “Deadly” Missiles. Anadoly Agency. [online]. Available at: https://www.aa.com.tr/en/world/azerbaijan-armenia-hit-shusha-with-deadly-missiles/2206525 [Accessed 3 June 2021]. 135 The Full Text of 10 November 2020 Tripartite Statement (Agreement) was published in Russian at the offcial website of the Russian President on 10 November 2020. [online]. Available at: http://kremlin.ru/events/president/news/64384 [Accessed 20 June 2021]. 136 Мирзоев, Ф. (2020). На Всей Территории Карабаха Должны Действовать Азербайджанские Законы [Mirzayev, F. Azerbaijani Laws Are Applicable on the Entire Territory of Karabakh]. Zerkalo Newspaper. [online]. Available at: https://m.zerkalo.az/glavy-iv-rajonov-v-nagornom-karabahe-dolzhny-naznachatsya-tsentralnymi-vlastyami-v-baku-ekspert-o-trehstoronnem-soglashenii/?f bclid=IwAR34VPjj7M0O6wpPpIKFLxWTigffiY5cWBbk-c0ci_VX0Cm4yhZjNx9jzZQ [Accessed 02 May 2021] (In Russian); Ахмедов, Ф. (2020). Соглашение от 10 Ноября – Это Юридический Документ о Uploaded by S. M. Safi
200 Farhad Mirzayev 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 Полном Восстановлении Территориальной Целостности Азербайджана [Ahmadov, F. Agreement of November 10-This is a Legal Document on the Full Restoration of the Territorial Integrity of Azerbaijan]. 1news. az. [online]. Available at: https://1news.az/news/20201118033303471-Farid-A k h me dov-Sog lashen ie - ot-10 -noyabr ya- eto -y u r id iche sk i i- dok ument-o-polnom-vosstanovlenii-territorialnoi-tselostnosti-Azerbaidzhana [Accessed 02 May 2021] (In Russian). Narrow 5 km width land strip connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia. A territory of Armenia separating Azerbaijan’s mainland with it’s the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic exclave given by the Central Moscow Authorities to Armenia in 1920s. See Balayev (n 1). Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation (2021). Russian-Turkish Armistice Control Center opened in Azerbaijan. Statement of 30 January 2021. [online]. Available at: http://eng.mil.ru/en/russian_peacekeeping_forces/news/ more.htm?id=12341496@egNews [Accessed 17 June 2021]. Kohen, M. (2006). Secession: International Law Perspectives. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 300–312; Castellino, J. (2000). The Secession of Bangladesh in International Law: Setting New Standards. Asian Yearbook of International Law, 7, p. 83; Borgen, K. Kosovo’s Declaration of Independence: Self-Determination, Secession and Recognition. American Society of International Law Insights, 12, p. 2; Crawford, J. (2006). The Creation of States in International Law. New York: Oxford University Press, p. 390. Mullerson, R. (1993). New Developments in the Former USSR and Yugoslavia. Virginia Journal of International Law, 33, p. 299. Fletcher, N.M. (1969). The Separation of Singapore from Malaysia. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, pp. 17–82. Brownlie, I. (1979). African Boundaries – A Legal and Diplomatic Encyclopaedia. London: C Hurst & Company, p. 9; Goy, R. (1993), L’Independence de l’Erythree [Independence of Eritrea]. AFDI, 39, p. 350. (In French). Vidmar, J. (2007). Montenegro’s Path to Independence: A Study of Self-Determination, Statehood and Recognition. Hanse Law Review, 3(1), pp. 73–102. Paylan, S. (2020). Remedial Secession and the Responsibility to Protect: The Case of Nagorno-Karabakh. Opinion Juris. [online]. Available at: http:// opiniojuris.org/2020/12/23/remedial-secession-and-the-responsibility-to-protect-the-case-of-nagorno-karabakh [Accessed 12 June 2021]. M. Shaw, Peoples, Territorialism and Boundaries (n 51), pp. 478–492; Mirzayev, Application of Uti Possidetis (n 18), pp. 12–23. Paylan (n 139). Secession of Quebec (n 71), p. 133; Abel, M. (2020) Is There a Right to Secession in International Law? E-International Relations. [online]. Available at: https:// www.e-ir.info/pdf/84268 [Accessed 12 July 2021]. Loizidou v. Turkey (Concurring Opinion of Judge Wildhaber Joined by Judge Ryssdal) [1996] ECHR, p. 24. Fierstein, D. (2008). Kosovo’s Declaration of Independence: An Incident Analysis of Legality, Policy and Future Implications. Boston University International Law Journal, 26, pp. 417–442; Know, C. (2012). The Secession of South Sudan: A Case Study in African Sovereignty and International Recognition. St Jospeh, College of Saint Benedict and Saint John’s University 2012. [online]. Available at: http://digitalcommons.csbsju.edu/polsci_students/1 [Accessed 7 June 2021]. Vidmar, J. (2010). Remedial Secession in International Law: Theory and (Lack of) Practice. International Review, 6(1), pp. 37–66; Meester, D. (2011). The International Court of Justice’s Kosovo Case: Assessing the Current State of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 201 International Legal Opinion on Remedial Secession. Canadian Yearbook of International Law, 48, pp. 215–254. Bolton, G. and Visoka, G. (2019). Recognizing Kosovo’s independence: Remedial Secession or Earned Sovereignty? Oxford: Oxford University SEESOX Occasion Paper, pp. 11–10; Meller, S. (2011–2012). The Kosovo Case: An Argument for a Remedial Declaration of Independence. The Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law, 40, p. 833; Sterio, M. (2015). Self-Determination and Secession Under International Law: The New Framework New Framework. Cleveland, Cleveland State University Law Faculty Articles and Essays, p. 847. Kosovo Advisory Opinion (n 71), p. 141; Fierstein (n 151), pp. 428–442. Mirzayev, Azerbaijan on the Crossroads (n 91), pp. 53–72. UNCERD (1999). Second Report of States Parties Due in 1999: Azerbaijan. UN Doc CERD/C/350/Add.1/6. Ibid. Aldstadt, A. (1994). O Patria Mia: National Confict in Mountainous Karabagh. In: W.R. Duncan and G.P. Holman eds., Ethnic Nationalism and Regional Confict. Boulder: Westview Press, pp. 115–116; Abdullayev, A. (2001). Dağlıq Qarabağ: Əsasız İddialar, Hadisələr, Faciələr [Abdullayev, A. Nagorno-Karabakh: Groundless Claims, Events, Tragedies]. Baku: Murercim, pp. 78–79 (In Azerbaijani); Rieff, D. (1997). Case Study in Ethnic Strife (Nagorno-Karabakh). Foreign Affairs, 76(2). [online]. Available at: http://www.cilicia.com/armo19e.html [Accessed 17 May 2008]. Mahmudov, Y. and Shukurov, K. (2005). Garabagh: Real History Facts Documents. Baku: Tahsil, pp. 307–330. Cornell, S. (2002). Autonomy as a Source of Confict: Caucasian Conficts in Theoretical Perspective. World Politics, 2, pp. 245–276; Nassibli, N. (1998). The Karabagh Problem: Old Stubbornness and New Hopes. In: U.S. Institute of Peace Conference. [online]. Washington, D.C. Available at: http://www.zerbaijan.com/Azerbaijani/nasibzade.htm [Accessed on 27 May 2021]; Slezkine, Y. (1994). USSR as a Communal Apartment, or How a Socialist State Promoted Ethnic Particularism. Slavic Review, 53(2), pp. 414–452. “Moment of Truth” Programme of the 1st Ostankino TV Channel and Kocharyan, R. (10 January 1994); Арутюнян, В. (1990). События в Нагорном Карабахе: Хроника, Февраль 1988 – Январь 1989 [Arutyunyan, V. Events in Nagorno-Karabakh: Chronics, February 1988–January 1989]. Vol. V. Yerevan: Armenian SSR Academy of Sciences Publishing House. p. 271. (In Russian). De Waal (n 12), pp. 15–18. Kuzio, T. (2021) Human Rights in the Two Karabakh Wars. New Easter Europe. [online]. Available at: https://neweasterneurope.eu/2021/02/16/humanrights-in-the-two-karabakh-wars [Accessed 19 July 2021]. Montevideo Convention on the Rights and Duties of States (1933). [online]. Available at: http://www.taiwandocuments.org/montevideo01.htm [Accessed 9 June 2021]; State Defned (1986). In: Restatement of the Law, Third of the Foreign Relations Law of the United States. Washington, DC: The American Law Institute Publishers, p. 201. EC Yugoslav Arbitration Commission (1992). Opinion No 1. International Law Materials. 31. p. 1494; EC Yugoslav Arbitration Commission (1992). Opinion No 10. International Law Materials. 31. p. 1525. Articles on Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts (2001). UN Doc. A/RES/56/83, 53 UN GAOR Supp. (No. 10) at 43, Supp. (No. 10) A/56/10 (IV.E.1). Ibid. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
202 Farhad Mirzayev 167 UN International Law Commission (2001). Report on the Work of its Fifty-Third Session. General Assembly, Offcial Records, Fifty-ffth Session, Supplement No. 10 (A/56/10); Crawford, J. (2002). The International Law Commission’s Articles on State Responsibility. Introduction, Text and Commentaries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 245–249. 168 Мирзоев, Ф. и Ахмедов, Ф. (2020) “Ремедиальная Сецессия”: Правомерность и Последствия Признания Независимости Нагорного Карабаха [Mirzayev, F. and Ahmadov, F. “Remedial Secession”: Legality and Consequences of Nagorno-Karabakh Recognition]. Rosbalt. [online]. Available at: https://www. rosbalt.ru/world/2020/11/03/1871326.html [Accessed 3 June 2021]. 169 Chiragov (n 59), pp. 13, 29, 58,172. 170 See the resolutions of UNSC, UNGA, PACE, Europarliament and OIC (n 59). 171 Rea, G.B. (1935). The Case for Manchukuo. New York: D. Appleton-Century Company, pp. 120–227; Matsumoto, S. (2017). Manchukuo and the Self-Declared SADR. International Law of Recognition and the Sahara Issue. Policy Paper. [online]. Available at: https://www.policycenter.ma/sites/default/fles/ PP%20-%2002–21%20%28%20Soji%20Matsumoto%29.pdf [Accessed 02 June 2021]. 172 Lytton Commission (1932). Manchuria. Report of 02 November 1932. HL Deb vol 85 cc976–1000. [online]. Available at: https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/lords/1932/nov/02/manchuria-report-of-the-lytton-commission [Accessed 20 June 2021]. 173 Chiragov (n 60), p. 168. 174 Zalyan (n 61), p. 214; Muradyan (n 62), p. 124. 175 Kosovo Advisory Opinion (n 71). 176 Ibid., pp. 80–81 177 Lauterpacht, H. (1944). Recognition of States in International Law. The Yale Law Journal, 53(3), pp. 385–458. 178 Montevideo Convention (n 164). 179 Ibid. 180 Mirzayev, Resettlement of Lebanese Armenians (n 64). 181 Austro-German Customs Union [1931] P.C.I.J., Ser. A/B, 41. 182 Chiragov (n 60), p. 186. 183 Ibid., p. 156. 184 The Guardian (2021). Azerbaijan Swaps 15 Armenian PoWs for Map of Landmines. [online]. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jun/13/ azerbaijan-swaps-15-armenian-pows-for-map-of-landmines [Accessed 20 June 2021]; Reuters (2021). Azerbaijan Swaps 15 Armenian Prisoners for Map Showing Landmines. [online]. Available at: https://www.reuters.com/world/azerbaijan-swaps-15-armenian-prisoners-map-showing-landmines-2021–06–12 [Accessed 20 June 2021]. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
9 International Law and the Changes in the Status Quo of the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict in 2020 Kamal Makili-Aliyev Introduction During the fall of 2020, the Nagorno-Karabakh confict went into a phase of active hostilities, which turned out to be most violent in the history of the confict since war frst broke out between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the beginning of the 1990s. Moreover, the result of the hostilities was fundamental change in the territorial status quo of the confict, that has not occurred since Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a ceasefre agreement in 1994. The analysis of the confict from the international law perspective has never been very popular in the English-language scholarship, with very few authors (including me) that focused on various aspects of the confict. For example, a notable work by Heiko Krüger (2010) is one of the rare exceptions of the comprehensive analysis from the point of view of public international law. In my early works I have looked at the questions of international humanitarian law and international criminal law in the Nagorno-Karabakh confict (Makili-Aliyev 2008), analyzed the confict form the perspective of the international legal instruments that address this situation (MakiliAliyev 2013), drawn parallels between the Åland islands precedent and the Nagorno-Karabakh confict (Makili-Aliyev 2018) and then made a comprehensive comparative analysis between Ålandic precedent and the Nagorno-Karabakh case from the perspective of public international law and confict resolution (Makili-Aliyev 2020). However, due to the fundamental changes in the dynamics and the territorial status quo of the confict, it is an appropriate time to review international legal issues that are associated with the Nagorno-Karabakh confict and address the outstanding legal questions that these changes brought with them. In this study I will: (1) review general international legal issues that are still relevant to the Nagorno-Karabakh confict, (2) analyze international law and scholarship regarding the use of force by Azerbaijan in the fall of 2020, (3) analyze, from the point of view of public international law, the new ceasefre agreement that was concluded in the aftermath of the hostilities in the fall of 2020 and focus on the legal consequences for the DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-12 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
204 Kamal Makili-Aliyev confict. This study will depart from the questions surrounding the role of Armenia in the confict. Armenian Role in the Confict from the Point of View of International Law The international community has condemned the occupation of the territories of Azerbaijan and the aggression of Armenia several times in various international legal documents and called for (and even demanded) the withdrawal of Armenian armed forces from the occupied territories on several such occasions. Most notable of these legal documents are four United Nations (UN) Security Council resolutions 822, 853, 874 and 884 of 1993 (UN 1993a, 1993b, 1993c, 1993d). Moreover, similar resolutions and declarations were adopted by the UN General Assembly, European Parliament, Parliamentary Assembly of Council of Europe, Organization of Islamic Cooperation (PACE 2005; OIC 2008; United Nations 2008; European Parliament 2010, paras. 8, 11, 41) and even NATO, that mentions in its declaration the unresolved conficts in Nagorno-Karabakh as well as Georgia and Moldova in a long list of security challenges facing the organization. The document clearly singles out territorial integrity of internationally recognized states as the guiding principle for their peaceful resolution. Moreover, that document makes no references to the right of peoples to self-determination which has been championed by the Armenian side of the confict (NATO 2012, para. 47) and will be discussed further in this study. Despite the condemnation of the international community, no practical steps have been taken to resolve the occupation, casting doubt on the international law itself. Some in the scholarship have even questioned the international organizations on their assessments of the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, alleging that all their decisions and resolutions have political rather than legal motivation and Armenia is not an aggressor and occupant of the neighboring state’s territories in the Nagorno-Karabakh confict and simply a kinstate trying to aid its national minority in a diffcult situation (Avakian 2015). In my previous research I have refected on a body of evidence that proves otherwise (Makili-Aliyev 2020, 5–8). However, the scholarly debate became practically irrelevant after the matter was decided by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR). ECHR tackled this question already in 2015 via its judgment in the Chiragov and Others v. Armenia case. In its Grand Chamber judgment, the court touches upon the relevant international law and citing Article 42 of Regulations concerning the Laws and Customs of War on Land, The Hague, 18 October 1907 (the 1907 Hague Regulations) concludes that: ...occupation within the meaning of the 1907 Hague Regulations exists when a state exercises actual authority over the territory, or part of the territory, of an enemy state. The requirement of actual authority Uploaded by S. M. Safi
International Law and Change in Status Quo 205 is widely considered to be synonymous to that of effective control. Military occupation is considered to exist in a territory, or part of a territory, if the following elements can be demonstrated: the presence of foreign troops, which are in a position to exercise effective control without the consent of the sovereign. According to widespread expert opinion physical presence of foreign troops is a sine qua non requirement of occupation, i.e. occupation is not conceivable without “boots on the ground” therefore forces exercising naval or air control through a naval or air blockade do not suffce. (ECHR 2015, para. 96) Indeed, occupation is a state when foreign troops on the ground exercise effective control over territory or its parts without consent of the sovereign state. Further, the Court determines that for the purposes of the case it was deciding it is: “...necessary to assess whether [Armenia] exercises effective control over Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding territories as a whole” (para. 170). This necessity was explained by the court as a means to determine Armenia’s jurisdiction in the case. Furthermore, ECHR: ...fnds it established that the Republic of Armenia, through its military presence and the provision of military equipment and expertise, has been signifcantly involved in the Nagorno-Karabakh confict from an early date. This military support has been – and continues to be – decisive for the conquest of and continued control over the territories in issue... (para. 180) Thus, the Court has also established the “boots on the ground” requirement it referred to in the relevant international law previously in its judgment. In paragraph 186 of the case the Court comes to the defnite conclusion that “...the ‘NKR’ and its administration survives by virtue of the military, political, fnancial and other support given to it by Armenia which, consequently, exercises effective control over Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding territories...” (para. 186). Consequently, the ECHR has established that since the beginning of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict Armenia has been involved in it militarily and maintained the effective control by means of (but not limited to) its military forces on the ground and that, in accordance with international law provided by the Court itself, amounts to the occupation of the sovereign territory of Azerbaijan. Even though ECHR was not asked to give such an evaluation of the situation in the Chiragov and Others v. Armenia case, the necessity to establish the facts has enabled the Court to determine the situation on the occupied territories of Azerbaijan on the grounds of international law. However, while Armenia’s involvement as an occupant and an aggressor was proven by the ECHR, the situation on the ground has changed since the fall of 2020 and will be discussed further in this study. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
206 Kamal Makili-Aliyev Relevance of the Right of Peoples to Self-determination to the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict It must be mentioned that in the scholarship and discourse on the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict there are often views expressed that principles of territorial integrity and the right of peoples to self-determination are in collision. The parties to the confict often argue over the superiority of one of the principles over the other. All such claims and views are incorrect by defnition. The same goes to some incorrect assumptions that territorial integrity does not mean inviolability of borders. To start from the beginning, it has to be pointed out that the majority of the grounding principles of international law are refected in the UN Charter and long constitute customary international law. (Thus they are binding for all the states in the world). The same applies to the famed principle of territorial integrity (Kohen 2006, 6 et seq.). Generally, this principle was included in the UN Charter in 1945 (United Nations 1945, art. 2[4]) with the aim not to repeat the World War II (and predecessor wars’) experience and to prevent the eruption of aggressive and occupational wars of states against each other. The further development of this principle is linked with the 1975 Helsinki Final Act of the then Conference for Security and Cooperation in Europe (predecessor of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe). This document proclaims the respect to territorial integrity of participating States and prohibits use of force and military occupation of territory, declaring that no occupation or acquisition can be recognized as legal. Moreover, norms of international law that cover inviolability of borders constitute a part of principle of territorial integrity and that is confrmed by the same Helsinki Final Act (OSCE 1975, 1: III and IV) Thus, the principle of territorial integrity means not only inviolability of borders but even wider range of sub-principles. That includes even the internal matters and not only international relations of the states concerned (Kohen 2006, 7). These principles apply to Armenia through international treaty law, while they are also binding for all the states in the world as norms of customary international law. When it comes to right of peoples to self-determination in its broader sense, it was frst refected in the UN Charter (United Nations 1945, art. 1[2]). In this broader sense it became practically inapplicable after the decolonization in the 1960s–1970s. Moreover, it was included in the UN Charter specifcally with the purpose of fnal abolition of colonialism and imperialism. The Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples is particularly indicating in this sense. In its paragraph 2 it confrms the decolonization context of the self-determination as a principle: “All peoples have the right to self-determination; by virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development” (United Nations 1960, para. 2). At the same time, it adds that: “Any attempt aimed at the partial or total disruption of the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
International Law and Change in Status Quo 207 national unity and the territorial integrity of a country is incompatible with the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations” (para. 6). Basically, this indicates that, even in this context, self-determination cannot be a reason for a violation of other principles of international law, namely territorial integrity. Such an approach is supported further by the UN Declaration on principles of international law that acknowledges that the realization of the principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples aims inter alia at bringing a speedy end to colonialism and specifcally points out the “colonial peoples” (United Nations 1970). However, by the end of the 1980s and beginning of the 1990s, when the Nagorno-Karabakh confict began, the process of decolonization was long over. In international legal discourse similar views further point to the fact that self-determination was almost entirely limited to the process of decolonization (Potier 2001, 30; Crisan 2015, 112; Makili-Aliyev 2020, 18–19). Moreover, Nagorno-Karabakh was never a colony and the Armenian population residing there is in fact a national (ethnic) minority on the territory of the Republic of Azerbaijan and not any kind of “colonial people”. Armenians as peoples in the meaning of the UN Charter have already exercised their right to self-determination in the Republic of Armenia. In accordance with international law, minorities do not have right to selfdetermination in the broader sense due to the fact that their “nation” (people) has already exercised the right to self-determination in their own territory. In the case of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict this territory is the Republic of Armenia (Makili-Aliyev 2020, 19–20). Nor did the population of Nagorno-Karabakh constitute a separate people of a state during the Soviet period to be entitled to the external right to self-determination (Krüger 2010, 55–56). All this makes the principle of right of peoples to self-determination in its broader sense and from the legal point of view inapplicable to the Nagorno-Karabakh confict. It is evident then, that the confusion about the collision of principles was created by the misinterpretation of the international law. Important to note, is that in my previous research, I have already explained why the right of peoples to self-determination is not a “right to secession” and how the internal aspect of self-determination can in fact be applicable to the Nagorno-Karabakh confict and can help in its resolution (Makili-Aliyev 2020, 20–24, 68–73, 90–101). Legitimacy and Status of So-called “Nagorno-Karabakh Republic” from the Perspective of Soviet Legislation and International Law Even though there are no peoples in Nagorno-Karabakh to claim the right to self-determination and somehow justify a secession, there are still arguments coming mainly from the Armenian politicians and even some Armenian researchers that the so-called “Nagorno-Karabakh Republic” (“NKR”) has Uploaded by S. M. Safi
208 Kamal Makili-Aliyev become an independent state using its right to secession provided by the Soviet legislation for the autonomous regions including former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast’ (NKAO) (Permanent Mission of Armenia to the United Nations Offce 2005, 7 et seq.; Avakian 2015). However, the close examination of the Soviet legislation shows a different picture. The USSR Constitution of 1977 in its Article 72 provided that each Union Republic (Armenia and Azerbaijan were such republics before the dissolution of the USSR) shall retain the right to freely secede from the USSR. Moreover, in Article 76 it explicitly states that a Union Republic is a sovereign Soviet Socialist state that has united with other Soviet Republics in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Furthermore, former NKAO, it appears, was not a “sovereign” and according to Articles 82 and 86 of the aforementioned constitution was a constituent part of the Union Republic; in our case Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic. In addition, Article 78 of the 1977 USSR Constitution provides that the territory of the Union Republic may not be altered without its consent. Even the boundaries between Union Republics could have been changed only by their own mutual agreement and still this agreement was subject to ratifcation by the USSR (Potier 2001, 39–40). However, in 1990 on the brink of the dissolution of the USSR, the Law on Procedures for Resolving Questions Related to the Secession of Union Republics from the USSR (Law on Secession) was adopted. This law provided in its Article 3 that: In the Union republic that has within it autonomous republics, autonomous provinces and autonomous regions, the referendum shall be held separately in each autonomous unit. The peoples of autonomous republics and autonomous formations shall retain the right to decide independently the question of staying in the USSR or in the seceding Union republic, as well as to raise the question of their own legal state status. In a Union republic whose territory includes areas with concentration of national groups that make up the majority of the population in a given locality, the results of the voting in these localities shall be considered separately during the determination of the referendum result. (Hannum 1993, 754) This particular piece of legislation is being used by the separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenian government to justify the creation of “NKR”. While it is true that such a law was adopted by the Soviet Union, it has many legal problems with both its existence and implementation. First of all, as it can be seen from the above, it clearly contradicts the superior legal act – the 1977 Constitution of the USSR and thus, it was unconstitutional by defnition. Second, as Tim Potier points out, this law was adopted in an attempt to slow down, at the time, the momentum of the secession of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
International Law and Change in Status Quo 209 the Baltic States from the Soviet Union and only later became relevant to other Union Republics (Potier 2001, 40). Legal researchers that have studied and analyzed the text of the law and that of the 1977 Constitution of the USSR are pointing out that in addition to mentioned contradictions, the law itself was not implemented properly and the requirements of this law were not properly met. Moreover, the law provided for such a complex, cumbersome and disadvantageous procedure, which would not only have a successful secession delayed for years but could even have made it impossible (Krüger 2010, 28–39). This is especially important, as the truth of the matter is that the procedure under the Law on Secession adopted in 1990 was so complicated and required so many years to implement, that none of the former Soviet Union republics has successfully implemented it, taking into account that the USSR has effectively ceased to exist on 26 December 1991. Thus, the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic has become an independent state by virtue of the dissolution of Soviet Union and under the principle uti possidetis juris Nagorno-Karabakh was a constituent part of the new Republic of Azerbaijan (Potier 2001, 41; Krüger 2010, 37). In her study of uti possidetis principle in regard to problematic situations in post-Soviet space Anne Peters makes a conclusion that: ...older administrative lines stemming from the pre-independence era (e.g. Soviet era) cannot be opposed against the currently existing ‘mother’ states (e.g. CIS states) if they are not acknowledged in their domestic law as it stands, too. Neither does uti possidetis apply on the basis of factual control over a territory, in the absence of a formal administrative line. (Peters 2014, 136) That fair conclusion when taken in the context of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict means that the Nagorno-Karabakh separatists can’t argue that because Azerbaijan did not have total or effective control over Nagorno-Karabakh in turbulent times of the USSR’s dissolution, uti possidetis principle did not apply to Nagorno-Karabakh as part of the territory of Azerbaijan. Interestingly, even the proponents of the independence of so-called “NKR” agree that the arguments under the Law on Secession are less than credible. For example, William Slomanson suggests that: ...[Nagorno-Karabakh] abandon its exclusive reliance on its interpretation of the... 1990 Soviet statute... There is no multilateral treaty on secession. There never will be. That would be political suicide. An alternative source of international law – state practice – does not provide an expedient yardstick for measuring the legitimacy of unilateral secessions... [T]he right to self-determination does not include a general right to secession... (Slomanson 2012, 41) Uploaded by S. M. Safi
210 Kamal Makili-Aliyev Moreover, Slomanson advises against using the case of Kosovo as well, due to the fact that the International Court of Justice did not consider the questions of statehood and right to secession of Kosovo (42). Furthermore, another claim that in accordance with the Montevideo Convention of 1933 the self-proclaimed so-called “Nagorno-Karabakh Republic” should be recognized on the international level, has earlier been proven as groundless (Makili-Aliyev 2020, 27–29), confrming the fact that the socalled “NKR” does not in any way qualify for the status of an independent state and cannot even be treated as a de facto state or a state-like entity. UN Security Council’s Resolutions and the Questions of Self-defense and Use of Force Raised in Connection to the Hostilities in 2020 From the start of the confict and frst actions of Armenia that aimed at the annexation of the parts of Azerbaijan’s sovereign territory, the UN Security Council has adopted four resolutions that were mentioned earlier (UN 1993a, 1993b, 1993c, 1993d), In these resolutions the Security Council demands the withdrawal of all occupying forces from the territories of Azerbaijan (Krüger 2010, 106). Many authors that have been analyzing these resolutions come to similar conclusions that actions of Armenia cannot be justifed under international law, that Armenia is an occupying power and that the Security Council recognized that fact and demanded the withdrawal of Armenian armed forces (e.g., Cornell 1999, 32; Krüger 2010, 106; Qasimova 2010, 83). Thus, it is quite obvious, that the analysis of the UN Security Council’s resolutions provides us with an open and clear message that the Armenian forces conducting occupation should have been withdrawn a long time ago. Moreover, it is commonly known from the UN Charter Article 25 that the Security Council Resolutions are obligatory for the implementation for all the UN member-states (United Nations 1945), including the Republic of Armenia. Moreover, the UN Security Council has enough powers to make any state comply with its resolutions (United Nations 1945, arts. 41–42), especially a state engaged in aggression against other states. The conduct of Armenia clearly fts the defnition of aggression as clarifed by the UN General Assembly Resolution 3314 (United Nations 1974, arts. 1, 3[a]). While it can be argued that the provisions of 1974 UN General Assembly resolution were strong recommendations of the international community to the UN Security Council and were of non-binding character in 1993, however, much time has passed since, and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court of 1998 has emerged, offcially making aggression an international crime (Rome Statute 1998, 5[1][d]). Even more importantly, by 2001 it was universally accepted that aggression is an unlawful act and prohibition of such act has acquired the status of jus cogens norms (ILC 2001, 283–284, paras. 4–5). Uploaded by S. M. Safi
International Law and Change in Status Quo 211 Unfortunately, none of the mentioned facts were considered by the UN Security Council as a reason to make Armenia comply with the Council’s own decisions and start procedures under Chapter VII of the UN Charter and so the aggression was allowed to continue. The inaction of the UN Security Council was interpreted by the Republic of Azerbaijan to mean that it still retains the right of self-defense under Article 51 of the UN Charter. The article declares that: Nothing in the present Charter shall impair the inherent right of individual or collective self-defence if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the United Nations, until the Security Council has taken measures necessary to maintain international peace and security…. (United Nations 1945, art. 51) It has to be pointed out that Azerbaijan recognizes this right in its own legislation, providing in Article 28 of its military doctrine that: [Azerbaijan] maintains its right to use all necessary means, including application of military force, to restore its territorial integrity according to the norms and principles of international law, if the Republic of Armenia continues to hold under occupation the part of the territory of the Republic of Azerbaijan and refuses to liberate occupied territories in the framework of political resolution of the problem. (Qasimova 2010, 92) Moreover, the state using self-defense is quite free to act on its own discretion. As Yoram Dinstein accurately suggests: “The acting State unilaterally determines whether the occasion calls for the use of forcible measures in self-defence, and, if so, what specifc steps ought to be taken” (Dinstein 2011, 234). The only requirement that Article 51 bestows upon a state in question is a reporting to the UN Security Council: ...[m]easures taken by Members in the exercise of this right to selfdefence shall be immediately reported to the Security Council and shall not in any way affect the authority or responsibility of the Security Council under the present Charter to take at any time such action as it deems necessary in order to maintain or restore international peace and security. (United Nations 1945, art. 51) The only matter that is questionable here is what “until” actually means in the understanding of Article 51 of the UN Charter. Thomas Plofchan examining the limits of right to self-defense as early as in 1992, in connection with Iraqi occupation of Kuwait in 1990, comes to solid conclusions that: Uploaded by S. M. Safi
212 Kamal Makili-Aliyev ...an examination of legislative history demonstrates that the framers of the U.N. Charter intended that the right of self-defense should exist at all times unless the Security Council were to specifcally prohibit its exercise... The right of self-defense is fundamental and can only be limited if State action is in direct contravention of the purposes and principles of the Charter, or if the Security Council takes explicit action to limit this right. (Plofchan 1992, 372–373) Malvina Halberstam tackling the issue in question similarly concludes that: It is diffcult to believe that some 180 states would have agreed to give up the most fundamental attribute of sovereignty, the right to use force in self-defense, to an international body, and particularly one like the Security Council....[More] plausible interpretation of Article 51 is that a state retains the right of self-defense until the Security Council has taken measures that have succeeded in restoring international peace and security. This interpretation is overwhelmingly confrmed by the legislative history of Article 51. (Halberstam 1996, 248) In this sense the legal argumentation adopted by Azerbaijan could be summarized as that until the UN Security Council decides to restore peace and security in the situation of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict using means available to it under UN Charter and achieves that goal successfully, Azerbaijan maintains its right to self-defense, provided that it will inform the UN Security Council of the measures it is taking. At the same time, UN Security Council has set no limitations on Azerbaijan regarding the right of self-defense. With that in mind, all actions of Azerbaijan to recover its territories from occupation should be considered as the exercise of the “inherent” right to self-defense. Azerbaijan maintained that position during the escalation of hostilities in the fall of 2020 (Permanent Representative of Azerbaijan to the United Nations 2020, 2). However, this position was questioned by some legal scholars and confrmed by others. The debate generally revolved around the interpretation of the principles of public international law with regard to the prohibition of use of force (United Nations 1945, art. 2[4]). Tom Ruys and Felipe Rodriguez Silvestre argued in November 2020, right after the new ceasefre agreement was concluded between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia (Statement 2020), that Azerbaijan’s claim that it had a right to exercise self-defense during the hostilities in the fall of 2020, wasn’t satisfactory. Ruys and Silvestre argued that it is doubtful that an unlawful occupation can be regarded as a “continuing” armed attack permitting the use of self-defense at any given point in time (e.g., years after occupation). In their argumentation, Ruys and Silvestre pointed to the “continuing character” of occupation as an event but Uploaded by S. M. Safi
International Law and Change in Status Quo 213 argued that this does not necessarily imply a “continuing armed attack”. They argued instead that Article 51 of the UN Charter refers to the attack as “occurring”, suggesting that it has a ratione temporis dimension, that becomes meaningless should the right to self-defense not be perceived as necessarily having “immediacy requirement”. Moreover, they believe and argue that the prohibition of use of force is not connected solely to the protection of territorial sovereignty but exists also to safeguard international peace and security and human lives, and that implies that the prohibition of solving disputes by military means extends even to the situation of territorial disputes or “frozen” armed conficts. Thus, they argue, based on the examples from state practice, the Nagorno-Karabakh confict as a territorial dispute could not have provoked Azerbaijan’s right to self-defense as the situation of status quo there was relatively peaceful for an extended amount of time. Therefore, they argued, the argumentation that unlawful occupation can support the legality of self-defense because this occupation is a “continuing armed attack” cannot be accepted (Ruys and Silvestre 2020). A similar position was taken by another duo of scholars. Bernard KnollTudor and Daniel Müller argued in EJIL:Talk! that because the hostilities in the fall of 2020 were between two recognized states (Armenia and Azerbaijan), Article 2(4) of the UN Charter, that prohibits the use force between such states, should apply in full to this situation. They believe that the fact of illegal occupation of territory by one state, does not necessarily mean that the rightful owner can arbitrarily use enforcement (military) action as it will challenge the overall architecture of preservation of peace. Moreover, they argue that Azerbaijan’s actions, on one hand, are problematic from the points of view of immediacy, necessity and proportionality and, on the other hand, they claimed (interestingly, based on the argumentation of Ruy and Silvestre) that continued occupation cannot be equated to the “continued attack”. Nor, in their view, can Azerbaijan base its enforcement action on the Security Council resolutions of 1993 (mentioned above), as they contain no authorization for such action. They concluded that a valid claim over land does not per se justify the use of force (Knoll-Tudor and Müller 2020). Yet, a third pair of scholars that commented on the issue, took an opposite stance. Dapo Akande and Antonios Tzanakopoulos criticized the position of Ruys and others from the point of view of an incorrectly formulated question. Akande and Tzanakopoulos argued that the right question is not if the unlawful occupation constitutes a continuing armed attack, but if any occupation as a direct consequence of an armed attack, constitutes a continuing armed attack. They have also argued that there is a difference between a territorial dispute where a claim was made but no force was used and another situation where one party creates or escalates the territorial dispute by invasion and occupation of the disputed territory. Moreover, they argue that the International Court of Justice (ICJ) have practically equated notions of “armed attack” and “aggression” in its case law, which needs to be taken into account when considering invasion and occupation. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
214 Kamal Makili-Aliyev They also argue that the necessity criterion in self-defense is very important as it can also refer not only to immediacy of self-defense but also to the situation of a last resort. In their view, prolonged occupation with no visible chances for peaceful resolutions constitutes such a last resort situation (Akande and Tzanakopoulos 2020). The argumentation provided by Akande and Tzanakopoulos presents as much more compelling than the argumentation of other scholars for several reasons. First, the argumentation provided by their opponents that the prohibition of use of force in international law is primarily connected to the maintenance of peace and security and that in some cases the protection of territorial integrity by any means will challenge the architecture of sustainable peace, cannot be accepted as valid. A simple refection on the fact that the principle of territorial integrity in the UN Charter does not have any exceptions, while non-use of force principle has two exceptions (Security Council authorization and self-defense), is already a clear indicator of a shaky ground under the assumption that Ruys and other made. It is obvious that the UN Charter accepts the necessity to use force in some cases, making the notion of peace a non-absolute category. Arguing a contrario and assuming the opposite, would make the inclusion of right to self-defense into UN Charter meaningless in the frst place. If the point of the UN Charter is “peace by any means”, then the logical reaction of any state to an invasion should be non-use of force (non-engagement with an aggressor) and further reliance on the international community (represented by UN Security Council) to restore the situation to previous status quo or, alternatively, to keep the situation as it is for the sake of continued peace. The result of such a theoretical exercise puts under question not only the right to self-defense, but also principles of sovereignty and sovereign equality of the states (United Nations 1945, art. 2[1, 4, 7]) as only the members of the UN Security Council would then hold a monopoly on the use of force. Thus, the validity of the theoretical argumentation provided by Ruys and Silvestre and supported by Knoll-Tudor and Müller is fundamentally challenged. Second, the opponents of Akande and Tzanakopoulos, rely on the understanding that territorial disputes should not be solved through the use of force, to which the counter argument is grounded in the difference between the territorial dispute where the force was not used and the situation of the occupation. However, there is another dimension here connected to the notion of a “genuine” territorial dispute that was put forward by the Ruys and Silvestre (2020). They try to preempt the argumentation that the dispute is not “genuine” if no claim was put forward by the occupying state. However, it should be instead argued, that it is not the claim or counterclaim that proves that the dispute exists, it is rather the uncertainty from the point of view of international law and the state practice that should be indicative here. Otherwise, any casual public proclamation or a verbal claim on the state level (e.g., populist nationalistic claims aimed at the internal audiences) Uploaded by S. M. Safi
International Law and Change in Status Quo 215 can be considered a territorial dispute. In cases such as Nagorno-Karabakh, where there is a clear confrmation of the unlawful occupation (ECHR 2015) and recognition of this fact by the member-states of the UN in form of the Security Council resolutions of 1993, labeling the territory as disputed is incorrect by defnition, as from the point of view of international law no dispute exists – Nagorno-Karabakh is a recognized territory of Azerbaijan. Thus, it is incorrect to equate a proven unlawful occupation of the sovereign territory with a territorial dispute within the meaning of the UN Charter and UN General Assembly resolutions. Lastly, the argument between the aforementioned scholars seems to boil down to the argument about if the unlawful occupation actually constitutes “continuing armed attack” to justify the self-defense under Article 51 of the UN Charter. The problem here seems to be in the differences of the understanding of the “occupation” which allows the scholars to interpret its properties in ways that ft their respective arguments. Akande and Tzankopoulos (2020) argue that occupation is a form of aggression that is continuing by defnition and recognized by the ICJ as an armed attack. Their opponents, on the other hand, understand occupation as a process that has started as an attack, but not necessarily continuing as an attack, due to the fact that hostilities usually cease on the occupied territory, especially in the protracted occupations. Thus, the occupation is argued to be different and separate from an armed attack per se (Knoll-Tudor and Müller 2020; Ruys and Silvestre 2020). What all of the aforementioned scholars seem to ignore is that the military occupation is actually a legal regime and it may be helpful to treat it as such – as a complex and multidimensional event. Instead of trying to equate the occupation to a notion of an aggression or compare it with a notion of an attack, it is more helpful to look at the ECHR’s confrmation (discussed above) that in accordance with the 1907 Hague Regulations military occupation is characterized by effective control of the occupying state and physical military presence of that state on the foreign territory (ECHR 2015, para. 96). The second requirement of physical military presence means that for the situation to be classifed as an occupation, it is always necessary to have military troops on the ground on the territory of the state against its sovereign will. However, such military action of the troops across the border is by defnition an “armed attack” (ICJ 1986, para. 195). Hence, while the occupation continues, so continues the presence of military troops and, consequently, armed attack continues as well. It is not a legal regime of occupation that constitutes a “continuing armed attack”, but it is one of its necessary requirements (military troops on the ground) that constitutes an armed attack that is continuing for the duration of the occupation. As it can be seen from the above, the analysis of the law and scholarship indicates that Azerbaijan’s claim to the right to self-defense during the hostilities in the fall of 2020 should be considered valid. It is then necessary to Uploaded by S. M. Safi
216 Kamal Makili-Aliyev consider the changes that happened after Azerbaijan has exercised its right to self-defense. International Legal Perspective on the Changes in the Status Quo After the New Ceasefre Agreement between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia Concluded in 2020 The full-scale hostilities between Armenia and Azerbaijan that broke out in the fall of 2020 have ended with the new ceasefre agreement concluded on November 10, 2020. The period after this agreement is marked by nearly absolute absence of any kind of active hostilities, including low-intensity hostilities that have persisted after the ceasefre agreement of 1994 between Armenia and Azerbaijan and occasionally turned into more active fareups (Makili-Aliyev 2020, 4–5), In many ways, this is due to the fact that the agreement introduced the Russian peacekeeping mission on the remnants of territory of Nagorno-Karabakh that were still controlled by the Armenian armed forces. In accordance with the agreement, the peacekeeping forces of Russia are deployed along the line of contact between Armenia and Azerbaijan that existed on November 10, 2020 and along the so-called “Lachin Corridor” – a fve-kilometer-wide strip of land with a road in the middle, running from the border of Armenia to the exclave of NagornoKarabakh surrounded by the line of contact (Statement 2020, paras. 3 and 6). Moreover, the agreement covered the return of the regions surrounding the former NKAO to the jurisdiction of Azerbaijan. These were the regions that Azerbaijan has not taken control over during the previous hostilities, namely, the Agdam, Kalbajar and Lachin regions (or “districts” as per the agreement) (paras. 2 and 6). The transfer of regions to the jurisdiction of Azerbaijan was carried out within close deadlines and by December 2020 Azerbaijan took control over these territories. Such profound changes in the territorial status quo and the access of a third state to the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh have consequently affected the questions of effective control and jurisdiction. It is clear now that the previous ECHR (2015) ruling is no longer as relevant to the present situation on the ground. Azerbaijan has regained jurisdiction and effective control over most of the territories that it did not control in 2015. The rest of the territory of Azerbaijan that still has presence of Armenian troops on it, however, now also hosts the military presence of Russia. This makes an interesting situation where the effective control over this remaining territory is exercised collectively by Armenia and Russia. For example, the new ceasefre agreement explicitly points to the exclusive control of Russian military over the “Lachin Corridor” (Statement 2020, para. 6). This arrangement will last at least until November 2025 as the Russian peacekeepers’ presence is limited by the fve-year term that can be prolonged indefnitely in the absence of an objection from any of the parties to the agreement (para. 4). Meanwhile, it is diffcult to see the delimitation of control between Russia and Armenia because Uploaded by S. M. Safi
International Law and Change in Status Quo 217 there are no legal documents regulating the mandate of the Russian peacekeepers, making the balance between powers of Armenia and Russia in this territory very diffcult to distinguish. Furthermore, the new ceasefre agreement includes the provision on the withdrawal of the Armenian troops from the territory in question, however, does not set a concrete deadline (para. 4). This further indicates that, at least in theory, the control of Armenia over the territory will diminish in favor of Russia. However, such an uncertain situation will create a lot of legal questions with regards to the jurisdiction over the territory and responsibility for the well-being of its population. Moreover, apart from the withdrawal of Armenian armed forces, there are other obligations under the agreement that remain to be fulflled: (1) the return of all internally displaced persons and refugees; (2) mutual return of all the detained persons; (3) re-opening of all economic and transport communications (paras. 7–9). Those provisions are not fully explained in the agreement and are not subjects to strict deadlines (unlike the return of regions to Azerbaijan). This makes them dependent on separate agreements between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia. On the other hand, the new ceasefre agreement, albeit being called a “statement”, is obviously a treaty in the understanding of international law. The ICJ have long ago explained that regardless of the format or the name of the document, when states enter into commitments toward each other – they conclude a treaty (ICJ 1994). In practice, the parties of the “statement” have demonstrated by their treatment of the document that they consider its obligations as binding under international law and that means that any disagreements on its implementation can be submitted to the ICJ if the parties so wished. This demonstrates a clear contrast with the previous ceasefre agreement of 1994, that was constantly violated and did not include that many substantive obligations. Now the parties have even more incentives to settle arguments peacefully by using an international arbitration if they so wish. Conclusion In this study I have reviewed the outstanding legal issues in the Nagorno-Karabakh confict in the changed situation after the active hostilities during the fall of 2020. I have confrmed that from the point of view of international law Armenia’s role in the confict is of the aggressor and occupying power. Moreover, I was able to show that the idea that at the heart of this confict there is a collision between principles of territorial integrity and self-determination of peoples (usually featured by political scientists) is not valid and that those two principles of international law are very well aligned, not least due to the fact that the right of peoples to self-determination is not a “right to secession”. Such a right does not exist in international law. Furthermore, Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh being a minority on the territory of Azerbaijan do not have a right to self-determination in the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
218 Kamal Makili-Aliyev understanding of the UN Charter. I have also confrmed that the idea of secession of Nagorno-Karabakh based on the Soviet legislation is not valid as the requirements of the Soviet Law on Secession of 1990 were never fulflled by any of the territories of the former Soviet Union and the law itself was unconstitutional. I have further analyzed the right of Azerbaijan to self-defense in the context of the protracted occupation from the Armenian side. Through the analysis of the international law and contemporary scholarship I challenge the idea that the principles of international law embedded in the UN Charter aim primarily at the maintenance of peace and that territorial integrity cannot be seen as a valid reason to disturb peace in order to restore the integrity of the state. I point to the fact that such a position would question the rationale of the right to self-defense itself as well as sovereignty and sovereign equality of the states. Moreover, I point to the fact that because Nagorno-Karabakh is clearly recognized under international law as territory of Azerbaijan, the territory itself can hardly be a matter of a dispute within the meaning of the UN Charter. I further explain that there is a misunderstanding in the scholarship of the relation between a military occupation and an armed attack. One of the properties of the occupation is physical presence of the military forces on the territory of another state without its consent and that in itself is an armed attack. This attack becomes continuing for the duration of the occupation making Azerbaijan’s claim to self-defense valid. Furthermore, I analyzed the treaty between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia that ended the hostilities in the fall of 2020. I point to the important changes that led to the questions of effective control over parts of the territory that remained outside of jurisdiction of Azerbaijan and on the unresolved obligations between the parties. One important outcome of the treaty is that it opened the way to resolution of the legal issues between Armenia and Azerbaijan through the use of international arbitration. References Akande, Dapo and Antonios Tzanakopoulos. 2020. “Use of Force in Self-Defence to Recover Occupied Territory: When Is It Permissible?” EJIL:Talk!, November 18. https://www.ejiltalk.org/use-of-force-in-self-defence-to-recover-occupiedterritory-when-is-it-permissible/ Avakian, Shahen. 2015. Nagorno Karabagh: Legal Aspects, 5th ed. Moscow: “MIA” Publishers. Cornell, Svante. 1999. The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict. Report no. 46. Uppsala: Department of East European Studies, Uppsala University. Crisan, Alexandru-Vlad. 2015. “The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict: The Principle of Sovereignty and the Right to Self-determination.” International Journal of Humanistic Ideology 6(2): 107–132. Dinstein, Yoram. 2011. War, Aggression and Self-Defence, 5th ed. New York: Cambridge University Press. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
International Law and Change in Status Quo 219 Halberstam, Malvina. 1996. “The Right to Self-Defense Once the Security Council Takes Action.” Michigan Journal of International Law 17(2): 229–248. Hannum, Hurst. 1993. Documents on Autonomy and Minority Rights. Dordrecht: Martinus Nijhoff. Knoll-Tudor, Bernard and Daniel Müller. 2020. “At Daggers Drawn: International Legal Issues Surrounding the Confict in and around Nagorno-Karabakh.” EJIL:Talk!, November 17. https://www.ejiltalk.org/at-daggers-drawn-international-legal-issues-surrounding-the-confict-in-and-around-nagorno-karabakh/ Kohen, Marcelo. 2006. “Introduction.” In Secession. International Law Perspectives, edited by Marcelo Kohen, 1–20. New York: Cambridge University Press. https:// doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511494215 Krüger, Heiko. 2010. The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict. A Legal Analysis. London, New York: Springer. Makili-Aliyev, Kamal. 2008. Enforcement of International Law in the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict: Guidebook to International Humanitarian Law and International Criminal Law in Nagorno-Karabakh Confict. Tbilisi: Universal. https://bit.ly/3b3kljr Makili-Aliyev, Kamal. 2013. Nagorno-Karabakh Confict in International Legal Documents and International Law. Baku: Silver Ltd. http://www.makili-aliyev. com/2014/05/new-book-nagorno-karabakh-confict-in.html Makili-Aliyev, Kamal. 2018. “Comparing the Åland Islands Precedent and the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict. Research Note.” Journal of Autonomy and Security Studies 2(2): 106–117. Makili-Aliyev, Kamal. 2020. Contested Territories and International Law: A Comparative Study of the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict and Aland Islands Precedent. 1st ed. London: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429353437 Peters, Anne. 2014. “The Principle of Uti Possidetis Juris. How Relevant is it for Issues of Secession?” In Self-Determination and Secession in International Law, edited by Christian Walter, Antje Von Ungern-Sternberg and Kavus Abushov, 95–137. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198702375. 001.0001 Plofchan, Thomas. 1992. “Article 51: Limits on Self-Defense.” Michigan Journal of International Law 13(2): 336–373. Potier, Tim. 2001. Confict in Nagorno-Karabakh, Abkhazia and South Ossetia: A Legal Appraisal. The Hague: Kluwer Law International. Ruys, Tom and Felipe Rodríguez Silvestre. 2020. “The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict and the Exercise of “Self-Defense” to Recover Occupied Land.” Just Security, November 10. https://www.justsecurity.org/73310/the-nagornokarabakh-confict-and-the-exercise-of-self-defense-to-recover-occupied-land/ Qasimova, Shafa. 2010. “Article 51 of the UN Charter and the Armenia-Azerbaijan Confict.” Perceptions XV(Spring–Summer): 75–98. Slomanson, William. 2012. “Nagorno Karabakh: An Alternative Legal Approach to its Quest for Legitimacy.” Thomas Jefferson Law Review 35(1): 29–44. Primary Sources ECHR (European Court of Human Rights). 2015. Chiragov and Others v. Armenia [GC], no. 13216/05. http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-155353 European Parliament. 2010. Resolution of on the Need for an EU Strategy for the South Caucasus. May 20. (2009/2216(INI)). Uploaded by S. M. Safi
220 Kamal Makili-Aliyev ICJ (International Court of Justice). 1986. Military and Paramilitary Activities in and Against Nicaragua (Nicaragua v. U.S.). June 27. ICJ 14, 181. ICJ (International Court of Justice). 1994. Maritime Delimitation and Territorial Questions between Qatar and Bahrain (Qatar v. Bahrain), Jurisdiction and Admissibility, ICJ Rep. 112. ILC (International Law Commission). 2001. The Report. 53rd Session. GAOR. 56th Session, Supp. No.10 (A/56/10). OIC (Organization of Islamic Cooperation). 2008. Resolution on the Aggression of the Republic of Armenia against the Republic of Azerbaijan. 10/11-P(IS). OSCE (Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe). 1975. Helsinki Final Act. Helsinki. PACE (Parliamentary Assembly of Council of Europe). 2005. Resolution “The confict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region dealt with by the OSCE Minsk Conference”. 1416. Permanent Mission of Armenia to the United Nations Offce at Geneva and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. 2005. Note Verbale. March 21. E/ CN.4/2005/G/23 Permanent Representative of Azerbaijan to the United Nations. 2020. Letter Addressed to the Secretary-General. October 1. A/75/379–S/2020/965. https:// documents-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N20/273/71/pdf/N2027371. pdf?OpenElement NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization). 2012. Chicago Summit Declaration. Chicago. Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. 1998. http://bit.ly/1TeuDLN Statement by President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia and President of the Russian Federation. 2020. http://en.kremlin.ru/ events/president/news/64384 United Nations. 1945. Charter. New York. http://www.un.org/en/sections/uncharter/chapter-i/index.html United Nations. 1960. General Assembly Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples. A/RES/15/1514. New York. http://www.un.org/ en/decolonization/declaration.shtml United Nations. 1970. General Assembly Declaration on Principles of International Law Concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation among States in Accordance with the Charter of the United Nations. A/RES/25/2625. New York. http://www. un-documents.net/a25r2625.htm United Nations. 1974. General Assembly Resolution “Defnition of Aggression”. 3314 (XXIX). New York. https://undocs.org/en/A/RES/3314(XXIX) United Nations. 1993a. Security Council Resolution 822. New York. United Nations. 1993b. Security Council Resolution 853. New York. United Nations. 1993c. Security Council Resolution 874. New York. United Nations. 1993d. Security Council Resolution 884. New York. United Nations. 2008. General Assembly Resolution “The situation in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan”. A/RES/62/243. New York. https://undocs.org/en/A/ RES/62/243. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Part III The Second Karabakh War and the Consequences Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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10 How Do We Explain Victory? The Karabakh Campaign of 2020 Edward J. Erickson Introduction How do we explain victory? How do we explain Azerbaijan’s stunning strategic victory in the autumn of 2020 in what has come to be called the 44-Day War or the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War? The most pervasive explanation today is “The bigger and better equipped Azerbaijani army, backed by Turkey, overwhelmed the smaller and obsolescent Armenian force” (Reynolds 2021). While it is true the Azerbaijani armed forces were certainly larger and better equipped, military history demonstrates that such factors do not automatically guarantee battlefeld victories. Much depends on training and motivation. Moreover, as late as mid-December 2020, the respected British defence publisher Jane’s wrote the Azerbaijani Army “remains hampered by corruption and a highly politicized offcer corps. It lacks a consistent and coordinated training programme for individual soldiers and small and larger units, which are especially lacking in combined arms/joint service training” (Azerbaijan – Army 2020, 2). If we combine these assertions we are left with the question, “How did a large but clumsy force, supposedly led by politicized offcers and poorly trained, achieve such a resounding Azerbaijani victory?” This chapter presents a military analysis of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces’ successful 2020 campaign to seize geographically and politically important parts of Karabakh from the Armenian Army. The campaign was indeed a resounding military success and this explanation is presented using a military vocabulary and military concepts to establish an overall context and timeline for understanding that success. At the highest levels, the Azerbaijani strategic objective of recovering large portions of Armenian-occupied territory proved achievable in terms of balancing military ends, ways, and means. Moreover, the Azerbaijani Armed Forces’ joint planning, preparation, and combat effectiveness proved effective and decisive compared to its Armenian opponent. This was achieved through an extended period of Turkish military assistance which was a critically important combat multiplier for the Azerbaijanis but it also refected the acquisition of selected capabilities and capacities chosen by Azerbaijan. DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-14 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
224 Edward J. Erickson Ultimately, the success of Azerbaijan’s 2020 campaign in Karabakh was the result of a sustained period of professionalization of its military institutions and complementary acquisition decisions. Background The fractious history between Armenia and Azerbaijan dates back to the dissolution of the Russian Empire in 1917 when both polities briefy became independent before being overrun by the Ottoman Army in 1918. However, by 1920, Armenia lost a war against Mustafa Kemal’s Turkish Nationalists and both republics were soon absorbed into the Soviet Union. Upon the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, both republics regained independence and problems immediately reignited over ownership of Karabakh and Nakhchivan, both of which were an internationally recognized part of Azerbaijan. The First Karabakh War was fought from 1992 through 1994 and resulted in the loss of the mountainous Karabakh region to Armenia. Fighting was heavy, casualties here high, and civilian victimization was rampant, but the war was overshadowed by the conficts in the former Yugoslavia, which seemed to capture a larger share of the world’s attention. The Armenians were better trained and more highly motivated, and inficted a major defeat on the new Azerbaijani Army. Since that time, tensions remain high along the Line of Contact (LoC) which separated the combatants and violations of the ceasefre have broken out episodically (but repeatedly) along the LoC. The most serious occurred over a four-day period, from April 1 to April 4, 2016, ending in another ceasefre on April 5 (Armenia – Armed Forces). This was the largest outbreak of fghting since 1994 and Azerbaijan came off as the putative winner, although having suffered more casualties than the Armenians. Taking advantage of a provocation, the Azerbaijani Army attacked across the LoC in the early morning of April 2, 2016, with its elite 52nd Special Forces (SF) Brigade, and two motorized rife brigades. Their objective was to seize two villages, Talish and Madagis, 3 kilometres beyond the LoC with a supporting attack on Horadiz (Azerbaijan – Army 2020, 6). They were successful in seizing eight square kilometres of territory, including Talish, but took heavy casualties. The commander and the principal staff of the SF brigade were killed in action. Although Azerbaijani losses were severe, the operation provided proof that the army could operate its weapons systems and manage a modern close battle. It was an opportunity to assess the success of Azerbaijan’s quest to build a modern professional army. In this regard, it most likely served Azerbaijan much like the Spanish Civil War served Hitler and Mussolini as a testing ground for weapons and tactics. A small victory, perhaps, but one that clearly indicated that Azerbaijan was on the right track to modernize its armed forces. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
How Do We Explain Victory? 225 Military Cooperation and Modernization Turkey and the newly independent Republic of Azerbaijan established a formal agreement for mutual military cooperation in 1992 (Oztarsu 2011, 2). Further agreements were signed in 1996, and a 1999 agreement extended fnancial aid to Azerbaijan and brought Azerbaijani soldiers to Kosovo under Turkish command. In 2000, Turkey began to export modern weapons to Azerbaijan. This was followed by a major effort of the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence to modernize and reform the armed forces. This was a belated recognition that the Armenian armed forces maintained a qualitative edge over Azerbaijani forces (Bosbotinis 2007). The priority of this effort was to recast the military from a Soviet style force to a NATO style force, including embracing NATO compatible doctrines and acquiring modern equipment. Oil and gas revenues subsidized these efforts. In 2010 Turkey and Azerbaijan signed a Strategic Partnership and Mutual Support (SPMS) agreement (Huseynov 2020a, 1). Under this agreement the Turks provided more robust professional military education and training opportunities for the Azerbaijani Armed Forces, including joint training exercises. In 2018, there were seven joint exercises and, in 2019, 13 more joint exercises. The joint manoeuvres in late July and early August 2020 involved up to 11,000 Turkish personnel and tested the combat readiness of Azerbaijani forces, fre support coordination, and military staff profciency in planning and operations (Huseynov 2020a, 1). These annual exercises took place in the province of Nakhchivan, which is adjacent to Turkey but disconnected from Azerbaijan itself. In fact, the Turkish Armed Forces in 2020 maintained active military training cooperation activities including sending training teams to partner nations and training military personnel from 61 countries in Turkish military institutions (Military Training Cooperation 2020). In an email to the author, January 31, 2021, retired Turkish Army colonel Dr. Mesut Uyar noted, “Hundreds of Azerbaijani offcers graduated from the Turkish military academies. The Azerbaijani Military Academy and General Staff College were founded by the Turkish military and for a period of time most of the lecturers and trainers were Turkish offcers.” The success of this endeavour owes much to the fact that Turks and Azerbaijanis share a common Turkic language and have close cultural and historic ties. In addition to Turkey, Azerbaijan receives signifcant military assistance from Israel. Israel established diplomatic relations with Azerbaijan in 1992 and the relationship has broadened since then. Azerbaijan is a major energy supplier to Israel and the relationship has matured into a full scale military cooperation and modernization programme. In 2012, Azerbaijan purchased $1.6 billion worth of weapons from Israeli Aerospace Industries (Avdaliani 2020). The Azerbaijanis followed up in 2016 with an additional $5 billion and in 2017 another $127 million; most of this went to purchase unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and satellite technology (Karčić 2021). Moreover, the Israelis have helped equip Azerbaijan’s Special Forces, installed security systems Uploaded by S. M. Safi
226 Edward J. Erickson in Azerbaijani airports, and upgraded tanks and armoured vehicles. Even for energy rich Azerbaijan the partnership is expensive but it resulted in the acquisition of very modern military capabilities. The United States has also maintained a durable security assistance programme with Azerbaijan which brought numbers of Azerbaijani offcers and NCOs to the United States for training, while their Armenian counterparts were trained in Russia. Moreover, in 2019, United States security assistance funding to Azerbaijan amounted to over $100 million while Armenia received around $4.2 million (US Allocated $100 million 2021). The “value-added” of western Turkish, Israeli, and American military assistance in comparison with Russian military assistance should not be understated. Azerbaijani Military Capabilities and Capacity In the autumn of 2020, Azerbaijan had well-developed capabilities (what they could do) matched by signifcant capacity (the extent to which they could do it). Most of the army’s conventional military equipment inventory is composed of upgraded Soviet or more modern Russian systems, including T-90 and upgraded T-72 tanks, BMP and BTR APCs, and self-propelled and towed artillery. However, the priority of the acquisition programme in the last ten years has focussed more narrowly on UAVs, ballistic missiles, and air defence systems. Tactically, Azerbaijan acquired a precision strike capability which allowed its soldiers to pinpoint and destroy almost anything within range of its UAV systems. Equally as important, Azerbaijan purchased a large number of advanced ballistic missiles which complemented their longer ranging UAVs, effectively giving them operational level reach. This enabled Azerbaijan’s military to conduct what is called the Deep Battle (operations beyond the immediate tactical battlefeld into the enemy’s rear areas) (Brito and Boring 2018, 233–238; Watling and Kaushal 2020). It is important to consider that capability acquisition and capacity development involves resource allocation, particularly funding, time and by assigning the most qualifed personnel to the effort. While it is certain that Azerbaijan increased selected precision strike capabilities matched by increased capacity, the recent war clearly demonstrated that the armed forces were unable to develop corresponding capabilities in conventional units. This is self-evident from watching videos of Azerbaijani infantry and armoured units being destroyed through their own inept tactics and incompetence. Post-war estimates of losses and casualties are equally damning. We may infer from this evidence that Azerbaijan’s choice of capability investment was asymmetric and weighted towards precision strike systems that would be useful only in certain situations. Defence analysts also point to the critical capability of Azerbaijani UAVs and satellites as battlefeld sensors which enabled the precision targeting of enemy positions and assets (Watling and Kaushal 2020). These sensors multiplied the effectiveness of Azerbaijan’s UAVs, ballistic missiles, and Uploaded by S. M. Safi
How Do We Explain Victory? 227 older guided missile systems giving Azerbaijan both close-range tactical strike capabilities matched by long-range operational level strike capabilities. These complementary precision strike capabilities proved to be a game changer tactically, which enabled the Azerbaijanis to overcome wellprepared Armenian defences on the high ground, and at a higher level of war, an operational game changer which enabled them to isolate the battle space. In terms of capacity, it is estimated that the Azerbaijani Air Force has a large and robust UAV feet including 36 Turkish Bayraktar TB2 UAVs (armed with Roketsan MAM-L laser-guided munitions), 48 Israeli Harop loitering munitions, and a large number of Israeli Orbiter 1K loitering munitions, Elbit Hermes 450/900, SkyStriker, and Aerostar UAVs (Azerbaijan – Air Force 2020, 11–12). These UAV systems are operated by the air force and the country locally manufactures Israeli Orbiter and Aerostar UAVs under license as well. The Azerbaijani Air Force missile inventory includes the modern Israeli Lora ballistic missile (four launchers and 50 missiles), old Soviet SS-11s, and the Israeli Extra guided missile system (six launchers and 50 missiles) (Shiakh and Rumbaugh 2020). Azerbaijan also invested in building a signifcant Special Operations Force (SOF) capability which complements its UAV and BM capability. Americans today often associate SOF with anti-terrorism operations and raids, such as the one which killed Osama bin Laden. However, well-trained SOF teams can extend battlefeld operations deep into the enemy’s rear areas to target and destroy command and control networks, critical infrastructure, and air defence systems. Turkish military assistance has been instrumental in developing the Azerbaijani SOF capability. Joint exercises in 2018 stressed joint interoperability and trained Azerbaijani personnel in the operation of Turkish weapons while a 2018 “Command-Staff War Game” training exercise replicated SOF operations in mountainous terrain integrated with electronic warfare and precision munitions (Azerbaijan – Special Operations Forces 2020, 2). Over the course of 2019, 13 joint SOF exercises were conducted with Turkish and Georgian SOF forces (Azerbaijan – Special Operations Forces 2020, 2). The Azerbaijani Special Operations capability is composed of a SOF Command with four SOF commando units and a special naval warfare SOF unit. Similarly to the United States, the Azerbaijani President is the Commander-in-Chief and the Minister of Defence is nominally a presidentially appointed civilian. However, unlike the United States which has a chairman of its joint staff, Azerbaijan employs a classic general staff in the Turkish and German model. While civilians may not consider command and staff organizations and their profciency as defned capabilities, professional soldiers would insist that these surely are. The multiplying effect of professional military staffs began with the advent of the Great Prussian General Staff in 1806 and can be traced through a historical continuum to the present day (Hughes and DiNardo 2018, 6–9). The highest ranking Uploaded by S. M. Safi
228 Edward J. Erickson Azerbaijani military member is the Chief of the General Staff, who is also the First Deputy Minister of Defence (Ministry of Defence 2021). The Chief of the General Staff leads a joint staff composed of staff offcers from the army, the air force, and navy, as well as offcers specializing in SOF, personnel, and logistics. The commanders of the army and the air force serve as the chief’s principal deputies. A professional war college supports the education and training of the offcers of the general staff. Importantly, over the past 30 years, the Azerbaijani General Staff has been transformed from a Soviet-style general staff to a more Western NATO-style general staff (Ministry of Defence 2021). This transformation is largely due to the infuence of Turkish military cooperation which implemented offcer exchanges, provided training teams, and educated Azerbaijani offcers in Turkish professional military educational institutions. Professional NATO Ministry of Defence-level military staffs today are capable of long range strategic planning, integrating the acquisition of hardware into warfghting doctrines and training, establishing compatible multi-echelon training programmes, creating campaign plans, and assigning and supervising combat missions to subordinate major headquarters. In effect, a professional military staff can establish and balance realistic, achievable ends, ways, and means. This is no small task. Subordinate army and air force staffs are similarly organized and trained for war. As the reader will come to understand, the Azerbaijani military staffs planned and executed a remarkably successful operational level campaign that recovered much of Armenian-occupied Karabakh in the autumn of 2020. The Military Balance At the strategic level, the Republic of Azerbaijan clearly is more powerful in every meaningful way than the Republic of Armenia. A simple on-line scan of the American CIA Fact Books reveals much and the numbers speak for themselves. In 2019, Azerbaijan had 10,300,000 citizens, a median age of 32.6 years, a youth unemployment rate of 13.4%, a population below the poverty line of 4.9%, a real GDP of $145.2 billion, and an industrialized economic sector of 53.5% (CIA Fact Book 2021). Azerbaijan exported around 720,000 barrels of crude oil a day as well as producing large amounts of natural gas. According to the CIA, in 2019, Azerbaijan spent 4% of its GDP on defence which provided approximately 67,000 total active military personnel; 56,000 Army; 2,500 Navy; 8,500 Air Force. In 2019, Armenia had 3,000,000 citizens, a median age of 36.6 years, a youth unemployment rate of 36.3%, a population below the poverty line of 32%, a real GDP of $40.4 billion, and an industrialized economic sector of 28.2% (CIA Fact Book 2021). According to the CIA, in 2019, Armenia spent 4% of its GDP on defence which provided approximately 45,000 active military personnel; 42,000 Army; 3,000 Air Force/Air Defence. The demographic, economic, resource, and military advantages enjoyed by Azerbaijan are immediately evident. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
How Do We Explain Victory? 229 In terms of the operational military balance, the force disparity is equally lopsided. Given the CIA’s economic data, Azerbaijan spent about $5.8 billion per annum while Armenia spent $1.6 billion per annum on defence related matters. Much of the Azerbaijani spending obviously went into equipment. At the beginning of the 2020 war, Azerbaijan had 582 main battle tanks, 588 infantry fghting vehicles, 637 armoured personnel carriers, 640 artillery systems (tube and rocket), 35 aircraft, and 104 helicopters, while Armenia had 325 main battle tanks, 300 infantry fghting vehicles, 236 armoured personnel carriers, 280 artillery systems (tube and rocket), 21 aircraft, and 31 helicopters (Kofman 2021, 5). Only in surface to air missile (SAM) systems did Armenia have a numbers advantage of 194 to 78. Critical to this analysis, according to Jane’s Azerbaijan deployed 14 medium-altitude long endurance UAVs. The Azerbaijani Army uses a corps and brigade organizational structure rather than a NATO corps and division structure and there are fve army corps in the army (Azerbaijan – Army 2020, 7–10). The army corps headquarters are located as follows: I Corps in Barda, the II Corps in Beylagan, the III Corps in Shamkir, the IV Corps in Baku, and the V Corps (Separate) in Nakhchivan. In the summer of 2020, each army corps was composed of fve brigades of mixed types. The army has three organized general support artillery brigades (long range cannon and rocket artillery), of which two are assigned to the II Corps and one is located with the V Corps (Separate). In modern military history, the positioning of an army’s heavy artillery preordains where the army’s priority of effort lies and the importance of the assignment of two of the Azerbaijani Army’s three artillery brigades to the II Corps will become evident. Unlike Azerbaijan, which modernized its forces for precision strike-based offensive operations, Armenia put the bulk of its available defence funds into defensive forces. In the twenty-frst century the Armenian Air Force purchased and deployed S-300 SAMs, Buk-M1–2 SAMs, and Tor-M2KM SAMs, giving them a robust and integrated air defence system (Armenia – Air Force 2020, 3). These were augmented by purchasing large quantities of shoulder launched man-portable SAMs as well. Armenia also purchased a few Russian ground attack aircraft to replace aging Soviet era aircraft. The Armenian ground forces spent its available funds upgrading old Soviet tanks and artillery, improving communications equipment, and enhancing anti-tank systems. In terms of new capability, the Armenian Army purchased a small number of modern Russian Iskander-E (SS-26) surface-to-surface short range ballistic missile system to complement their aging feet of Scud-Bs (SS-1C) and Scarab (SS-21) surface-to-surface ballistic missiles. Four of Armenia’s fve army corps are deployed along the border with Azerbaijan. However, two face east along the LoC and two more face southwest against Nakhchivan. The ffth army corps faces Turkey. In military terms this placed the Armenian Army at great disadvantage because it Uploaded by S. M. Safi
230 Edward J. Erickson could not concentrate the bulk of its forces against its principal enemy – the Azerbaijani Army. Moreover, at the tactical level in Armenian-occupied Karabakh (known to the Armenians as the Republic of Artsakh) the Armenian Army maintained a separate force called the Artsakh Defence Army, which was essentially a force equivalent to a NATO army division. The headquarters of this force is in the Artsakh capital, Stepanakert (Xankändi), and is composed of three motorized rife brigades, a tank regiment, a command and control battalion, and an electronic warfare battalion (Armenia – Army 2020, 12). The Artsakh Defence Army reportedly received priority with light arms, heavy artillery, tanks, and armoured vehicles from its parent Armenian Army. Over the past 30 years, the Armenian Army in Karabakh invested heavily in fortifcations, such as bunkers, strong points, entrenchments, and protected positions for armoured vehicles and artillery. This seemed to be a good investment because the fortifcations signifcantly enhanced the defensibility of the naturally rugged mountainous terrain in eastern Karabakh. In fact, the diffculties that the Azerbaijani Army encountered in the April 2016 clash seemed to validate the expenditure and effort. As 2020 approached, what could be said about the condition and deployment of the Armenian Army? First, only a portion of its strength was available against an attack on Karabakh. Second, it was equipped with weapons which were of little use in combating the Azerbaijani Army, particularly with regard to its networked and expensive air defence system which was useless when confronted with small UAVs and ballistic missiles. Third, the Armenians failed to recognize the progress towards professionalization and modernization that the Azerbaijani forces had developed which led to overconfdence and perhaps even complacency. Fourth, the inherent defensive mind-set and weapons inventories of the Armenian Army left it unable to conduct successful offensive counter-attacks to regain lost ground immediately. Cumulatively, these factors doomed Armenia to defeat in detail. On the “other side of the hill,” as we will see, the Azerbaijani military deployed a more NATO-like army capable of modern doctrinal campaign design and planning aligned with ultra-modern UAV tactics and technology (Shahbazov 2020). Azerbaijani Campaign Planning At the present time Azerbaijan’s military forces have not revealed the specifcs of their grand strategy or their operational campaign plan. However, there is a wealth of open source information and reporting about the tactical situation as it progressed for 44 days during the confict. From this it is possible to reconstruct the basic outline of their campaign design and overall plan. It is important to keep in mind that, in military doctrinal terminology, a campaign is a deliberate series of battles and encounters designed to achieve a strategic outcome. It appears that this campaign was Uploaded by S. M. Safi
How Do We Explain Victory? 231 designed to achieve a strategic outcome of liberating a substantial part of Armenian-occupied Karabakh. In the case of designing the Azerbaijani campaign, the geography of Karabakh is critical to understanding the parameters of the Azerbaijani campaign plan (See Map 1). The Aras (Araxe) River originates in Turkey and fows east to the Caspian Sea. As the river leaves the mountainous region along the Iranian border, it forms a wide and fat valley in southern Karabakh. Even though the LoC and villages behind it were heavily fortifed by the Artsakh Defence Army, the Aras Valley is what military planners see as an operational level avenue of approach. Large-scale forces can mass and manoeuvre through the open terrain. To the north, and centred on the capital city of Stepanakert, the remainder of the Artsakh is composed of high and rugged mountains which are unsuitable for large-scale conventional military operations. While the rugged terrain favoured the Armenians, it also imposed a signifcant strategic and operational liability on the Artsakh defenders in the form of the Lachin (Laçın) corridor. The corridor contains a single all-weather southwest-to-northeast road which runs from the town of Lachin bordering Armenia to Stepanakert; it is the only major road between Armenia and Karabakh. Assuming that one controls the Aras River Valley, possession of the Lachin corridor (or the ability to interdict the corridor) effectively blocks the entry of goods into Artsakh itself. It is essential at this point to understand that the town of Shushi (Şuşa/Shusha) sits on high ground adjacent to, and dominating, the Lachin-Stepanakert road. In military terminology Shushi represents what is called key terrain which must be controlled to assure operational success. A NATO planning staff designing a campaign would immediately select Shushi as the operational objective of the campaign. The planning staff would consider such factors as the ability to sustain casualties and weather, which would further infuence the course of action. It would be clear to any NATO staff offcer that the isolation of the central mass of Artsakh was Azerbaijan’s strategic end state gained through a campaign designed to seize or interdict the Lachin corridor. Achieving that objective isolates Artsakh and would immediately put Azerbaijani negotiators in a position to dictate the terms of a settlement or cease fre. The planning window would consider that winter weather would degrade signifcantly Azerbaijan’s feet of UAVs; therefore the campaign had to be completed before weather imposed constraints on the operations. Campaign termination as winter weather developed would also limit the ability of Armenia to conduct a counteroffensive and, moreover, prevent external Russian forces from timely intervention. Therefore, it is likely that timing the campaign to end in late November was a planning parameter. It is self-evident that the Azerbaijani campaign plan composed two phases with the main effort in the south. In the frst phase the main effort envisioned the seizure of the Aras Valley to establish a base for further operations. In this phase smaller supporting attacks in north and east Artsakh would serve Uploaded by S. M. Safi
232 Edward J. Erickson Map 1 Operational Avenues of Approach. to fx Armenian forces in place and prevent the Artsakh Defence Army’s ability to shift reserves against the Azerbaijani main effort. The second phase would then push north into the rough mountainous terrain to seize Shushi. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
How Do We Explain Victory? 233 Possession of Shushi represented the military end state placing Azerbaijan in a position to demand a cease fre or settlement on Azerbaijani terms. Failing that, the Azerbaijani Army would be in an operationally favourable position to complete the conquest of Artsakh in the spring of 2021. A key element of the Azerbaijani campaign plan was the army’s ability to plan and to conduct limited Deep Battle operations. Deep Battle originated in the 1980s during the Cold War when United States Army planners conceptually planned to separate and isolate front line Soviet forces from reinforcements and resupply by interdicting their lines of communications. This would enable NATO forces to fght and destroy ever-diminishing numbers of Soviet forces. It is known that Azerbaijani planners intended to isolate the Artsakh Defence Army tactically and operationally by conducting Deep Battle operations using ballistic missiles, SOF, and long range UAVs. American general David Petraeus famously noted that “Luck is the intersection of preparation and opportunity.” In the autumn of 2020, Azerbaijan did not just get lucky and overwhelm the Artsakh Defence Army simply with superior numbers and more modern weapons. The Azerbaijanis deliberately procured, over a ten year period, particular types of weapons, trained selected units of their forces for particular types of operations, wrote a particular type of Deep Battle campaign plan, and waited for the opportunity to put all of these endeavours together. The Road to War July–September 2020 Between 2016 and 2020, tensions along the LoC remained high and clashes between the opposing forces broke out frequently, characterized particularly by artillery barrages on the opposing side’s bunkers and positions. In July 2020, a more substantial skirmish erupted when the Armenians undertook to restore a disused border checkpoint near Movses in the Tavush District. Both sides blame the other for the outbreak of hostilities and a two-day clash began on July 12, 2020 involving artillery and UAV strikes (Huseynov 2020b, 8–9). Casualties were limited to about 20 on each side, but an Azerbaijani major general was killed. Armenia claimed that it shot down 13 Azerbaijani UAVs, including Orbiter 2 and 3, and Harop systems (Ripley and Cranny-Evans 2021, 4). It is unknown whether these reports were correct but Major General Daniel Balayan, head of Armenia’s Military Aviation Institute, asserted the fghting had proven the Azerbaijani UAVs to be “almost powerless in the face of the skilful air defence… of the Armenian Army” (Ripley and Cranny-Evans 2021, 1). Based on this, British defence analysts reasoned that the Armenian forces felt suffciently prepared to defeat Azerbaijani UAVs. Nothing could have been farther from the truth. It is obvious that Azerbaijan drew different conclusions from these actions and the government prepared for war. In a speech on September 16, Azerbaijani Minister of Defence Colonel General Zakir Hasanov announced that his forces stood ready to liberate the Armenian-occupied Uploaded by S. M. Safi
234 Edward J. Erickson territories and had achieved a high state of readiness (Azerbaijani army ready to liberate, Azernews, September 17, 2020). Azerbaijani media and news sources increased their coverage of reported Armenian provocations along the LoC. On September 19, Hasanov met with his staff and ordered his forces to prepare for winter operations and to prepare logistically for combat operations, including instructions for Covid-19 precautions for military personnel (Azerbaijani Army ready to suppress, Azernews, September 19, 2020). Ministry of Defence offcials inspected military border detachments the next day and the Turkish Foreign Ministry announced that Turkey would back Azerbaijan if Armenia violated its territory. Azerbaijan called up reservists for active duty on September 21, announced that a soldier had been killed along the LoC, and that an Armenian UAV had been shot down; according to the Azerbaijanis serious provocations were increasing by the day (Reservists in Azerbaijan, Azernews, September 21, 2020). The Azerbaijani Army held tactical exercises two days later which included tanks and artillery units conducting live-fre training. On September 26, the Ministry of Defence reported that Armenian forces had violated the ceasefre 48 times within the previous 24 hours (Armenia violates ceasefre, Azernews, September 26, 2020). The accuracy of these reports is contested and may have been part of an Azerbaijani information campaign to rally public support. In any case, the next day, Minister of Defence Hasanov reported that Armenia had attacked Azerbaijan and that fghting erupted along the entire LoC. President Ilham Aliyev declared a state of martial law in western Azerbaijan and announced that seven villages had already been liberated. It is hard to pinpoint the exact time and places where what is called the 44-Day War started; but there is agreement that it began on September 27, 2020. The Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence announced that it was conducting a major counter-offensive in reaction to Armenian incursions and provocations but nothing could be farther from the truth. From the limited media reporting in August and September it is evident that Azerbaijan mobilized and made preparations in advance for offensive warfare. It is equally evident that the government increased reporting on Armenian provocations along the LoC but whether these were real or constructed as a casus belli is unclear today. What is clear is the well-prepared Azerbaijani military had concentrated its forces in advance and in preparation for the execution of its offensive campaign plan. The Early Phase of the Campaign In late December 2020, after the end of hostilities, President Aliyev announced that the Azerbaijani offensive had carried the name Iron Fist (Iron Fist Operation, Trend News Agency, December 29, 2020). It is uncertain whether this was the actual name used by the army’s planners to identify the campaign plan or whether Iron Fist is simply a media by-line. In any case, by locating the daily progress of the army’s offensive through Uploaded by S. M. Safi
How Do We Explain Victory? 235 Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence news releases, the opening of the campaign reveals itself. The II Corps, under the command of Lieutenant General Mais Barkhudaroz, conducted the army’s main effort attacking southwest into the lower Aras Valley. The main effort tracks with the assignments and location of the army’s general support artillery and rocket brigades, which were needed to weight offensive operations. Additional supporting attacks were conducted by Lieutenant General Rovshan Akbarov’s III Corps and Major General Hikmet Hasanov’s I Corps against Armenian fortifcations in the Republic of Artsakh’s mountainous north and northeast respectively. The army’s SOF units, under the command of Lieutenant General Hikmet Mirzayev, appear to have deployed mostly in the II Corps zone of operations (Azernews, September 27–30, 2020, passim). The offensive operations of the II Corps were designed to seize control of the Aras Valley foor while the supporting attacks of the I Corps and III Corps were designed to tie down Armenian Army units from deploying south to reinforce the ongoing battles in the Aras Valley. These forces were under the overall command of Colonel General Karam Mustafayev, who is listed on the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence webpage as the Commander of the Combined Arms Army (MOD webpage, February 1, 2021). Lieutenant General Ramiz Tahirov served as Mustafayev’s counterpart Commander of the Azerbaijani Air Force. At higher organizational levels, the Azerbaijani Chief of the General Staff, Colonel General Necmeddin Sadikov was relieved of his responsibilities two days after the outbreak of hostilities, September 29, 2020, for reasons that are unverifed. In an email to the author, Professor Jamil Hasanli, January 30, 2020, noted that the most popular opinion asserts that Sadikov was too close to the Russians, and the Russians were sympathetic to the Armenians. Moreover, it has been suggested that Sadikov’s close associates were also relieved, and that they were all interned for the duration of the war. Publically, Sadikov’s biography was removed from the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence’s webpage on October 1, 2020 and Azerbaijan announced on January 28, 2021 that Sadikov had retired from the army. Russian newspapers reported that he had undergone open heart surgery in Moscow (Azerbaijani MoD: Najmeddin Sadikov, Apa News Agency, January 28, 2021). The question of “Who led and supervised the Azerbaijani General Staff?” must be asked. The Russian and Armenian press reported that three high ranking Turkish generals participated in the conduct of planning and executing the campaign from the Baku headquarters but this is unproven (Sassounian 2020). In the absence of a chief of the general staff, the Russian press reported that Turkish Lieutenant General Şeref Ongay, Major General Bahtiyar Ersay, and Major General Göksel Kahya spent some time during September and October in Baku in a senior-level advisory capacity. Did Turkish generals supersede Sadikov to run Azerbaijan’s war? Readers will have to wait for the actual answer. However, in an email to the author, January 31, 2021, Professor Uyar noted that it is important to consider that Azerbaijan initiated the purge of Soviet/Russian trained offcers Uploaded by S. M. Safi
236 Edward J. Erickson with the retirement of Colonel General Safar Abiyev in 2013. Effectively, Turkish educated Azerbaijani offcers had already achieved majority by the middle of the decade. The author’s opinion is that it is very likely that the Azerbaijani general staff received advice in real time from the Turks but it is unlikely that Turkish generals were actually in command of the campaign. A more compelling question is “Who were the pilots of the UAVs and who was in charge of precision strike operations?” It may be that Azerbaijan hired Bayraktar company’s civilian UAV pilots and also Bayraktar's experts to lead the UAV effort; but, again, the world will have to wait for the answers to these questions. On the frst day of the Azerbaijani offensive (September 27, 2020) army artillery and air force UAVs targeted the Armenian Osa (SA-8) and Strela-10 (SA-13) mobile short-range air defence systems and subsequently targeted S-300 launchers, 2K12 SAM batteries, and long-range air defence radars (Roblin 2020). Like Coalition campaigns in Iraq in 1991 and 2003, this gave the Azerbaijanis free rein to employ their large feet of UAVs to the fullest extent. On the ground, the Azerbaijani combined arms units (infantry, tanks, artillery, and combat engineers) made contact with the defenders along the contested parts of the LoC and attacked the Armenian fortifed positions. This was very costly and early reports indicated that the Azerbaijanis suffered heavy casualties in both personnel and equipment (tanks and armoured vehicles). The Armenians struck back by shelling and rocketing Azerbaijani cities and towns; Barda, Shamkir, Sabkirkend, and Horadiz were all hit hard. Azerbaijan reciprocated by shelling Stepanakert, Shushi, Jabrayil (Cäbryıl), and Zangilan (Zängilan) with artillery and rockets. The Azerbaijani cities of Ganja and Terter (Tärtär), as well as the contested town of Ağdam (Aghdam), would be shelled repeatedly during the next two weeks. The destruction of Armenian equipment, especially tanks and armoured vehicles, from precision strikes from the Turkish drones and the loitering munitions was covered by the international media and remains a source on instant on-line information today. In return, the Armenian anti-tank missile systems and artillery inficted much damage and many casualties on the advancing Azerbaijani Army. However, at the time, other than watching video clips of precision strikes, the outside world was unable to determine the course of the battles. For the frst three days, the opposing armies hammered away at each other with the Azerbaijanis bearing the brunt of the losses in attacks on heavily fortifed Armenian positions. However, while the front-line soldiers were engaged in a deadly close-in fght, the Azerbaijanis were also waging a longer-range Deep Battle to isolate the battlefeld. For this fght the Azerbaijanis used their Israeli ballistic missiles and their Turkish Bayraktar TB2 UAVs, which gave them the ability to strike into Armenia itself. Reporting by open source media noted that Azerbaijani ballistic missiles struck the town of Martakert on September 30 and the Armenian city of Gavar in the Gegharkunik District three days later (Aravot, September 30 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
How Do We Explain Victory? 237 and October 3, 2020). Gegharkunik lies deep in Armenia and Martakert lies on the road from Stepanakert to the north-eastern front. It was also reported that the Azerbaijanis employed Israeli Lora short-range ballistic missiles to destroy bridges on the main road connecting Armenia with Artsakh (Shahbazov 2020; Trevithick 2020). Within Artsakh itself Azerbaijan launched paralysing interdiction attacks along the Armenian tactical (or battlefeld) lines of communications. Cumulatively, the behind-the-lines destruction of logistical nodes, supplies, and munitions rapidly affected the front-line Armenian combat troops as they began to run out of these vital commodities with which to fght and sustain themselves (Azernews, September 27–30, 2020, passim). It is a doctrinal principal that battles and campaigns reach a culmination point where one side achieves a decisive superiority over the other and the tactical balance irretrievably shifts. In his well-received book The Tipping Point, published in 2000, author Malcolm Gladwell reached a similar conclusion about epidemics; there comes a point where it cannot be stopped. It appears that the culmination point of the early parts of the campaign was reached on October 3, by which date the Armenians had lost hundreds of tanks, artillery pieces and multiple launch rocket systems, and unarmoured trucks and vehicles. Moreover, they had lost a large number of ammunition depots, a dozen command posts, and large amounts of munitions and food supplies in truck convoys destroyed along the lines of communications. October 3, 2020 marked the frst public announcement from President Aliyev’s offce noting that villages near Talish, Fizuli (Füzuli), and Jabrayil had been liberated. Aliyev also announced that Armenian rifemen were abandoning their positions under heavy Azerbaijani fre in Agdere (Ağdärä). Importantly, Aliyev congratulated I Army Corps commander Hikmet Hasanov on the liberation of Madagiz (Mataghis). Two days later the government announced the liberation of three more villages in Jabrayil. It is evident from the content and tone of these announcements that the war had already shifted in favour of Azerbaijan. By October 7, the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence reported that Armenian regiments in the Aras Valley were suffering serious shortages of food, fuel, and ammunition causing wide-spread desertion (Azernews, September 30–October 7, 2020, passim). Over the next two days the ministry reported more villages liberated and that Armenian units attempting to withdraw or move during the daytime were invariably attacked from the air and destroyed. Throughout this period and, in the following weeks, the Armenians continued to pound Azerbaijani towns and cities with ballistic missiles and rockets. The Armenian Army launched counter-attacks to regain territory which failed badly. The Azerbaijani armed forces clearly had the operational and tactical initiative at this point in the campaign. By October 10 Azerbaijan had liberated Jabrayil and many of the surrounding villages, in effect penetrating the Armenian’s main line of defence. Azerbaijani media reported that, after abandoning qualities of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
238 Edward J. Erickson armoured vehicles and equipment, defeated Armenian regiments withdrew northward towards the town of Hadrut. Advances were also announced in the Khojavand and Fuzuli districts and, in the Aras Valley, the II Corps pushed towards Zangilan (Azernews, October 7–10, 2020, passim). The Azerbaijani Army closely pursued the retreating Armenians towards Hadrut and, by October 13, had seized the heights overlooking the town. The details of the battle are not clear but within two days the Azerbaijani’s controlled the town and the surrounding high ground. This victory put Azerbaijan in a tactical position to advance on Shushi. However, the army had to fnish clearing the Aras Valley in order to assure the advance could be safely supported logistically. Conventional assaults cleared Khojavand (Martuni) and Fuzuli. A brief Russian-brokered humanitarian cease-fre on October 18 did not materially slow the Azerbaijani advances. By October 20, the II Corps liberated Zangilan and its hinterlands and, on October 23, President Aliyev announced that the Angband (Aghband/Ağbänd) Settlement had been liberated assuring that 100% of the Iranian border was secured by the army (Azernews, October 10–20, 2020, passim). We can infer from these announcements that the II Corps had achieved control over the upper and lower Aras Valley. An American-brokered humanitarian ceasefre on October 26 broke down almost immediately. Thus, near the end of October 2020, the Azerbaijani Armed Forces successfully completed, but at great cost in soldiers and equipment, the frst phase of the campaign. The Final Phase of the Campaign The actual architecture of command in use by Azerbaijani Army during the 44-Day War remains unclear. However, it is known that Azerbaijan formed a “Joint Corps” under the command of Special Forces Lieutenant General Hikmet Mirzayev for the fnal phase of the campaign. On November 8, 2020, the Azerbaijani newspapers reported that President Aliyev made a congratulatory phone to call to General Mirzayev, the “commander of the Joint Corps” which had liberated Shushi (Azernews, October 9, 2020, passim). The Joint Corps was composed predominantly of Mirzayev’s Special Forces units and would be termed by NATO planners as a special purpose task force. In any case, Azerbaijani Special Forces pushed north from Hadrut taking the village of Chanakhchi (Avetaranots) on October 29, putting them within 20 kilometres of Shushi. However, the existing road network did not connect the towns directly forcing the lightly equipped Special Forces to attack west across rugged mountains. Nevertheless, by November 4, the Azerbaijanis had cut the Lachin-Stepanakert road three kilometres south of Shushi. Azerbaijani artillery and rockets had pounded the Armenian defenders in Shushi intermittently for weeks, but it intensifed now for the fnal assault. The fnal assault began on November 4 and, according to the media was very bloody. Supported by conventional army artillery and air force Uploaded by S. M. Safi
How Do We Explain Victory? 239 precision strikes, Azerbaijani Special Forces scaled the high ground to the west of the town the next day; entering the town of Shushi itself on November 6 (Azernews, November 4–6, 2020, passim). Two days later President Aliyev announced the victory while General Mirzayev’s Special Forces soldiers pushed their perimeter several more kilometres north of Shushi and attacked east to seize the town of Suşakand. Azerbaijan’s Armed Forces’ victory at Shushi signalled the completion of the campaign and led to the termination of the war on terms dictated by Azerbaijan. On November 9, 2020, President Aliyev, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, and Russian President Vladimir Putin signed an agreement ending hostilities (Azernews, November 10, 2020, passim). They announced that the Russian-brokered agreement would go into effect the next day with Russian peacekeepers deploying to secure the Lachin corridor. Much to the surprise of many, the agreement went far beyond a simple cease-fre, effectively amounting to an instrument of unconditional surrender with Armenia ceding large areas of Artsakh to Azerbaijan. Under the terms of the agreement, the areas already liberated by Azerbaijan would remain under its control. Armenia further pledged to withdraw from the Ağdam District by November 20, the Kalbajar District by November 25, and the Lachin District by December 1 (See Map 2). There were other clauses as well, with the most important for Azerbaijan being the creation of a guaranteed overland transit link with Nakhchivan and, for Armenia, a Russian-patrolled and guaranteed corridor from Lachin to Stepanakert. This was a stunning and utterly unpredicted outcome which reduced the land area of the Republic of Artsakh by two-thirds and left it isolated and dependent on an easily interdictable corridor. The agreement left the government of Prime Minister Pashinyan signifcantly weakened politically and in danger of total collapse. Campaign Analysis Much has been published already about the tactical lessons of the 44-Day War, including predictions about the supposedly diminishing future value of armoured vehicles, the value-added of relatively inexpensive UAVs and loitering munitions, and the high number of equipment losses incurred when precision strike munitions are employed (Kofman 2020). However, we might keep in mind that many similar predictions were made after the Arab-Israeli War of 1973 suggesting that armour and ground attack aircraft were no longer survivable on the modern battlefeld. I will leave predictions to other authors. Rather, then, what can we say about the Azerbaijani campaign itself? First, the effect of the Turkish military cooperation effort over a sustained period has been very successful. Military cooperation can never improve every capability or increase capacity to 100%. It is always subject to funding constraints and to the vested interests of the parties themselves. While the performance of the Azerbaijani conventional forces appears less Uploaded by S. M. Safi
240 Edward J. Erickson Map 2 Peace Agreement. than stellar, especially at battalion level and below, it refects the military priorities of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces. By deliberate choice Azerbaijan selected certain capabilities over others. The Azerbaijani Air Force invested heavily in UAVs and ballistic missiles while the Azerbaijani Army invested heavily in Special Forces and command and staff training and education (at the expense of its conventional manoeuvre forces). Although some of this success can be attributed to the Israelis most can be credited to the Turks. Second, the apparent campaign plan balanced ends, ways, and means in an effective manner. The army concentrated its main conventional manoeuvre forces, reinforced by SOF and UAVs, in the Aras Valley avenue of approach where it fought a deliberate series of battles to secure a base from which Uploaded by S. M. Safi
How Do We Explain Victory? 241 to advance north. The obvious selection of Shushi as the objective of the campaign was designed to put the entire Armenian Army remaining in Artsakh and, indeed the Republic of Artsakh itself, in an untenable position of extreme danger. The seizure of Shushi led to an immediate cession of hostilities on terms dictated by President Aliyev. In military terms, the Azerbaijani campaign’s objective was geographically oriented rather than force oriented (i.e. focussed on a town rather than on the destruction of the Armenian Army) and led directly to the successful conclusion of the war. Third, the Azerbaijanis leveraged their UAV capability tactically but they also leveraged their UAV and ballistic missile capabilities at the operational level of war. Reading Azerbaijani day-by-day news releases from the Ministry of Defence, it is clear that the Armenian forces in Artsakh were weakened seriously through the Azerbaijani interdiction of their operational and tactical lines of communications. It is beyond doubt that many of the Armenian forces in Artsakh ran out of ammunition, food, fuel, and other military supplies at critical moments. This is not a new approach to war, having been used from Normandy in 1944 to Kuwait in 1991. But it is somewhat surprising that the Azerbaijanis even attempted to conduct a Deep Battle operation. It is probable that the Azerbaijanis did not achieve all that they wanted to do in this regard but their success was, to a certain extent, evident on the battlefeld. Fourth, the most decisive strategic outcomes result from campaign plans that put the enemy in an operational position from which they cannot recover. The seizure of Shushi achieved that because the shattered Armenian Army did not have the strength to recover the town. Moreover, by simply holding Shushi, it would only have been a matter of time before the surviving Armenian forces in Artsakh would have had to surrender unconditionally. The agreement signed by Prime Minister Pashinyan defnitively proves this point. Fifth, in terms of “jointness” the Azerbaijani Air Force, Army, and Navy appear to have fought well together. We cannot yet today know the full extent of their joint coordination but it is self-evident, for example, that the Air Force UAVs directly and successfully supported Army units in contact. It is clear, for example, that a Joint Corps (a special joint task force) was activated under the command of Special Forces commander Lieutenant General Mirzayev for the advance and seizure of Shushi. Mirzayev’s Joint Corps combined forces and assets from several services successfully during the fnal battles of the war. Lastly, combat is the province of the unknown and of uncertainty, and there is no “sure thing” in war. Carl von Clausewitz’s magnum opus On War is all about this phenomenon. It is also true that an army does not have to be twice as good or three times as large as the enemy to win battles. Rather, an army fundamentally must concentrate its assets in places and at times where it can achieve a decisive superiority. The Azerbaijanis concentrated a relatively small number of modern precision strike and sensor assets on critical Armenian combat assets and capabilities. Within several days of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
242 Edward J. Erickson the advent of hostilities the Azerbaijanis had achieved mastery of the battle space which gave them freedom of action and the initiative. In layman’s terminology ̶ Azerbaijan owned the battlefeld. This is no small accomplishment for any armed force and is, of itself, noteworthy. This is not to say that the Azerbaijani Armed Forces performed fawlessly; they did not. But the sum total of what they did right exceeded the sum total of their mistakes. In understanding how that battlefeld victory came about, analysing what a military gets right is essential. This chapter does not render judgements on such infammatory non-military subjects such as humanitarian concerns, war crimes, or long-standing cultural and historic issues between the two countries. Neither does it judge the validity of the territorial claims over Karabakh of Armenian and Azerbaijan. None of these things affected the military planning and execution of the Azerbaijani campaign. Finally, because no authentic evidence has come forth regarding the supposed employment by Azerbaijan of Syrian-based mercenaries, this issue is not considered in this chapter. For what it is worth, given the kind of campaign that was waged by Azerbaijan, there was little scope for the tactical skill sets of such combatants. Conclusion It is beyond doubt that the Azerbaijani Armed Forces’ successful 2020 campaign to seize geographically and politically important parts of Karabakh from the Armenian Army was a resounding success. The strategic objective of recovering a large portion of Armenian-occupied territory proved achievable in terms of balancing military ends, ways, and means. Moreover, the Azerbaijani Armed Forces’ joint planning, preparation, and combat effectiveness proved effective and decisive compared to its Armenian opponent. This was achieved through an extended period of Turkish military assistance which was a critically important combat multiplier for the Azerbaijanis but it also refects the choices in capability and capacity development chosen by Azerbaijan. Ultimately, the success of Azerbaijan’s 2020 campaign in Karabakh was the result of a sustained period of professionalization of its military institutions and complementary acquisition decisions. References Aravot (Yerevan), 2020. Newpaper headlines. September 30 and October 3, 2020. “Armenia – Air Force.” 2020. Jane’s Sentinel Security Assessment – Russia and the CIS. December 10, 2020. “Armenia – Armed Forces.” 2020. Jane’s Sentinel Security Assessment – Russia and the CIS. July 18, 2020. “Armenia – Army.” Jane’s Sentinel Security Assessment. December 10, 2020. “Armenia violates ceasefre with Azerbaijan 48 times.” 2020. Azernews. September 26, 2020. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
How Do We Explain Victory? 243 Avdaliani, Emil, 2020. “Defying geography; The Israel-Azerbaijan partnership.” The Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies. August 31, 2020. “Azerbaijan – Air Force.” 2020. Jane’s World Air Forces. December 10, 2020. “Azerbaijan – Army.” 2020. Jane’s Country Intelligence. December 14, 2020. “Azerbaijani MoD: Najmeddin Sadikov is not currently in military service.” 2020. Apa News Agency (Moscow). January 28, 2021. “Azerbaijan – Special Operations Forces.” 2020. Jane’s Amphibious and Special Forces. October 6, 2020. Azernews, 2020. Newspaper headlines, September 27–November 10, 2020. Bosbotinis, James. 2007. “Assessing the modernization of Azerbaijan’s armed forces and its implications for regional security.” RUSI Newsbrief. Volume 27. Issue 11. November 6, 2007. Brito, Major General Gary M. and Major Keith T. Boring. 2018. “Disrupted, degraded, denied, but dominant: The future multi-domain operational environment.” In Kem, Jack D. (ed.), Deep Maneuver, Historical Case Studies of Maneuver in Large-Scale Combat Operations. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: Army University Press. CIA Fact Book Armenia. 2021. https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/ armenia/ accessed January 28, 2021. CIA Fact Book Azerbaijan. 2021. https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/azerbaijan/ accessed January 28, 2021. “Defence Minister: Azerbaijani Army ready to liberate occupied territories.” 2020. Azernews, September 17, 2020. “Defence Minister: Azerbaijani Army ready to suppress, retaliate for any provocation of Armenia.” 2020. Azernews, September 19, 2020. Hughes, Daniel J. and Richard L. DiNardo. 2018. Imperial Germany and War, 1871– 1918. University Press of Kansas. Huseynov, Vasif. 2020a. “Azerbaijan, turkey hold large-scale military drills amidst escalation of tensions with Armenia.” Eurasia Daily Monitor. Volume 17. Issue 121. August 14, 2020. Huseynov, Vasif. 2020b. The July 2020 Clashes on the Armenia – Azerbaijan Border and Implications for the Old Confict. Vienna: Center of Analysis of International. 2020. “Iron Fist Operation being studied by leading military centers, specialists.” 2020. Trend News Agency (Baku). December 29, 2020. Karčić, Harun. 2021. “Turkey, rising drone power.” RUSI Newsbrief. January 29, 2021. Kofman, Michael. 2020. “A look at the military lessons of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict.” The Moscow Times. December 21, 2020. Kofman, Michael. 2021. “Unmanned strategy: The fght for Karabakh.” Jane’s Defense Weekly. January 12, 2021. “Military training cooperation activities.” Turkish General Staff web page. https:// www.tsk.tr/Sayfalar?viewName=TafMilitaryTrainingAndCooperation, accessed January 26, 2021. Ministry of Defence, Republic of Azerbaijan. https://mod.gov.az/en/deputy-minister-of-defence-commander-of-the-combined-arms-army-620/, accessed February 1, 2021. Oztarsu, Mehmet Fatih. 2011. “Military relations of Turkey and Azerbaijan.” Strategic Outlook. Volume 1. Issue: 2. July 2011. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
244 Edward J. Erickson Republic of Azerbaijan Ministry of Defence webpage. https://mod.gov.az/en/frstdeputy-minister-of-defence-chief-of-general-staff-of-the-armed-forces-005/, accessed January 27, 2021. “Reservists in Azerbaijan are called for military training.” Azernews. September 21, 2020. Reynolds, Michael A. 2021. “Confdence and Catastrophe: Armenia and the Second Karabakh War.” War on the Rocks. January 11, 2021. Ripley, Tim and Samuel Cranny-Evans. 2021. “Unmanned strategy: The fght for Karabakh.” Jane’s Defence Weekly. January 12, 2021. Roblin, Sebastien. 2020. “What open source evidence tells us about the Karabakh War.” Forbes. October 23, 2020. Sassounian, Harut. 2020. “Turkish Generals led war on Artsakh. This was a Turkish, not Azerbaijani, Victory.” The Armenian Weekly. December 28, 2020. See also “The Azerbaijani Army is being purged.” MEMRI (Russia), undated, which cited an article written by Andrey Veselov in Vz.ru, November 12, 2020. Shahbazov, Fuad. 2020. “Tactical reasons behind military breakthrough in Karabakh confict.” Eurasia Daily Monitor. Volume, 17. Issue 155. (The Jamestown Foundation), November 3, 2020. Shiakh, Shaan and Wes Rumbaugh. 2020. “The Air and Missile War in Karabakh: Lessons for the future of strike and defense.” Center for Strategic and International Studies. December 8, 2020, https://www.csis.org/analysis/air-and-missile-warkarabakh-lessons-future-strike-and-defense, accessed January 27, 2021. Trevithick, Joseph. 2020. “Video points to Azerbaijan’s frst use of Israeli-made Ballistic Missile against Armenia.” The War Zone. October 2, 2020. “US Allocated $100 million in security aid to Azerbaijan in 2018–2019.” Institute of Armenian Studies. University of Southern California. July 17, 2019, https://armenian.usc.edu/us-allocates-100-million-in-security-aid-to-azerbaijan/, accessed on February 2, 2021. Watling, Jack and Sidharth Kaushal. 2020. “The democratization of precision strike in the Nagorno Karabakh confict.” Commentary. Royal United Services Institute. October 22, 2020, https://rusi.org/commentary/democratisation-precision-strike-karabakh-confict, accessed on January 27, 2021. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
11 The Causes and Consequences of the Second Karabakh War September 27, 2021–November 10, 2021 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu Introduction This chapter discusses the causes and consequences of the Second Karabakh War, which began on September 27, 2020 and lasted only 44 days, without addressing the complex history of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict. The 44-day war has changed the frm status quo in the Southern Caucasus (or Transcaucasia) formed by the ceasefre agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia signed in May 1994. Although the 1994 ceasefre had been repeatedly violated since its inception, none of them had a signifcant effect on its permanent nature. Even the 2016 April War with its devastating effects lasted only four days before it was terminated through Russia’s intervention. Likewise, the Tovuz clashes of 2020 between Armenia and Azerbaijan lasted only a few days without affecting the deadlock in negotiations in any way. The start of the Second Karabakh War came as a surprise to many at least because of its mostly dormant history of the past nearly 30 years. Yet analysts had warned about the misleading peace on various occasions. The recent brief wars of April 2016 and July 2020 were not evaluated by Armenia and the international mediators, especially the co-chairs of the Minsk Group – with the exception of Russia – correctly. Azerbaijan’s frm stance and its readiness for the renewal of war had been ignored and underestimated. The main causes of the war are associated with both international and domestic circumstances. The OCSE Minsk Group co-chairs have proved to be ineffective in mediating the negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. They chose to manage the confict for decades not to let intense violence erupt and engulf the region and eventually their policy failed. Yet it is hard to claim that Russia, a Minsk Group co-chair, had the same agenda. We claim that Russia has always had its own secret agenda and its presence in the Minsk Group was nothing but a part of its own undeclared Karabakh policy which is discussed below. Another noteworthy cause of the Second Karabakh War was Armenia’s reluctance to consider Azerbaijan’s demands. Armenia had complicated the DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-15 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
246 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu negotiation process by insisting on adding the administration of the occupied lands to the sides of negotiation. This demand was on and off at various times which diminished Armenia’s dependability as a party to negotiate with. Moreover, Armenia’s massive military armament had raised its confdence in promoting the status quo in the region which was unacceptable to Azerbaijan. However, both the people and the political leadership of Azerbaijan were dissatisfed with the situation. People had never lost the memory of atrocities in Khojaly and other towns in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan. The fact that every eighth person in Azerbaijan was an internally displaced person contributed to keeping the memory alive. This created some pressure on the government the head of which had periodically made statements that Azerbaijan would liberate its lands through military means if negotiations failed. His warnings had been regarded as ultimatums by Armenia which periodically accused Azerbaijan of taking a destructive position. The gradual growth of the conditions of “no war, no peace” into a state of being ready for an explosion was not properly assessed and addressed by Armenia and the OSCE Minsk Group. Azerbaijan, as a victim of the confict, got tired of being a loser and every time showed its dissatisfaction with the current state of affairs. Its call for justice was ignored until the Second Karabakh War, which Baku needed to restore justice and the country’s territorial integrity. The Second Karabakh War that was brief and destructive with drastic changes in the geopolitical realities of the region had numerous major causes. Some of the causes were related to domestic and regional issues, while others were related to international conditions. The consequences of the war have affected the sides of the war, the disputed territory, and neighboring countries, both politically and economically. This chapter provides a detailed analysis of the main causes and consequences of the Second Karabakh War. Cause One: Ripeness of the Situation or Readiness for War The peace process, which started after the ceasefre agreement signed in May 1994, failed despite a long series of negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, mostly sponsored by the OSCE Minsk Group. The dynamics of the peace process are analyzed in various works, but the truth is simple and apologetic: no progress was made in the past 26 years. The institution of the mediated negotiation, in place since the early 1990s, had completely failed without making any tangible progress. First efforts of mediation started in the early 1990s and shifted to the mediated negotiation stage in 1994 under the aegis of the OSCE Minsk Group. In September 2020, the situation was ripe for the renewal of large-scale war in Karabakh as it was apparent that Azerbaijan completely lost all hope of a peaceful resolution to the Nagorno-Karabakh confict. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 247 Paradoxically, the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan was recognized by the main international organizations and states, including its neighbors, but Armenia – the aggressor – received more support than Azerbaijan from the West, which allowed it to continue to control the lands of the latter. Simple statements and recommendations of third parties about the futility of war in the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict did not make any contribution to the peace process, and Azerbaijan considered them more destructive than useful. By the end of 2020, Azerbaijan required no or minimal foreign involvement in a new potential armed confict to be able to act decisively without facing any decelerating external interference. The process of the US presidential elections and unfavorable economic conditions in the world due to the pandemic created a favorable situation for Azerbaijan, diverted attention from the confict zone, and created adverse conditions for the Western countries which would otherwise be willing to participate in the regional developments more readily. The insignifcant external interest in getting actively involved in the issue created advantageous conditions for Azerbaijan to launch a fast and decisive war. Some scholars have tried to explain the onset willingness of Armenia and Azerbaijan to negotiate their differences in the early 1990s with ripeness theory (Mooradian and Druckman 1999). Put forth by William Zarman (2000), ripeness theory is intended to explain that when the conficting parties fnd themselves in a painful deadlock from which none of them can rise to victory, they seek a way out which usually leads to a round table for negotiation. The research conducted by Mooradian and Druckman (1999) concluded that a mutually hurting stalemate was a condition for negotiating a ceasefre and reduced violence between Armenia and Azerbaijan. In reality, however, by the time Armenia and Azerbaijan concluded a truce in May 1994, Armenia had gained Azerbaijani territories more than double of the size of Nagorno-Karabakh. In other words, Armenia rose to a decisive victory when the ceasefre became effective and since that point it had tried to keep all of the territories that already were under the control of Armenia’s troops or negotiate some part of the occupied territories for a political status of another. Since the mediators chose not to differentiate between the aggressor and victim, the nature of the negotiations excluded the sense of justice. Azerbaijan, the disadvantaged party, had no choice but patiently working toward changing the stubborn status-quo until the time was ripe to reclaim the lost land by force. In other words, it was Azerbaijan that had to decide when it was time to restore its territorial integrity, using the same means that the aggressor had used in the early 1990s, and when the nation was ready for that. Apparently, Azerbaijan decided that the late September of 2020 was the time to return the occupied lands. By means of the two brief but bloody wars in April 2016 and July 2020, Azerbaijan managed to collect abundant information about the capacity of the Armenian military which ensured Baku that it had military superiority over Armenia. Eliminating potential dangers coming from the Kremlin Uploaded by S. M. Safi
248 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu was the only major issue for Azerbaijan as Russia and Armenia are part of the same security alliance called the Collective Security Treaty Agreement. More importantly, Russia’s support for Armenia throughout the Karabakh confict is notorious, even though Russia has been one of the co-chairs of the Minsk Group. Unlike politicians, analysts have discussed these two controversial identities of Russia related to the same issue (Tchantouridze 2008). The time was apt for negotiating the subject of Russia’s impartiality with the Kremlin before resuming wide-scale military attacks on the Armenian military in the occupied lands. Russia’s unhappiness with Armenia’s pro-Western political orientation due to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s policies worked in favor of Azerbaijan. It is diffcult to say what kind of changes Moscow exactly wanted in Armenia, but it is clear that it did want to punish Pashinyan through his removal from the offce. Coming to power through popular vote after the revolutionary movement was the main power of Pashinyan who exercised strong popular support. This was clear in Russia just like in Armenia, and the Kremlin hoped that some military failure in Karabakh could cost Pashinyan his power. What is not clear yet is to what extent Russia agreed on Azerbaijan’s military advance. Although this point is not clear, some judgments can be made based on both President Aliyev’s occasional declarations and Russia’s well-anticipated intervention on November 9, 2020. President Aliyev had made some statements on the national media that without liberating the city of Shusha Azerbaijan’s victory would not be complete, thus signaling the point where Azerbaijan would stop. Also, exactly after Shusha was liberated by Azerbaijan on November 8, 2020, Russia started to step in by slow movements. It is most likely that Russia and Azerbaijan agreed on it beforehand and more so Russia had let Azerbaijan know until when the Kremlin would tolerate the advancement of the Azerbaijani troops. Russia was also in search of new gains with acquiring a new status in Nagorno-Karabakh, although it is not clear if this was also negotiated before the war started. However, the solid point is that Russia acquired that status very abruptly after intervening into the confict at midnight on November 9, 2020. After a couple of hours of negotiations, which is extremely short for this type of protracted confict, President Aliyev, President Putin, and Prime Minister Pashinyan signed a nine-point trilateral agreement that gave the Kremlin the right to station Russian troops in Karabakh to participate in peacekeeping operations. This agreement will be discussed in more detail below in the consequences section. It is important to note here that Russia has pushed out of the game the other two co-chairs of the Minsk Group – the US and France. More importantly, Russia’s role in the war as an independent from the Minsk Group actor has clearly indicated that the Kremlin always enjoyed a special status in regard to this confict and had always had its own separate Karabakh agenda. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 249 Cause Two: Failure of the International Mediation The mediated negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan had lasted decades without any results. The most notable products of the numerous meetings were the expressions of hope for a breakthrough in negotiations. The OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs were mostly concerned with keeping the process within manageable boundaries without making a thorough assessment of the situation. The negotiations over the issue were deadlocked after each government change in Armenia. Although Armenia has been ruled by numerous different governments since 1994, which caused an unstable approach to the problem, the main Armenian leaders that complicated the problem and delayed its resolution were Robert Kocharyan and Serj Sarksyan. With Pashinyan as prime minister, hope for a breakthrough in negotiations resumed. President Aliyev and Prime Minister Pashinyan agreed, in Dushanbe, in September 2018, to reduce tensions and establish a joint hotline, which helped reduce ceasefre violations (Sanamyan 2018). However, Pashinyan gradually used different rhetoric on the Karabakh issue, which demonstrated his unwillingness to compromise, most likely under pressure from domestic and international factors. Initially patient Baku could not stand this. By the third anniversary of the April 2016 war, despite glimmers of hope following the handover of power in Armenia, the main observation was that the way forward in the confict resolution process could be deadlocked again. Cause Three: Loss of Trust Azerbaijan had completely lost its trust in Armenia, as Prime Minister Pashinyan frequently changed both Armenia’s position and his approach to the problem. Pashinyan initially stated that he would not negotiate on behalf of Nagorno-Karabakh because he was not elected by the people of Nagorno-Karabakh. However, having consolidated his power, he seemed to have reverted back to a “business as usual” approach, both in terms of dragging out negotiations and ensuring the opposition that Karabakh was a priority for Armenia. While doing so, Armenia still relied on Russian backing in Armenian security policy decisions. Yerevan tried to get closer to Moscow by sending a military-humanitarian mission to Syria (although Pashinyan explained this differently) (TASS, March 28, 2019), and receiving a new Russian loan for the purchase of four Su-30SM supermaneuverable fghter jets (Kommersant, Feb. 1, 2019). On the other hand, Pashinyan insisted on his Western orientation of the policy. Yet he failed to use a balance of power policy to safely implement his government’s policies, in which Russia’s intolerance toward those who value the West was also effective. Pashinyan’s conficting messaging to Azerbaijan prompted the latter to change its policy. When the Yerevan offcials had publicly rejected the basic tenet of the ongoing negotiations – Armenia’s withdrawal from Uploaded by S. M. Safi
250 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu the occupied territories of Azerbaijan – Azerbaijan hardened its policies. Armenian National Security Service Director Artur Vanetsyan publicly stated on February 27, 2019, “this is our clear message to all Armenians and the whole world: not an inch of land will be conceded,” while the resettlement of Armenians took place in the occupied territories (Askarov 2019). Eventually, it turned out that there was a discrepancy between the statements of Armenian politicians and Armenia’s military capabilities. Indeed, Russia also lost its confdence in Pashinyan’s government, which made an impression that Armenia was moving closer to Moscow because of the Russian military bases in Armenia as its security guarantees, also critical to blocking military options for Azerbaijan. Armenian offcials occasionally stated that Russian military presence in the Caucasus region was the most important factor for a non-resumption of military hostilities in the region (Sputnik February 21, 2019). Yet Armenia felt confdent in military terms asserting that it would go on the offensive if hostilities resume (Massispost.com February 26, 2019). Armenia’s tenacious Karabakh policies made the Azerbaijani government increasingly lose its confdence in the new Armenian leadership as a dependable partner to make a deal with, although pockets of hope remained until the late times, as illustrated by the March 29, 2019 face-to-face meeting between Aliyev and Pashinyan (Mammadov 2019). But as Armenia returned to pre-“Velvet Revolution” policies and negotiating tactics, Azerbaijan, in turn, looked for new ways to block Armenian participation in various benefcial regional projects as well as seeking to raise the costs on Yerevan for sustaining its occupation. Notably, Azerbaijan conducted several largescale military exercises, in which the scenarios included tasks for preparing an offensive operation (Azernews.az, March 8). The joint military exercise of Azerbaijani and Turkish troops was a signal to Armenia, which had missed the opportunity of assessing it rightly. This later gave a rise to rumors that Turks fought in Karabakh which shadowed the splendid military success of Azerbaijani fghters. Cause Four: Emotional and Psychological Burden For decades, Azerbaijan bore the extremely heavy emotional and psychological burden of the defeat in the First Karabakh War. First, it had lost its Nagorno-Karabakh region to Armenia and then seven surrounding regions one after another, all in 1992–1993. Almost one-eighth of the republic’s population has become internally displaced people who had faced all types of moral and material hardships for many years. The worse, Azerbaijani people developed a syndrome of losers and trauma because they could not come to terms with their fate. One of the reasons was that they lost the war to Armenians with whom they had historical hostilities. Therefore, Azerbaijanis, especially the youth, had wanted to change the situation. One of the signals for that came from Mubariz Ibrahimov, a soldier, who Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 251 attacked an Armenian military unit alone killing dozens. The legacy of the First Karabakh War had eventually developed into unmatched patriotism that led to heroism in the Second Karabakh War. Before the 44-day war started, the Azerbaijani leadership had put serious efforts to keep the Azerbaijani concerns about the situation around the occupied lands and its rejections to the status quo constantly alive. Understandably, time worked against Azerbaijan as the unrecognized Armenian entity in the occupied lands had acted as an independent state exerting full effective control over the region. Azerbaijan’s inability to exercise its jurisdiction in Nagorno-Karabakh and the other occupied lands had narrowed Baku’s choices down to military measures. Cause Five: Military Readiness Azerbaijan had persistently worked to create a power asymmetry in its own favor until the moment when it believed that it was the time to change the status quo in the region. Azerbaijan’s military capabilities had increased signifcantly before the war. Yet Armenia had also worked to replenish its arsenal with sophisticated weapons. For example, it purchased most advanced military technology like Iskander missiles from Russia to deter Azerbaijan from its aspirations to liberate its occupied territories. Armenia also created strong military fortifcations in the occupied lands which pushed them to believe in their invincibility. Yet Russia did not let Armenia use Iskander missiles against Azerbaijan and, most likely, the latter knew about this before and during the war. However, there are other views around this issue. Prime Minister Pashinyan recently said that Armenia used Iskander missiles against Azerbaijan, but most of them did not explode, noting that only 10% of those missiles fred at best. Pashinyan’s contemptuous words about Russia’s most high-tech missiles have infuriated the Kremlin, which is stepping up its covert campaign against him by supporting the opposition. Russsia’s allegedly clandestine efforts resulted in a military memorandum by Onik Gasparyan, commander-in-chief of the Armenian army, to Pashinyan, demanding that he resign. Pashinyan, in return, signed an order to remove Gasparyan from the offce which was not approved by President Sarkisyan twice. Involvement of the military in the politics exacerbated the situation in Armenia leading the supporters of Pashinyan to rally in the streets of Yerevan. Cause Six: Power Consolidation The Nagorno-Karabakh confict has been an important factor in both Azerbaijan’s and Armenia’s internal politics. The Karabakh card has especially been very effective in changing governments in Armenia. Serj Uploaded by S. M. Safi
252 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu Sargsyan and Robert Kocharyan, former presidents of Armenia, represented the Karabakh clan who had successfully used the Karabakh problem for their political career. Although Pashinyan’s approach to the Karabakh problem was somehow different when he came to power, the four-day April 2016 war catalyzed the transition of power in Armenia, through a popular revolution, from long-ruling Serzh Sargsyan to reformist Nikol Pashinyan. With each regime change in Armenia, Azerbaijan’s hopes for the solution of the confict also changed. In May 2018, when Pashinyan came to power, hopes were renewed again. However, over time, Pakhinyan began to approach the Karabakh problem more harshly. His controversial messages on the Karabakh issue were a sign of a dilemma formed under pressure from the opposition in Armenia. Initially, the regime transition in Yerevan inspired some limited optimism regarding the prospect of resolving the confict (Mammadov 2018). In response, Azerbaijan did not attempt to retake any portion of its occupied territories while internal unrest consumed Armenia. Baku’s rationale was to not interrupt Pashinyan’s efforts to clean up the Sargsyan clan, widely seen as responsible for numerous grave crimes against Azerbaijani civilians and inherently uninterested in actually reaching a peace deal. Baku’s position was also supported by a widely shared belief that Pashinyan would work to achieve normalcy with neighbors in order to underpin his promises of democracy, reforms, and economic growth (Morgan 2018). The later developments showed that Pashinyan either was unable to do what he originally wanted to do in Karabakh, or he had no intent to bring any changes and also used the Karabakh topic for political purposes. In any case, Pashinyan’s approach to the Karabakh confict prior to the renewal of the war in 2020 can be summed up by his own expression of “Karabakh is Armenia, period.” This was the very moment when Pashinyan completely deviated from his original ideals and yielded to the Armenian ultranationalist stance in order to consolidate his power. Before starting the war in the feld, President Aliyev declared Azerbaijan’s position at Russia’s high-level Valdai conference before an audience including Russian President Vladimir Putin: “Karabakh is Azerbaijan – exclamation point!” (Kucera 2019). Aliyev’s words, aimed at obtaining stronger national support to strengthen his power in the country, have been very effective. They were delivered at a right time in a right place to achieve some superiority in the Karabakh rhetoric and more popular support in the country. Although President Aliyev had occasionally used the Karabakh card for the purpose of internal politics, this time he wanted to demonstrate his determination to all the actors, including Putin and Pashinyan, as well as to the people of Azerbaijan. Ultimately, the decisions in the course of the war made by President Aliyev alone earned him tremendous national support. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 253 Cause Seven: Russia’s Interests Russia played an undeniable role in escalating the Nagorno-Karabakh confict in the early 1990s and in managing it in accordance with its interests until the outbreak of the Second Karabakh War (Askerov 2020). The Kremlin wanted a new war to happen and stay under its control. Russia’s interest in the former Soviet republics is well known as the Kremlin wants to keep them within the sphere of its infuence. Dynamic international, regional, and domestic circumstances force Russia from time to time to adjust its policies to the new realities in order to maintain its superior position. Russia has vital geopolitical interests in the South Caucasus, and therefore the Kremlin works diligently to make the states in this region dependent on itself. In this sense, Russia had played an exceptional role in reshaping the Karabakh confict in the early 1990s through which it has infuenced both Armenia and Azerbaijan. Armenia has completely submitted to Russia, fully relying on it for security. Azerbaijan, however, has been very careful not to provoke Russia, recognizing its hegemonic role in the Caucasus (Yavuz and Huseynov 2021). In 2020, Russia used its old political means in a new fashion to satisfy its interests in the region. The changing conditions in Armenia with Pashinyan’s pro-Western orientation were against Russia’s interests and the Kremlin would not tolerate this. A war that the Kremlin could control would be a good option for Russia to fortify its position in the region. Russia’s plans to subdue the unruly pro-Western Pashinyan played a signifcant role in the renewal of the war. Russia wanted to force Pashinyan to abandon his pro-Western orientation by reminding him of Armenia’s dependence on Russia for its security. Ousting him from offce was among the options but wide public support allowed Pashinyan to survive. Yet the policies of Pashinyan’s government contributed to the formation of Russian policy toward Karabakh during the period of active military operations. At the same time, Russia wanted to demonstrate its utmost importance in the region. The target audience for Russia was the parties to the confict (Armenia and Azerbaijan), the West, especially the other two OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs (the US and France), and all of the countries within Russia’s sphere of infuence. When the armed confict ended on November 9, 2020, Russia emerged from the confict as a real winner, since it alone dictated the terms of peace, forcing Armenia and Azerbaijan to nod and the other two co-chairs of the Minsk Group to watch Russia’s actions. The only state that Russia pretended to take into account was Turkey, but the Kremlin did not allow Ankara to have any peacekeeping forces in the region, thereby holding sole power in the region in its hands. Russia redeployed its forces to Azerbaijani territories after 26 years, which is an astounding victory for the Kremlin. This is currently not being properly assessed due to Russia’s peacekeeping role, although Russian forces in the region have begun to act as a government. It is quite ostensible that today Russian peacekeeping Uploaded by S. M. Safi
254 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu forces exercise more jurisdiction over Nagorno-Karabakh than Azerbaijan. The situation may change in the future in either direction since the political conditions in the region are unstable. Arguably, Russia was also interested in a new war between Armenia and Azerbaijan because it wanted to shorten its access to the Near East through new corridors that would result from the war. On the other hand, this would enable the Kremlin to slow down, if not block completely, the integration of both Armenia and Azerbaijan to the West and keep them within the sphere of its own infuence. Deploying Russian troops in Karabakh under the designation of peacekeeping forces would increase Russia’s leverage in the region. The plans of the Kremlin also included diminishing Georgia’s geostrategic importance in the region by making new regional arrangements. Moscow’s readiness to create a new alternative route to the Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey transportation corridor, which was outside of Russia’s control, would be fed by a new war in the South Caucasus. The economic aspects of a new war in Karabakh were also important to Russia, since a controllable warfare would mean selling more weapons and ammunition to the parties in confict. This war had been under Russia’s control since its inception, and the Kremlin was confdent it could stop it the moment it saw as being suitable. Therefore, the war also related to Russia’s calculations for economic gains which were immediate and projected. The immediate gains came from the sale of weapons and ammunition, while the projected gains are based on the future projects made possible by the geopolitical changes in the region. Cause Eight: Nationalism and Patriotism in Azerbaijan The people of Azerbaijan wanted this war to take place regardless of its results, since the consequences of the First Karabakh War were very shameful for them. The bitter memories of the people were very alive because of the traumas such as the Khojaly massacre of 1992, as well as because of the huge number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) who suffered from the consequences of the Armenian aggression. Therefore, nationalistic and patriotic sentiments among the people of Azerbaijan were high, and the public constantly wanted a war for the liberation of the occupied lands and the restoration of their honor, but the political and socio-economic conditions in the country were not ripe for this for a long time. Yet the numerous promises of the President of Azerbaijan at different times to return the occupied lands by means of war demanded new and more decisive steps. The political leadership of Azerbaijan was aware that the atrocities of the First Karabakh War never had disappeared from the memories of Azerbaijanis, who considered the return of the occupied lands a matter of honor and dignity. The shooting of Major General Polad Hashimov by Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 255 an Armenian sniper July 12, 2020 and his personal stories, which many social media users describe as a courageous and honest man, increased the mobilizing patriotic energy of the people in Azerbaijan and demanded that the government liberate the occupied territories. With the support of the population and even some pressure from the public, President Aliyev was able to make serous decisions with greater courage. Cause Nine: External Interest in War Some foreign actors other than Russia were also interested in waking up the dormant confict. These interested states were Turkey and Israel. For decades, Turkey has made tremendous diplomatic efforts to help Azerbaijan restore its territorial integrity. Four UN Security Council resolutions of 1993 in support of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity were the result of Turkey’s diplomatic efforts. However, those documents have never been implemented (Askerov 2015; 2020). The mediation efforts of the OSCE Minsk Group have also proved extremely ineffective in achieving some positive changes regarding the Nagorno-Karabakh confict (Askerov 2015). By 2020, Turkey became increasingly interested in war as it wanted to continue its efforts to restore justice in the region and increase its infuence in the South Caucasus. It is well known that, despite strong cultural ties with Azerbaijan, Turkey did not play a signifcant role in the First Karabakh War of the early 1990s militarily, yielding the arena to the Armenian forces, which enjoyed very strong military support from Russia (Askerov 2015; 2020). In 2020, the strategic partnership between Turkey and Azerbaijan was at its peak and Turkey was ready to provide political and strategic support to Azerbaijan in this historical moment to make up for lost opportunities in the early 1990s. A new war in 2020 would also be a great opportunity for Turkey to test and sell its new weapons like the Bayraktar TB 2, in addition to creating a new platform for cooperation with Russia. More importantly, President Erdogan’s desire to increase his popularity in both Turkey and Azerbaijan also played a role in escalating the confict. Ready to support Azerbaijan, Israel was also interested in resuming the war. Israel’s main interest was to forge a strong strategic partnership with Azerbaijan, which might be used against Iran when necessary. Israel was ready to support Azerbaijan with intelligence and its modern weapons like kamikaze drones. Political support from Turkey and Israel and their new military technologies presented to Azerbaijan prompted Baku to resort to war as a means of returning the occupied lands and achieving strategic superiority over its rival. As a result of the political struggle between new and old ruling elites in Armenia, political and military governance was weakened. The effect of this in renewal of the war was twofold. First, the Armenian government Uploaded by S. M. Safi
256 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu wanted to divert public attention from internal problems to the external ones. Secondly, Azerbaijan considered the situation favorable for taking decisive steps. It is clear that the causes discussed here are not exhaustive, but they are the main ones that led to the war, which ended in 44 days with serious consequences discussed below. The Consequences of the Second Karabakh War The war offcially halted on November 9, 2020, producing a nine-point trilateral document signed by the heads of Russia, Azerbaijan, and Armenia, but does not mention anything about the political status of NagornoKarabakh. Four months after the end of the 44-day Karabakh War, the impacts of the armed confict on the conficting parties and the region are profound. Each party to the confict and those who were passively involved in the war are infuenced by the war differently. The consequences of war can be assessed both economically and politically at the national and regional levels. The restoration of existing communication lines and the commissioning of new ones, provided for in Article 91 (Trilateral Statement, November 10, 2020) of the tripartite declaration on the ceasefre, can be considered one of the main consequences of the Karabakh War for the region in the economic sphere. The deal calls for a corridor linking Karabakh to Armenia proper, the 10-mile-long Lachin corridor. In return Armenia also accepted to ensure the unimpeded 30-mile-long corridor between Azerbaijan and its exclave Nakhchivan, with the latter obtaining a direct territorial link to Turkey. Meanwhile, representatives of the Russian railway which controls Armenian railways until 2038 recently visited the Meghri region of Armenia to assess the possibilities of the reopening of the Nakhchivan – Meghri – Azerbaijan railway. Increased Russian Infuence in the Caucasus Ending the war by a joint statement of President Aliyev, Prime Minister Pashinyan, and President Putin (Trilateral Statement, November 10, 2020)2, the subsequent achievement of a ceasefre in Nagorno-Karabakh, and the deployment of Russian troops in the confict zone under cover of peacekeeping forces increased Russia’s infuence and control over the region and the dependence of Azerbaijan and Armenia on Russia. The war has weakened the relations of both Azerbaijan and Armenia with the West. The joint statement serves the purpose of the ceasefre temporarily, and the failure to conclude a fnal peace agreement suggests that tensions and uncertainty in the region will continue for a long time. The projected control of Russian peacekeepers over the behavior of the parties to the confict for at least fve years and the regulation of military-political and transport Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 257 communication relations in the region will expand Russia’s participation in political decision-making in both Azerbaijan and Armenia. Because the Nagorno-Karabakh confict remains unsettled, Azerbaijan and Armenia will not be able to implement serious projects in the near future without reckoning with the Kremlin. On November 18, 2021, the OSCE Minsk Group’s co-chairs from the US and France met with their colleagues in Moscow (Daily News, November 18, 2021) which took place more than a week after the agreement was reached.3 Obviously, the West was a bit late to understand that week’s signifcance after the ceasefre agreement was signed since Russian “peacekeepers” were already in the South Caucasus region. Russia has been taking large-scale practical steps to expand its presence in the region from the frst days of the ceasefre. Its presence in the region for such a long time as fve years is also a sign that democratic changes are not likely to occur in Azerbaijan. Now, the only promising ally for the West in the South Caucasus is Georgia where government revenues come mainly from declining transit revenues. Besides, France’s4 (apnews.com, November 25, 2020) highly harsh anti-Azerbaijani stance on the Second Karabakh War, the Dutch parliament’s decision5 to impose sanctions on Turkey and Azerbaijan, and the threats from the US have increased the anti-Western public opinion in Azerbaijan. It seems that the West is also pushing the Azerbaijani people toward Russia. However, the West can now have peace regarding the security of natural gas and oil pipelines from the Caspian Sea region to Europe, as the threats of Armenia have been eliminated. Weakening Relations with the West The new realities in the region affect both Azerbaijan’s and Armenian’s relations with the West. It is likely that Azerbaijan will take both Russia’s and Turkey’s positions into account while formulating its foreign policies, while Armenia will continue to be dependent on Russia. Most likely, Azerbaijan will completely abandon the course of integration into the Euro-Atlantic space. At the very least, Azerbaijan, which is working on a strategic partnership agreement with the European Union (EU), will postpone this work for an indeterminate period. Anti-Azerbaijani positions and calls from the West during the 44-day war, including the pro-Armenian positions of the OSCE Minsk Group’s co-chairs as well as calls for sanctions against Azerbaijan and Turkey, and the attempts to recognize Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent state in the US House of Representatives and in the French Senate may not only cause some changes in Azerbaijan’s foreign policy, but also growth of anti-Western sentiments among the population. Ultimately, these will not only weaken the course of Azerbaijan’s integration with the West, but also reduce confdence in Western democracy. Ironically, this is exactly what Russia wanted to accomplish. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
258 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu Armenia Cultivates Relations Simultaneously with Russia and the West In November 2017, Armenia signed a Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) with the EU, which differed from the draft of the Association Agreement. Despite the main distinction, which did not allow Armenia’s entering of a free trade area, it still revived hopes for deepening Westernization in all spheres (Armenia–EU Partnership, November 2017).6 As expected, the Armenian “Velvet Revolution” in April–May 2018 served as an additional impetus for the agenda of the Agreement. On March 1, 2021, CEPA entered into force. It has now been ratifed by the Republic of Armenia, all EU member states, and the European Parliament (CEPA, March 2021).7 Boris Navasardian states that the new Armenian government turned out to be extremely ineffective in their interaction with European structures and showed indecisiveness regarding the matter of institutional reforms (Navasardian 2021, 10). As for Azerbaijan, a long-awaited European Union– Azerbaijani strategic partnership agreement was not signed. Opportunities for Azerbaijan to Diversify its Cargo Transportation Undoubtedly, the changes in this area, along with the re-establishment of lines and junctions in the transport infrastructure of the South Caucasus, will have a signifcant impact on intra-country and intercountry, as well as intra-regional and interregional trade and economic relations. This will create opportunities for Azerbaijan to diversify its cargo transportation to the West via Turkey and to the South via Iran. Also, Azerbaijan’s shortterm and medium-term expenditures and long-term revenues as a transit country in the region will be increased. The new developments in the regional transportation will allow the formation of competition between the existing Baku-Tbilisi-Kars and the new Baku-Nakhchivan-Kars, as well as the existing Baku-Astara-Tehran and Baku-Nakhchivan-Tehran railways, and ultimately optimize cost and time elements in freight and passenger transportation. Armenia Gains Access to Turkey, Iran, and Russia The trilateral agreement has created some opportunities for Armenia in economic terms. The Armenian railways can be connected to the Baku-Tbilisi-Akhalkalaki-Kars railway from Gyumri and Ijevan. This will provide Armenia with direct access from Gyumri to Turkey, and from Ijevan to Georgia and Russia via the Baku-Tbilisi railway. The implementation of Article 9 of the ceasefre agreement allows Armenia to transport goods by railways to Iran and back via Nakhchivan which is part of Azerbaijan. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 259 Finally, the implementation of Article 9 can also contribute to the development of transport links between the South Caucasus and Central Asia at the interregional level, provided that Azerbaijan is on the transition route for China’s “One Belt, One Road” project, the “Lapis-Lazuli Transportation Corridor,” and “North-South Transportation Corridor” (India-Iran-Russia). Within the framework of the Europe-Caucasia-Asia Transportation Corridor, more than 50 million tons of goods are carried annually through the territory of Azerbaijan. The resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict, which is located in the midst of such important nodal points, is important, in particular because the transportation of goods by rail from Armenia to Central Asia and back can be provided by transit through the territory of Azerbaijan. War Effects on the Economy of Azerbaijan and Armenia Ending the war will undoubtedly have effects on the economy of both Azerbaijan and Armenia. Azerbaijan’s increase in military spending forced Armenia to follow its example. But while Azerbaijan's oil-rich economy has not been over-hit, it has posed a signifcant fnancial burden on Armenia8 (Ibadoglu 2021). Even in the post-war period, rising military, social, and health spending in Azerbaijan and Armenia will limit the ability of the state budget to allocate suffcient funds to other important areas. The governments will feel this diffculty signifcantly during the formation of the 2021 budget. On the other hand, investments in the restoration of dilapidated infrastructure for Azerbaijan, as well as housing for internally displaced people (IDPs) returning home, will increase government spending and investment in the economy of Azerbaijan. Despite the fact that it will stimulate economic growth, it can be concluded that covering military spending in the medium and long term creates additional challenges for the economies of Azerbaijan and Armenia. The Composition of Foreign Trade Relations Will Change Steadily With regard to investment and trade relations, changes in foreign policy will lead to signifcant changes in international trade relations and investment cooperation. The current situation in Nagorno-Karabakh will also have a signifcant impact on the region’s international and domestic integration processes. Nevertheless, the Second Karabakh War will not lead to significant changes in the composition of Azerbaijan’s export trading partners; Italy, Turkey, and Israel will remain the main buyers of oil and gas. As for imports, Russia, Turkey, and China will continue to be the main trading partners, but trade relations with Western countries, which rank in the next places, are expected to weaken. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
260 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu As for Armenia, the Second Karabakh War will not lead to signifcant changes in the composition of Armenia’s imports with Russia and will increase the share of Russian military goods in total trade turnover. Some offcials in Armenia are hopeful for reconciliation with Turkey. The foreign minister of Armenia, Ara Ayvazyan noted that his country is not building its foreign policy against any third party, including Turkey (greekcitytimes.com, March 2021).9 The Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan refused to describe Turkey as an enemy state. In response to the question on whether “Turkey is another enemy state for Armenia?” Grigoryan noted, “If we are going to open up, then there should be some corrections in our approaches, and we are working in that direction.” When pressed further on whether Turkey is an enemy state, he said that it would not be right to state unequivocally that there is no threat from Turkey, but the events in the region also create opportunities. It looks like Armenia is going to start bilateral trade relations with Turkey and if this happens, the foreign trade composition of Armenia will change signifcantly. Economist Suren Parsyan stated that access to the Turkish and Azerbaijani markets for Armenian producers can theoretically have a positive effect on Armenia’s economy. Currently, the volume of products exported from Armenia to Turkey amounts to an average of $2 million a year. The reverse fow from Turkey to Armenia averages $260 million a year (www.evnreport.com March 09, 2021).10 As for exporting to Azerbaijan, Parsyan stated that exported goods from Armenia include minerals (such as copper and molybdenum) and light industrial products (cigarettes, canned food, etc.). Azerbaijan is in a more competitive position for these products because of its larger population and economies of scale. However, the history of the confict is likely to inhibit the demand for Armenian goods in Azerbaijan. Increase Military Expenditures in Both Countries Most likely, in the near future, Azerbaijan and Armenia will continue to purchase innovative equipment and weapons from Russia to renew and modernize their lost military equipment and machinery due to the recent war. This will lead to a reduction in the share of Western countries in the composition of imports, including arms imports. Although Azerbaijan and Armenia are in dire need of Western technology in the context of investment cooperation, it will not be easy to attract investment from the West during the post-war period, especially in the liberated territories. The deployment of Russian troops in Karabakh under the guise of peacekeeping operations and the possibility of creating a military base in the region in the future will undoubtedly worsen the investment attractiveness and business performance of Azerbaijan and Armenia. Hi-tech weapon systems bought with oil revenue ultimately tipped the balance11 in Azerbaijan (Ibadoglu 2021). Yet the war will likely hurt doing business and the credit rating for both countries due to uncertainties created Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 261 in the post-war times. Without a solid peace agreement, the actual uncertainty will increase during this and subsequent years. The scenario in which Armenia or Azerbaijan starts a war today is much less probable than during any given year of the last three decades. This marginal probability is likely to decrease as time passes from the peace deal. However, a lasting peace agreement has not yet been concluded between the two sides to the confict. Consequences for Azerbaijan The post-war realities contain for Azerbaijan more opportunities than risks. An infrastructure rehabilitation program will be implemented to the highest standards in the territories returned to Azerbaijan, and they will be re-populated by the Azerbaijani people. The settlement of more than 10,000 square kilometers of territory liberated by Azerbaijan as a result of the Karabakh War and the restoration of the local economy could lead to signifcant changes. This will stimulate economic growth in the capital and its environs with the return of hundreds of thousands of IDPs from Baku and Sumgayit cities and Absheron district, as well as the resumption of business in the liberated areas. Thousands of hectares of agricultural land and water resources have been returned to the economy of Azerbaijan. The development of the fertile lands of Upper Karabakh and the Kalbajar-Lachin economic regions, which include Zangilan and Gubadli, and their absolute and comparative advantages that will emerge over time, will contribute to the national economy by encouraging both economic regions to compete with other economic regions of Azerbaijan. Minerals have returned to the Azerbaijani economy and there are little to no factors today stopping Azerbaijan from active inclusion of the above in its extractive industry. The occupied lands also possess various rich deposits of mineral resources: two gold, four mercury, two chromite, one lead-zinc, one copper, and one antimony (Mustafayeva and Garayev 2013, 57–58). One of the consequences of the war is the increase in Azerbaijan’s state expenditures. According to preliminary estimates, the restoration of infrastructure in the liberated territories, and the resettlement of the population there will cost Azerbaijan at least USD 50 billion. Thus, according to the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), as the result of the aggression, the total material cost and economic damage are estimated around USD 53.5 billion (Azerbaijan Human Development Report 2000, 52). This amount means the four-year budget of Azerbaijan. If 20% of the budget is spent for this purpose each year, then it will take 18 years to pay the required amount. 2.2 billion manats have been allocated from the 2021 budget for the restoration of the territories, which is a small amount, especially for the frst year. Therefore, in order to cope with this task faster, it is necessary for the Azerbaijani government to share its costs with the private sector, foreign investors, and international organizations. Because of this economic loss in the occupied regions, nearly 7000 establishments were closed, which were Uploaded by S. M. Safi
262 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu providing 24% of the grain revenues, 41% of liqueur production, 46% of the potato growth, 18% of the meat production, and 34% of the milk production of the economy of Azerbaijan (Dadayev et al. 2014, 203). Since Azerbaijan has obtained a land connection to the Nakhichevan exclave, the restoration of transport and communication lines will play an important role in the development of Nakhchivan. The restoration of transport and communication lines provided for in Article 9 of the joint statement can lead to the restoration of railways and highways, which have not been used for 30 years, connecting Azerbaijan and Nakhchivan, and it will play an important role in the development of Nakhchivan, which has been under blockade until now. Such a favorable geographical position for Nakhchivan will allow it not only to restore relations with Azerbaijan, but also to establish transport links between Armenia and Azerbaijan and Turkey and Iran via Nakhchivan. Consequences for Armenia The war has had harsh results for Armenia. During the 44-day war, at least 3,000 Armenians were killed. The Armenian military released the names of 1,690 soldiers who died. Many hundreds remain missing, and hundreds of bodies have not yet been identifed or found. These fgures paint a sad and gloomy portrait of the cost of the war for Armenia. However, the ceasefre conditions also offer some opportunities to Armenia. Armenia will have railway access to Russia via Azerbaijan and to Iran via the Nakhchivan Autonomous region. The Armenia – Turkey border may be opened. The new Minister of Economy of Armenia stated12 the following on November 28, 2020: “Opening the borders will provide wide opportunities. Our exporters will be able to export their products to Russia or other countries through more convenient roads than we have now. Turkish ports will be open to us, and many wide opportunities will be provided. It’s possible that the Azerbaijani market will be open for us and ours for them” (YouTube channel News, Nov. 2020). Consequences for Nagorno-Karabakh Victorious Azerbaijani president Aliyev said that Nagorno-Karabakh will not have political status, and we can still observe some uncertainty around this issue. Therefore, here we will not dwell on the current developments in detail. The unrecognized Karabakh regime has lost nearly 75% of the prewar territory held under its control. About 25% was lost in the fghting and the remainder handed over in accordance with the terms of the November 10 cease-fre agreement. The territorial losses include about one-third of the Soviet-era Nagorno-Karabakh autonomy’s territory, including nearly all of Hadrut, and parts of Shusha, Askeran, Xocavend, and Agdara districts. As a result, out of 36 hydropower plants only 6 are currently in the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 263 territories controlled by Russian peacekeepers. As for agriculture, now Azerbaijan controls up to 95,000 hectares of arable land. In 2019, unrecognized Karabakh produced 118,000 ton of grain, which was consumed locally and mainly exported to Armenia. Before the war, unrecognized Karabakh fully satisfed its needs for electricity, and now Azerbaijan supplies electricity to unrecognized Karabakh. Karabakh also receives additional volumes of grain from Russia (Poghosyan 2020).13 From the words of President Aliyev and some economic events in the regions, it can be concluded that Nagorno-Karabakh will gradually integrate into Azerbaijan. However, the presence of Russia and pre-war political structures in the region raise certain doubts. Consequences for Russia The most important part of the deal for Russia is the geopolitical one, as it strengthened its position in the region by deploying its troops to Azerbaijan for the frst time in about 26 years. Today, Russian peacekeeping forces in the region act like a government. Russia also has numerous economic gains provided by the trilateral statement, for example, the right to deliver goods to and from Armenia through Azerbaijan. The implementation of Article 9 of the tripartite ceasefre14 will facilitate the transportation of military and civilian cargo from Russia to Armenia through the territory of Azerbaijan. Thus, the Black Sea part of the Caucasus railway network, which is still theoretically possible to restore, will lose its practical signifcance. Nevertheless, sensing this danger, the Abkhazian parliament sent an appeal to the Russian Duma to open the unused Ochamchire-Zugdidi line between Abkhazia and Georgia (www.sputnik-abkhazia.ru, Feb 2021).15 However, the restoration of this part of the railway depends not only on Russia but also on Georgia. Such an agreement between the two countries, which currently do not have diplomatic relations, seems impossible. According to the Georgian expert16 (Khevtsuriani 2021), even if Russia goes for it, Georgia will not agree because Georgia does not want to become dependent on Russia. In this case, Russia will have to transport cargo to Armenia and back through Azerbaijan. Obviously, if everything goes as intended, all participants will beneft from regional integration, albeit asymmetrically. Another consequence of the war is that the competitiveness of Russian goods are increasing. It is in the Kremlin’s interest to restore all these transport networks and increase the access of the South Caucasus railway transport infrastructure to and from the region through new ones because the main trading partner of Armenia and Azerbaijan in imports is Russia. Restoration of the transport network will increase the competitiveness of Russian goods transported to Armenia and Azerbaijan at a lower cost. Duty-free trade between the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries will ensure the competitive advantage of Russian goods over Turkish goods in the markets of both countries. In any case, the Armenian market will be subject to the expansion Uploaded by S. M. Safi
264 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu of Russian-Turkish goods, which will strengthen Armenia's dependence on both countries. Russia is gaining bargaining power and advantages against the US, EU, and China. Article 9 of the joint statement signed by Russia with the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia states that “all economic and transport links in the region shall be unblocked. The Republic of Armenia shall provide for transport communication between the western regions of the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic in order to organize the unhindered movement of citizens, vehicles, and goods in both directions. Control over transport shall be exercised by the bodies of the Border Guard Service of the Federal Security Service (FSB) of Russia. By agreement of the Parties, the construction of new transport communications linking the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic with the western regions of Azerbaijan shall be provided.” Thus, Russia, which has taken control of key transport and communications routes in the South Caucasus, will be able to infuence the global freight chain, such as the international NorthSouth and regional East-West transport corridors. Russia can achieve this by controlling access to the transport hubs passing through Khudafarin and Nakhichevan and can easily provide access to the Middle East by controlling the means of transport and communication in these areas. This will bring Russia closer to its main geopolitical goal in the South. In this case, the importance of the existing international transport infrastructure between Georgia and Azerbaijan, which is more integrated into the West in the region, decreases for both countries. Russia, which is positioned in the strategic crossroad between East-West and North-South transportation corridors, is gaining bargaining power and advantages against the US, EU, and China in the long-term period (Aslanli 2021).17 Consequences for Turkey Turkey is Azerbaijan’s most important strategic partner, and the two countries share close ethnic and linguistic ties. During the Second Karabakh War, Azerbaijan’s offensive received strong diplomatic, political, military, and logistical support from Turkey. Turkey’s military advisory support to Azerbaijan in the Second Karabakh War played a signifcant role for Azerbaijan’s recent victory against Armenia after a 30-year-long effort. One of the expectations of Ankara from the Second Karabakh War was to establish a military base in in Azerbaijan. On November 11, 2020, Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar and his Russian counterpart, Sergei Shoigu, signed an agreement to establish a joint ceasefre-monitoring center in Azerbaijani controlled territories (Tass.com, Nov 2020).18 In this regard, Turkey’s parliament on November 17, 2020, approved the deployment of troops to join Russian forces at an observation post in Nagorno-Karabakh after Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a Russian-brokered ceasefre deal to end fghting over the enclave (Reuters.com, Nov 2020).19 On February Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 265 2, 2021, Russia and Turkey opened a joint military center in Azerbaijan. Turkey’s military power created a situation of balance of power in the South Caucasus region. The Second Karabakh War is likely to accelerate the military, political, economic, and cultural integration process between Turkey and Azerbaijan. Indeed, having a sphere of infuence in the South Caucasus, Turkey now has more prospects for strengthening it. Turkey’s close economic ties with Azerbaijanis is likely to further expand, and access to the Armenian market may increase. This could strengthen both the economic and political power of Turkey in the South Caucasus. Turkey and the Nakhichevan region of Azerbaijan will have a direct transportation connection with Azerbaijan and Central Asian countries, in addition to the present Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway. Also, Azerbaijani lands lay in a transition route for China’s “One Belt, One Road” project, “Lapis-Lazuli Transportation Corridor,” and “North-South Transportation Corridor” (India-Iran-Russia). Within the framework of the Europe-Caucasia-Asia Transportation Corridor, more than 50 million tons of goods are carried annually through the Azerbaijani lands. The resolution of the confict in the region, which lays in the middle of such important connection points, is important. Boris Navasardian stated that Turkey tried to compensate for its formal non-participation in negotiations by strengthening its military presence in Azerbaijan and along the Western borders of Armenia. Moreover, unlike in previous years, Ankara’s role cannot be assessed as a kind of Euro-Atlantic representative (Navasardian 2020).20 It is impossible to agree with this statement. First, Turkey called on the Minsk Group to hold talks on the Nagorno-Karabakh confict on October 26, 2020. Turkish Foreign Ministry Spokesman Hami Aksoy said in his statement that “in order for the efforts of the Minsk Group co-chairs to yield results, we see the need for goal-oriented talks in line with UN Security Council resolutions and international laws that aim for lasting peace, taking into consideration Armenia’s violations” (Gumrukcuy 2020).21 Second, Turkey made this call as one of the 11 members of the Minsk Group (https://www.osce.org).22 Finally, the war and the truce have exposed the weakness of international institutions, particularly the fact that Western governments are more focused on arms sales and the support of powerful lobbies with specifc geopolitical interests than on broader human-rights guarantees. Conclusion Azerbaijan won a brilliant victory over Armenia in the Second Karabakh War. Russia and Turkey have strengthened their political and military positions in the region, Iran and the West have found themselves out of the game, and international law has not justifed itself. As Yavuz and Huseynov (2020) put it, “The war and the truce have exposed the weakness Uploaded by S. M. Safi
266 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu of international institutions, particularly the fact that Western governments focus more on arms sales and the support of powerful lobbies with specifc geopolitical interests than on broader human-rights guarantees”.23 Confict resolution does not mean forcibly imposing a solution on one of the parties to the confict, since the loser will try to change the status quo as soon as the right time comes. The failure of international mediation in this case has been transparent. Of course, here the problem should not be seen in the framework of mediation as an institution, but it should be examined in the framework of how the institution was organized and used. It should be noted that Armenia’s main supporter in the First Karabakh War – Russia – has been an integral part of international mediation efforts since the 1994 ceasefre. The same Russia is the only country that today has peacekeeping troops in the region. It might be an exaggeration to say that the wars in Nagorno-Karabakh were Russian wars, but it can certainly be argued that Russia managed these wars the way it wanted. Although the situation is somehow different today and this confict is not under Russia’s monopoly alone, it is happening not because of Western states and international organizations, but because of Turkey and Turkish realities. However, Russia’s superior status on this issue is still very visible. The trilateral agreement, signed on November 10, 2020, gives Russia the right to keep its troops in Karabakh for fve years with the possibility of extension, but Russia has already begun to act as a sovereign in Nagorno-Karabakh. In that case, it seems the region is under the jurisdiction of Russia and it is the real winner in this war. However, there is hope for a better future. If Armenia and Azerbaijan try to forget old hostilities, abandoning their thirst for revenge, and manage to start economic cooperation, they will gradually leave the problems behind and look to the future with optimism. Cooperation between Armenia and Azerbaijan will lead to more cooperation due to mutual benefts. But is such cooperation possible? This is theoretically possible, and the two countries have worked together quite well in the past. However, there are some major external problems. The frst external problem is that Armenia and Turkey need to solve their problems. Secret negotiations took place in the late 2000s, when Armenia and Turkey made serious efforts to establish harmonious relations. They even signed a secret protocol in Zurich, Switzerland on the details of this rapprochement, but ultimately the agreement never materialized. The deal included the establishment of diplomatic relations between Turkey and Armenia, and the opening of borders between the two states. But there were two main problems that got in the way of the deal. The frst was Armenia’s precondition for Turkey’s recognition of the so-called Armenian genocide of 1915, and the second was the withdrawal of Armenian troops from Nagorno-Karabakh – a demand from Turkey. Now, in 2021, the conditions for trilateral cooperation are more favorable. The key state, whose decisions would play a decisive role in this, is Armenia. Apparently, Armenia’s ability to abandon banal nationalism and unfounded calls for revenge will lead it Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 267 to a new stage of development. If this happens, the entire region will enter a state of lasting peace and prosperity. Another external problem is related to the Russian factor. Russian accession to such cooperation is necessary to avoid potential problems and increase multilateral benefts. Nevertheless, it is hard to believe that Russia will abandon its secret, but continuing ambitions in the region, thereby allowing both Armenia and Azerbaijan to strengthen their independence. When it comes to Russia’s strategic interests, it is almost impossible to infuence the tough stance and uncompromising policy of the Kremlin. Only granting Russia an extraordinary status in the region undermining the true independence of Armenia and Azerbaijan would make peace in the region lasting. Today, mutual dislike and discord between Armenia and Azerbaijan serve the interests of Russia. Notes 1 Statement by President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia and President of the Russian Federation, November 10, 2020, http://en.kremlin.ru/acts/news/64384 2 Statement by President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia and President of the Russian Federation, November 10, 2020, http://en.kremlin.ru/acts/news/64384 3 “Minsk Group Members Meet to Discuss Karabakh Deal ‘Ambiguities,’” Daily News, November 18, 2020 https://www.dailysabah.com/politics/diplomacy/ minsk-group-members-meet-to-discuss-karabakh-deal-ambiguities 4 “French Senate Pushes Paris to Recognize Nagorno-Karabakh,” November 25, 2020, https://apnews.com/article/paris-azerbaijan-france-armenia-yerevan04dc8732aa04a17e2adca821c296e69b 5 “Dutch Parliament Adopts Resolutions on Imposing Sanctions against Aliyev and Erdoğan,” November 17, 2020, https://gagrule.net/dutch-parliament-adopts-resolutions-on-imposing-sanctions-against-aliyev-and-erdogan/ 6 “Armenia-EU Partnership.” Offcial Website of the RA Ministry of Foreign Relations. Updated on 19.03.2021, https://www.mfa.am/en/bilateral-relations/eu 7 European Union-Armenia Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) Entered into Force. https://www.eureporter.co/world/ armenia/2021/03/02/eu-and-armenia-comprehensive-and-enhanced-partnership-agreement-enters-into-force/ 8 Gubad Ibadoglu, “Why Azerbaijan Won?” November 17, 2020, https://iwpr.net/ global-voices/why-azerbaijan-won 9 “Armenian FM: Developing Trilateral Cooperation with Greece and Cyprus Is on the Agenda,” March 29, 2021, https://greekcitytimes.com/2021/03/29/ armenian-trilateral-greece-cyprus/ 10 “Opening Borders: Armenia’s Economic Risks,” March 09 2021, https://www. evnreport.com/politics/opening-borders-armenia-s-economic-risks 11 Gubad Ibadoglu, “Why Azerbaijan Won?” https://iwpr.net/global-voices/ why-azerbaijan-won 12 Speech of Ministry of Economy of Armenia in Youtube channel News, Premiered on 28 Nov 2020, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTHZSSh7U6s 13 Benyamin Poghosyan, Chairman, Center for Political and Economic Strategic Studies, “Economic Consequences of the Second Karabakh War for Armenia,” Uploaded by S. M. Safi
268 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu December 14, 2020, https://ccbs.news/en/article/2330/?fbclid=IwAR0p1XB9lyeNNz1PrtVLknJOHV7E7SOqQ3F74cwe68ZRjgpJG-vrcrARp2U http://en.kremlin.ru/acts/news/64384 “Experts Assess the Prospects for the Opening of Russia’s Communications with Armenia via Abkhazia,” February 11, 2021, https://sputnik-abkhazia.ru/caucasus/20210211/1031816845/Eksperty-otsenili-perspektivy-otkrytiya-zhd-soobscheniya-Rossii-s-Armeniey-cherez-Abkhaziyu.html “Amiran Khevtsuriani: Abkhazian Railway Makes Georgia Dependent on Russia,” February 15, 2021, https://zen.yandex.ru/media/arminfo/amiran-hevcuriani-abhazskaia-jeleznaia-doroga-sdelaet-gruziiu-zavisimoi-ot-rossii602a2fcbb498705a81fc3517 Kenan Aslanli, “A Multidimensional Approach to the Karabakh War: Internal, External, and Energy Aspects?” CIFE Policy Paper No.113, February 15, 2021. “Russia, Turkey Agree Creation of Nagorno-Karabakh Ceasefre Monitoring Center,” November 11, 2020, https://tass.com/world/1222765 “Turkish Parliament Approves Troop Observer Deployment to Karabakh,” November 17, 2020, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-armenia-azerbaijan-turkey/turkish-parliament-approves-troop-observer-deployment-to-karabakh-idUSKBN27X2NQ Boris Navasardian, “War with Azerbaijan Weakened Relations with the West, Strategist Westernization Report 2021,” https://www.strategeast.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/StrategEast-Westernization-Report-2021.pdf “Turkey Says Goal-Oriented Talks Needed for Minsk Group Efforts to Yield Results,” October 2020, https://www.reuters.com/article/instant-article/ idAFL8N2HH5NT The Minsk Group is headed by a co-chairmanship consisting of France, Russia, and the US. Furthermore, the Minsk Group also includes the following participating states: Belarus, Finland, Germany, Italy, Sweden, Turkey as well as Armenia and Azerbaijan. https://www.osce.org/minsk-group/108306 Yavuz and Huseynov, “The Second Karabakh War,” Middle East Policy, Vol. XXVII, Issue 4, Winter 2020. References Armenia-EU Partnership. 2021. Offcial Website of the RA Ministry of Foreign Relations. Updated on March 19, 2021. Accessed March 31, 2021, https://www. mfa.am/en/bilateral relations/eu Armenian FM: Developing Trilateral Cooperation with Greece and Cyprus Is on the Agenda, March 29, 2021. Accessed March 31, 2021, https://greekcitytimes. com/2021/03/29/armenian-trilateral-greece-cyprus/ Askerov, Ali. 2015. The UN, OSCE, and Azerbaijan’s Karabakh Impasse: Imposing or Making Peace? The Actual Problems of Azerbaijani Studies, Slavyan University. Askarov, Ali. 2019. Shadows of the April 2016 War: Armenia and Azerbaijan Back in a Deadlock? Eurasia Daily Monitor, Vol. 16 Issue 45 https://jamestown.org/program/ shadows-of-the-april-2016-war-armenia-and-azerbaijan-back-in-a-deadlock/ Askerov, Ali. 2020. The Nagorno Karabakh Confict: The Beginning of the Soviet End. In Askerov, Brooks, and Tchantouridze (Eds.), Post-Soviet Conficts: A Thirty Years’ Crisis. Lexington Books, pp. 55–82. Askerov, Ali and Thomas Matyok. 2015. The Upper Karabakh Predicament from the UN Resolutions to the Mediated Negotiations: Resolution or Hibernation? European Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies, Vol. 2, Issue 1, pp. 154–164. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 269 Aslanli, Kenan. 2020. A Multidimensional Approach to the Karabakh War: Internal, External, and Energy Aspects? CIFE Policy Paper No. 113. February 15, 2021. Azernews. March 8, 2019. Azerbaijani Army to Conduct Large-scale Exercises. Accessed March 29, 2021, https://www.azernews.az/nation/146965.html Dadayev, B. et al. (2014). Qarabağ 99 Sualda. Bakı: CBS. Daily News. 2020. Minsk Group Members Meet to Discuss Karabakh Deal ‘Ambiguities, November 18, 2020. Accessed March 31, 2021, https://www.dailysabah.com/politics/diplomacy/minsk-group-members-meet-to-discusskarabakhdeal-ambiguities Dutch Parliament Adopts Resolutions on Imposing Sanctions against Aliyev and Erdoğan. 2020, November 17, 2020. Accessed March 31, 2021, https://gagrule. net/dutch-parliament adopts-resolutions-on-imposing-sanctions-against-aliyevand-erdogan/ European Union-Armenia Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) Entered into Force. 2021. Accessed March 31, 2021, https://www. eureporter.co/world/armenia/2021/03/02/eu-and-armenia-comprehensive and-enhanced-partnership-agreement-enters-into-force/ Experts Assess the Prospects for the Opening of Russia’s Communications with Armenia via Abkhazia. Feb 11, 2021. Accessed March 31, 2021. Gumrukcu, Tuvan.October 26, 2020. Turkey Says Goal-oriented Talks Needed for Minsk Group Efforts to Yield Results. Reuters. https://www.reuters.com/article/ instant-article/idAFL8N2HH5NT Ibadoglu, Gubad. 2020. Why Azerbaijan Won? November 17, 2020. Accessed March 31, 2021, https://iwpr.net/global-voices/why-azerbaijan-won https:// c c b s . n e w s /e n /a r t i c l e / 2 33 0 / ? f b c l i d=IwA R0 p1X B 9l y eN N z1P r tV L k n JOHV7E7SOqQ3F74cwe68ZRjgpJG-vrcrARp2U https://sputnik-abkhazia.ru/ caucasus/20210211/1031816845/Eksperty-otsenili-perspektivy-otkrytiya-zhdsoobscheniya-Rossii-s-Armeniey-cherez-Abkhaziyu.html https://www.reuters. com/article/instant-article/idAFL8N2HH5NT Khevtsuriani, Amiran. February 15, 2021. Abkhazian Railway Makes Georgia Dependent on Russia. Accessed March 31, 2021, https://zen.yandex.ru/media/ arminfo/amiran-hevcuriani abhazskaia-jeleznaia-doroga-sdelaet-gruziiu-zavisimoi-ot-rossii 602a2fcbb498705a81fc3517 Kucera, Joshua. October 7, 2019. Azerbaijan Escalates Punctuation War with Armenia. Eurasianet. Accessed March 30, 2021 https://eurasianet.org/azerbaijan-escalates-punctuation-war with-armenia Mammadov, Asad. 2019. Hikmət Hacıyev: Vyana görüşü Ermənistan-Azərbaycan münaqişəsinin həlli istiqamətində danışıqlara yeni impuls Verdi. Accessed March 28, 2021. Azertag.az March 30. Accessed March 31, 2021, https://apnews.com/article/ paris-azerbaijan-france-armenia yerevan-04dc8732aa04a17e2adca821c296e69b Mammadov, Farhad. 2018. Impact of the Change in Government in Armenia on the Karabakh Confict: View from Baku. Eurasia Daily Monitor, Vol. 15, Issue 74. French Senate Pushes Paris to Recognize Nagorno-Karabakh. November 25, 2020. Massispost.com. February 26, 2019.Defense Minister David Tonoyan: If Hostilities Resume Armenian Armed Forces Will Go on the Offensive. Accessed March 29, 2021, https://massispost.com/2019/02/defense-minister-david-tonoyan-if-hostilities-resume armenian-armed-forces-will-go-on-the-offensive/ Uploaded by S. M. Safi
270 Ali Askerov and Gubad Ibadoghlu Mediamax.am, March 1, 2019. New Settlements in Artsakh: Leyla Abdullayeva vs. Artur Vanetsyan. Accessed March 27, 2021. Mooradian, Moorad and Daniel Druckman. 1999. Hurting Stalemate or Mediation? The Confict over Nagorno-Karabakh, 1990–95. Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 36, Issue 6, pp. 709–727. Morgan, Sam. 2018. Pashinyan: The Providential Man to Solve Armenia’s Problems? Euractive.com. Accessed March 29, 2021, https://www.euractiv.com/section/armenia/news/pashinyan-the-providential-man-for solving-armenias-problems/ Mustafayeva, A. & Garayev, R. (2013). Legal Aspects of Reparation for Damage Caused to Azerbaijan as a Result of Armenian Aggression. IRS Heritage, 14, 51 – 61. Navasardian, Boris. 2021. War with Azerbaijan Weakened Relations with the West, Strategeast Westernization Report 2021. Accessed March 31, 2021, https:// www.strategeast.org/wp content/uploads/2021/03/StrategEast-WesternizationReport-2021.pdf Opening Borders: Armenia’s Economic Risks. March 9, 2021. Accessed March 31, 2021, https://www.evnreport.com/politics/opening-borders-armenia-s-economic-risks Poghosyan, Benyamin. December 14, 2020. Chairman, Center for Political and Economic Strategic Studies Economic Consequences of the Second Karabakh war for Armenia. Accessed March 31, 2021. Russia, Turkey Agree Creation of Nagorno-Karabakh Ceasefre Monitoring Center, November 11. Accessed March 31, 2021, 2020, https://tass.com/world/1222765 Sanamyan, Emil. 2018. “Agreed to Reduce Tensions:” Aliyev, Pashinyan Talk in Dushanbe. USCDornsife Institute of Armenian Studies. Accessed March 28, 2021, https://armenian.usc.edu/agreed-to-reduce-tensions-aliyev-pashinyan-talk-in dushanbe/ Saphronov, Ivan and Alexandra Georgevich. 2019. Россия продала Армении истребители как себе Четыре Су-30СМ ушли покупателю по внутрироссийским ценам. Kommersant, February 1. Accessed March 28, 2021. https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/3868951 Speech of Ministry of Economy of Armenia in Youtube Channel News. 2020. Premiered on 28 Nov. 2020. Accessed March 31, 2021, https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=lTHZSSh7U6s Sputnik. February 21, 2019. Российское присутствие на Южном Кавказе способствует безопасности в регионе – Тоноян. Accessed March 29, 2021 https:// sptnkne.ws/vsuy Statement by President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia and President of the Russian Federation. November 10, 2020. Accessed March 31, 2021, http://en.kremlin.ru/acts/news/64384 TASS. March 28, 2019. Armenia Pays Historical Debt by Sending Humanitarian Mission to Syria, PM Says. Accessed March 28, 2021. https://tass.com/ world/1050976 Tchantouridzé, Lasha. 2008. The Three Colors of War: Russian, Turkish, and Iranian Military Threat to the South Caucasus, Caucasian Review of International Affairs, Vol. 2, Issue 1, Winter, pp. 2-10 The Minsk Group Is Headed by a Co-Chairmanship Consisting of France, Russia and the United States. Furthermore, the Minsk Group also includes the Following Participating States: Belarus, Finland, Germany, Italy, Sweden, Turkey As Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Causes and Consequences 271 Well As Armenia and Azerbaijan. Accessed March 31, 2021, https://www.osce. org/minsk-group/108306 Turkey Says Goal-Oriented Talks Needed for Minsk Group Efforts to Yield Results. October 2020. Accessed March 31, 2021. Turkish Parliament Approves Troop Observer Deployment to Karabakh. November 17, 2020. Accessed March 31, 2021, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-armenia-azerbaijan turkey/turkish-parliament-approves-troop-observer-deploymentto-karabakh idUSKBN27X2NQ Yavuz, H. M. and Vasif Huseynov. 2021. The Second Karabakh War: Russia vs. Turkey? Middle East Policy, Vol. XXVII, No. 4, Winter 2020, pp. 103–118. Zartman, William. 2000. Ripeness: The Hurting Stalemate and Beyond. In International Confict Resolution after the Cold War. Eds. Stern, P. & Druckman, D. Washington: The National Academies Press. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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Part IV Foreign Policy and the Karabakh War Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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12 Turkish Foreign Policy and the Karabakh Confict M. Hakan Yavuz The Second Karabakh War between Armenians and Azerbaijanis was fought over claims to the mountainous region of Nagorno-Karabakh, during which thousands of people were killed and many homes, bridges, religious sites, and schools destroyed. While Azerbaijan has focused on maintaining its territorial integrity and freeing its internationally recognized territories from occupation, Armenia has insisted on the principle of self-determination for the Karabakh Armenians (Asenbauer, 1996). This latest war was a response to the failure of the frst one (1992–1994) to resolve these territorial disputes (Yavuz and Huseynov, 2020). In the First Karabakh War, Armenia occupied seven districts of Azerbaijan, adjacent to its Karabakh region. The Armenian occupation resulted in 30,000 deaths and the ethnic cleansing of 700,000 Azerbaijanis from Karabakh and the surrounding region. It was a devastating defeat for the newly independent Azerbaijani state. As a result, Azerbaijan’s morale was shattered and a major portion of its population displaced, emphasizing how the rattled Azerbaijani identity took on a profoundly resentful tone toward Armenians (Swietochowski, 1985; Altstadt, 1992; Fuller, 1994). The loss of the cradle of Azerbaijani culture, the city of Shusha, combined with collective guilt and shame sowed the seeds for a new phase of nation-state building, with the goal of liberating ancient cities and restoring them to Azerbaijan. While Azerbaijani society was paralyzed by defeat, Armenia, emboldened by victory, refused to compromise. This transformed peace negotiations into a means of protecting the status quo and consolidating the occupation. Armenia established a subordinate structure in the occupied territories called the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (also known as the Republic of Artsakh), with the hope of winning international recognition and thus legitimizing the occupation (Chorbajian, 2001). To the disappointment of the Karabakh Armenians, this entity was never recognized by any United Nations member, including Armenia itself. Azerbaijan has insisted that it was ready to offer Nagorno-Karabakh the highest degree of autonomy within its internationally recognized borders. But, the Armenian side rejected autonomy, wanting to annex the region and adjacent territories to Armenia. Azerbaijan pinned its hopes on the international community and diplomacy to restore its territories; it waited for 26 years, but these hopes were dashed. After clashes erupted in July 2020, the Azerbaijani leadership decided that another war was the only way to DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-17 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
276 M. Hakan Yavuz reclaim its territories. Armenia provided the necessary pretext by attacking Azerbaijan on September 27, 2020. The humanitarian catastrophe experienced during the 44-day war could have been avoided had Armenian politicians sought a compromise. The territories over which the two sides have been unable to come to terms are recognized by the international community as part of the Republic of Azerbaijan. Nagorno-Karabakh never had the mandate to defne its own demographic or geographic borders and had always remained part of Azerbaijan. When it became an autonomous region on July 7, 1923 with the decision of the Central Executive Committee of Soviet Azerbaijan, it was surrounded by seven provinces of Azerbaijan. When the Soviet Union collapsed in the early 1990s, the region had about 189,085 inhabitants, which was composed of Armenians (145,450) and Azerbaijanis (40,688), along with Russians, Kurds, and Greeks.1 In contrast, the population of the seven surrounding provinces always remained 100% Azerbaijani. Meanwhile, the position of the international community has been based on four United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolutions (822, 853, 874, and 884), which were adopted in 1993. The UN resolutions recognized Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding regions as part of the Republic of Azerbaijan and called for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of Armenian armed forces from the occupied territories. Similar statements have been made since then by many other international institutions including the UN General Assembly. However, the UNSC resolutions have never been implemented, and negotiations between the two countries have failed to deliver any breakthrough. Against this backdrop, tensions gradually intensifed, leading to the existing respective troubles for both countries. To explain the causes and consequences of the Second Karabakh War, which started on September 27 and ended with the Russian-imposed truce on November 9, 2020, we briefy examine (1) the dominant Armenian political thinking and its effects on the Karabakh issue; (2) the causes of the current war through process-tracing of the major events; (3) the role of the two major regional powers (Turkey and Russia); (4) Armenia’s framing of the Second Karabakh War as the “Clash of Civilizations”; and (5) the nine-item truce agreement and its potential consequences. Armenia’s Political Thinking: Love of Russia versus Hate of Turks Armenia’s independence occurred within the framework of the confict and combat over Karabakh. Therefore, no events shaped the founding philosophy of the newly independent Armenia as much as the Karabakh issue and the essential need for the contested territories to secede from Azerbaijan. Many Armenian leaders linked their political reputations to framing the issue either as the cause for Karabakh independence or as a fghter and advocate in the Karabakh War. Simply, Karabakh predominantly defned Armenia’s foreign Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy 277 policy and domestic politics—the ideal put forth by Armenian intellectuals as Hai Dat, the Armenian Cause, which was incorporated into the declaration of Armenia’s independence in 1991.2 Likewise, the preamble to the Armenian constitution puts forth the ideal in similar language. Instead of acting pragmatically, the newly independent Armenia was obsessed by Hai Dat, with the notable exception being the administration of Levon Ter-Petrossian, as the essential condition for pursuing its nationalistic dreams.3 When Armenian foreign minister Vardan Oskanian announced the primacy of Hai Dat, he identifed three pillars supporting this policy theme. They included recognizing the events of 1915 as genocide; restoring territories in present-day Turkey and Azerbaijan that were once inhabited by Armenians, and unifying Karabakh with Armenia because it always had been populated and ruled by Armenians and consequently the principle of self-determination legitimized such a policy. Armenia justifed this policy line as an appropriate defense measure to counter the existential threat from Turkey and Azerbaijan. Armenia could only overcome such a threat by becoming “the strategic extension of Russia” (Grigoryan, 2018, 854). An Armenian during my visit to Yerevan summed it up as “Armenia cannot survive without Russia” and therefore it must become the outpost of Russia against Turks. Russia as Savior Rafael Ishkhanian wrote a comprehensive treatise criticizing the trend of Armenia’s obsessive fear of the Turks along with attempts to frame and understand the entire scope of Armenia’s modern history on the basis of genocide discourse. He criticized Armenian political thinking which relied on the participation of the great powers to secure the destiny of the Armenian nation. In a landmark 1989 article titled, “The Law of Excluding the Third Force,” he expanded on the problems of Russophile thinking in Armenia: Who told you that Russia is the savior of the Armenian people? Russia itself has never said that. This, my fellow citizens, is your invention. It is you who have placed your hopes on those powers and are now disillusioned…. The Russians are refusing to accept your defnition of their interests, but you insist on teaching them. It also does not make sense to be enemies with Russia. Not to rely on Russia, not to make plans based on its power does not at all mean to be enemies with Russia. Let us be friends, but let us not rely on them, be fully devoted to them, believe so much that they are our saviors. Let us re-Armenianize Armenia, let us be our own nation. (Ishkhanian, 1999, 31–33) Armenia’s liberation plans, according to Rafael Ishkhanian, always have been based on the ideal of a “third force.” That is, some external power(s), Uploaded by S. M. Safi
278 M. Hakan Yavuz either Russia or a European nation, to augment Armenia’s efforts to survive and/or expand its territories to strengthen a buffer against the Turkish threat. Ishkhanian argues that Armenia’s dependence on foreign powers has resulted in more suffering to the entire nation than the process of liberation. This view can be best summed up as: “The patriotism of Armenians is the love of Russians and hatred of Turks.” Ishkhanian dismisses this dominant view, instead calling upon Armenia to “cut its umbilical cord from Russia” as a frst step to real independence (Ishkhanian, 1999, 22). He contends that Armenia’s survival does not depend on Russia but rather on having good relations with its neighbors, especially Turkey. One persistent pillar of Armenian nationalism in and outside the country is the belief that Armenia cannot survive against the Turks without Russia’s support. This thinking is widespread among the Armenian political and diplomatic establishment. For instance, Ruben Shugarian, Armenia’s frst ambassador to the US, after the republic gained independence in 1991, explains, Our ties with Russia are something innate and natural for all Armenians, particularly those residing on the territory of the Republic and the CIS. Its components are common cultural-spiritual values and the traditional perception of Russia as the most signifcant regional ally and protector of Armenia’s security. (Quoted in Mirzoyan, 2010, 22) Armen Garo (Karekan Pastermadjian), a leading nationalist and later the Armenia ambassador to the US in (1918–1920), adds: Without Russia’s active assistance, we will not have the opportunity to half-way realize our national ideal: to have our own homeland, independent or even semi-independent, where our people will have the chance to live and work, away from the Turkish sword. From this perspective our ‘red brothers’ in Yerevan are standing on more realistic ground. (Quoted in Panossian, 2006, 192) Even after the Second Karabakh War, which resulted in Armenia’s defeat, the political and diplomatic establishment in Armenia has yet to revise their view of Russia because they still expect Russia to deliver the Karabakh region to Armenia. This dominant narrative, which was criticized by Rafael Ishkhanian in the early 1990s, still informs the majority of Armenians’ thinking. Ishkhanian argues, as summarized by Grigoryan, that “the worst calamities visited upon the Armenian people were the result of chasing unrealistic goals vis-à-vis the neighbors and relying on third parties to achieve them” (Grigoryan, 2018, 846). Ishkhanian does not view modern Turkey as an existential threat and he has called upon Armenians to protect Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy 279 and preserve their nation’s independence by not becoming dependent on Russia. Ter-Petrossian, the frst president of independent Armenia, rejected the ideological lines of Hai Dat calling instead for a civic-minded Armenian state maintaining good relations with its neighbors (Ter-Petrossian, 2018). The Karabakh War reconfgured the Armenian ideological discussions, and the nationalists, who were led by the political leaders of Karabakh, took control of the state until Nikol Pashinyan came to power. Victory in the First Karabakh War enhances this image that Russia is “the only savior of Armenia.” This thinking also transformed Armenian nationalism into becoming more self-confdent and assertive vis-à-vis Turkey and Azerbaijani. Yet, the same Armenia, due to its aspirations to unify with the Karabakh region, also became the outpost of Russia in the Caucasus. Given Armenian demography vis-à-vis Azerbaijan, which resulted in the major military victory and the occupation of 20% of Azerbaijani territories in the 1990s, Armenian individual and communal identity coalesced around a militarized and self-assured national-body. After the First Karabakh War, Armenian intellectuals and politicians agreed nearly unanimously that “not even an inch” of territory would be returned to the Azerbaijani Turks (Geukjian, 2012). This uncompromising position was built on a narrative of an invincible army that could go all the way to Baku. Such a narrative shaped the Armenian political position for the next quarter century, as Armenians constructed an image of the Azerbaijani Turk as lazy, cowardly and uncivilized. The criticism and the potential problems were all negated, or at least ignored, and the majority of Armenians rallied around this new form of victorious and conquering Armenian nationalism. The First Karabakh War signifed the rebirth of Armenia as an aspiring hegemon in the Caucasus with hopes of crushing its neighbors. As a result, a large number of Armenians either in the global diaspora or inside Armenia have been dedicated to adding their own voice and resources to achieve Armenia’s vision of victorious nationalism. The military victory in the 1990s provided an opportunity for Armenians to reimagine themselves as instrumental pieces of the mythologized Armenian body as a potent entity. One of the results of this cognitive transformation was the “otherization” of the Azerbaijanis as lackadaisical, backward Turks. The enmity toward Azerbaijanis carried dehumanizing consequences and effectively blocked any political compromise or even sincere acknowledgment of the sufferings of Azerbaijani refugees. The Armenian elite never imagined the possibility that Azerbaijan could fght and regain these territories; the Armenians became hostage to their nationalistic worldview. As events in 2020 showed, the Armenian stubbornness would prove costly. Before the Velvet Revolution in Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan was a leading critic of Armenia’s pro-Russian foreign policy (Iskandaryan, 2018). As a member of the parliament he voted against Armenia’s accession to the Russian dominated Eurasian Economic Union (EEU). He campaigned for Armenia to leave the EEU and develop closer relations with the European Uploaded by S. M. Safi
280 M. Hakan Yavuz Union. Pashinyan’s worldview has been shaped by his admiration of European economic and cultural development. He treats Europe as the future of what Armenia should become. Yet, just like the new Armenian political elite, he has regarded everything Soviet or Russian as backward, imperialistic, and undemocratic. As prime minister, Pashinyan reversed his thinking about Russia by insisting that Armenia’s security situation constrained its foreign policy options. Furthermore, not only Pashinyan but many Armenian foreign policy scholars also insisted that Armenia does not have any alternative but to rely on Russia and remain as a Russian “outpost” in the Caucasus. This group insists that Armenia’s geography determines its foreign policy because it is sandwiched between two hostile neighbors, Turkey and Azerbaijan. Thus, these geographic circumstances force Armenia to rely on Russia (Iskandaryan, 2019). Moreover, the majority of Armenians believed that Moscow would defend Armenia militarily if it were attacked by either of these two states. For instance, Col. Andrey Ruzinsky, commander of the 102nd Military Base at Gyumri in Armenia, indicated Russian readiness to “armed confict against Azerbaijan if it decides to restore jurisdiction over Nagorno-Karabakh by force” (Petersen, 2013). Russia never has hesitated to limit Armenia’s foreign policy options by using the Turkish or Azerbaijani threat card (Coyle, 2021). Armenians view Turkey as an existential enemy of the Armenian people and in order to remove this danger they accept the role of being a vassal for Russia. However, this essentialist view totally ignores the fact that Armenian irredentist nationalism, its occupation of Karabakh and its surrounding regions, made it reliant on Russia. This factor of nationalism more than its geographic position had tainted Armenian foreign policy options beyond acknowledging geopolitical realism. Armenia would have many more foreign policy options if it ceded its dream of nullifying the terms of the Treaty of Sevres or if it accepted the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. While the Armenian desire to annex Karabakh and its surroundings removed any option for Armenian foreign policy but to rely on Russia, the occupation of Azerbaijani territories remained the primary determinant of Azerbaijan’s foreign policy. This issue shaped Baku’s foreign policy strategies and tactics between Russia and the West. While Azerbaijan expected to receive support from the US and Europe against Armenian occupation of its territories, when this support did not materialize as Western powers instead supported Armenia, Azerbaijan had to reconfgure its foreign policy and adopt a more neutral, pro-Turkey, and pro-Russian stance. Baku’s strategic gravitation toward Russia was an outcome of its desire to preserve its territorial integrity and end the Armenian occupation (Valiyev and Mamishova, 2019). Baku painfully witnessed how Russia had fragmented and crippled Georgia and Ukraine before the eyes of the Western powers. One should note that Russian foreign policy in the Caucasus comprises three parts. First, Armenia is the closest military and political ally of Russia bereft of any option but to rely on Russia for its security and economic Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy 281 well-being. Second, the Karabakh confict became a bargaining chip to prevent an Azerbaijani drift to the Western camp and, as a result, keep the country under Moscow’s infuence. Third, the Karabakh confict was used to remind everyone in the region to recognize Russia as the hegemon with still formidable power to (de)stabilize the region. Very few scholars and politicians saw the potential costs of Armenian aspirations to unify with the Karabakh region. Armenia’s infuential global diaspora members have either rallied for the recognition of the Karabakh republic as an independent state or supported its unifcation with Armenia (Minasyan, 2017). Levon Ter-Petrossian, Armenia’s frst president and a man who stood out as a thoughtful statesman, called for compromise, in addition to establishing relations with Turkey. However, the Armenian diaspora refused, and Ter-Petrossian had to resign from his post in 1998. He was replaced by the Karabakh nationalist leader Robert Kocharian, who rejected any compromise with Azerbaijan. Ter-Petrossian had told Armenians, It happened in Bosnia. The Serbs lost everything. I don’t think that the maintenance of the status quo is a real option. … I do not think that Karabakh is capable of forcing Azerbaijan to its knees, because it will have to seize Baku. (Cited in Laitin and Suny, 1999, 166) His prudent, visionary reading of the region’s deeply rooted sociopolitical forces guided him to call for peaceful coexistence and compromise in the Karabakh confict. But, irredentist Armenian nationalist leaders rejected Ter-Petrossian’s calls, and he subsequently was sidelined (Ter-Petrossian and Grigoryan, 2017). The maximalist demands of the Armenians blocked an assortment of potential pathways for productive negotiations. Recent Fighting Several factors have sustained this confict and its most recent eruption: (1) the failure over the past 26 years of the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), the main international mission tasked with the coordination of the peace negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, to resolve the confict; (2) the aggressive rhetoric of Nikol Pashinyan, the current prime minister of Armenia, who has declared that Karabakh is part of Armenia; (3) the July 2020 skirmishes that resulted in the killing of an Azerbaijani general, along with several military offcials; (4) pressure from the Azerbaijani public on their government to restore their territorial integrity; and (5) Turkey, under Erdoğan’s leadership, has shifted its policy from a diplomatic focus to full military support of Azerbaijan’s efforts to reclaim its territorial integrity in the contested Karabakh region. In fact, the Azerbaijani army was preparing for the war Uploaded by S. M. Safi
282 M. Hakan Yavuz not only with technologically high-end weapons but also training its troops to free its territories. The Minsk Group, co-chaired by the US, Russia, and France, failed to resolve the confict, according to the principles and norms of the OSCE, the UN Charter, and the UNSC resolutions.4 Armenia’s desire to consolidate control over not only the region that previously belonged to the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast but also seven adjacent Azerbaijani districts, discouraged Armenia from meaningfully participating in the negotiation process. The settlement formulas proposed by the Minsk Group, based on the UNSC resolutions, were not welcomed by the Armenian government, because they would have meant the withdrawal of Armenian military forces from the occupied Azerbaijani territories. On the other hand, Armenia interpreted the geopolitical situation in the region as a sign of continuous Russian support for the existence of Azerbaijani territories under the control of Armenia. The subsequent Armenian governments failed to read the changes in the geopolitical environment of the wider South Caucasus region, especially in trilateral relations among Russia, Azerbaijan, and Turkey. Russia has taken a leading role by demonstrating that the Caucasus is legitimately inside its backyard as a national interest, therefore conveying the right to negotiate a solution to this confict. Russia’s alliance with Armenia within the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), Armenia’s economic dependence on Russia, and the existence of a Russian military base in the territories of Armenia further complicate the international dynamics to the detriment of efforts to resolve the Armenia-Azerbaijan confict. The impasse has aggravated the animus on both sides and imparted a false sense of security to Armenians who saw Russian support as a signal that the occupied territories are part of their country and that the issue had already been resolved. Russia also has been the main supplier of arms to both Armenia and Azerbaijan. According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), a think tank that monitors military spending worldwide, oil-rich Azerbaijan spent more than $24 billion on arms between 2008 and 2018. Armenia, with limited resources, has received cheaper and older Russian weaponry, some donated. It spent a mere $4 billion during the same period, but allocated one-ffth of its annual state budget to spending on arms. Nevertheless, the alliance with Russia allowed Armenia to acquire otherwise expensive arms without excessive cost burdens, signifcantly strengthening the country’s defensive capabilities. The 2016 border clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia resulted in signifcant human losses and a loss of territories. The war exposed the weaknesses of Azerbaijan, and Armenia became more assured about its military’s capabilities. For instance, when Russia proposed a major peace plan in 2016 it was rejected by Armenia. After the clashes in 2016, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, a Russian-Armenian with deep sympathies Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy 283 toward Armenian causes, proposed a compromise plan that comprised two parts ensuring the Karabakh region would have special status. Armenia would return the fve adjacent regions to Azerbaijan and keep the Lachin and Karavajar districts until a fnal status on Karabakh would be decided in a referendum. This plan, which could have avoided the disastrous defeat of the Armenian forces in 2020, was rejected by Armenia. In 2017, the de facto authorities of Nagorno-Karabakh renamed the enclave the Republic of Artsakh, by utilizing its medieval Armenian name to deny any claim of the Azerbaijanis. Consequently, Ilham Aliyev concluded that there was no hope for a diplomatic solution. Azerbaijan lobbied to solve the Karabakh problem according to the international legal principle of territorial integrity. It engaged in various diplomatic initiatives to put pressure on Armenia. Baku lobbied at the UN, parliaments in European countries and numerous international organizations. Washington and Brussels refused to guarantee the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan in rejecting the Azerbaijani diplomatic initiatives. When the UN General Assembly voted on Resolution 10693 (passed on March 14, 2008), which confrmed Azerbaijan’s claim on territorial integrity and demanded the withdrawal of all Armenian forces from the occupied territories, the US and France vetoed the resolution with nearly every European Union member abstaining. When the US and European countries imposed sanctions against Russia over the annexation and occupation of Crimea, Aliyev unsuccessfully asked the same countries to do the same against Armenia. Russia’s war against Georgia in 2008, which resulted in the loss of Abkhazia and South Ossetia and crippled the Georgian state, had incurred major regional consequences. It became clear that no country could expect any external help if they face a security problem with Russia. In addition, Russia made it clear that it would support separatism and secessionism as political strategies to promote its hegemonic position. No European country resisted the practice of Russian occupation and some EU countries, such as France, tried to use the confict to promote their own interest by appeasing Putin. Western inaction over the fragmentation of Georgia was a wake-up call for Baku. Russia sought to legitimize its actions on the principle of self-determination in Georgia, and later in Crimea on the principle of territorial integrity. These developments disturbed Baku, especially when Armenia supported Russia’s annexation of Crimea. These events, however, encouraged Azerbaijan not to seek an alliance with the West that might anger Russia. Rather, Aliyev pursued a policy of moderating Russia’s perspective on Azerbaijan as a friendly country that is sensitive toward Russia’s historical fears and concerns. The timing proved signifcant, given the policies of Pashinyan in Armenia, who came to power in 2018 via a popular uprising with the goal of developing closer ties with the West to counterbalance Russian infuence (Batashvili, 2019). Pashinyan represented a signifcant break from the hardline Karabakh Armenians who had dominated the state of Armenia since the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
284 M. Hakan Yavuz war in the 1990s. At the outset, he signaled an intent to resolve the confict, which the Azerbaijani government welcomed. According to recently declassifed information, the governments of Armenia and Azerbaijan at that time had engaged in secret negotiations over the settlement process.5 However, after consolidating his power at home, Pashinyan abruptly abandoned this approach and called for the unifcation of Karabakh and Armenia, declaring, “Karabakh is Armenia, period.”6 Unlike the previous Armenian leadership, he worked hard to destroy the framework of the Minsk Group and rejected the step-by-step process.7 Pashinyan’s irredentist rhetoric not only angered the Azerbaijanis, it also provided the reason for Azerbaijani political opposition groups to challenge their own government on the following grievance: thirty years of events in which historical cities of Azerbaijan identity were ceded to Armenia, outcomes that implied the confict had been resolved in favor of the Armenians. Pashinyan’s raw nationalist rhetoric on behalf of his country, which included calling eastern Turkey an “historic land of Armenia,” angered the Turkish government as well. Tensions reached unprecedented levels when the Armenian government offcially marked the hundredth anniversary of the defunct Treaty of Sevres, which would have dismantled the Ottoman Empire at the end of the wars in 1920 and divided Ottoman territories, including Turkey, into several pieces.8 The treaty was never entered into force and was replaced by the Treaty of Lausanne of 1923.9 But, in August 2020, Pashinyan proclaimed the Treaty of Sevres as historical fact and announced, “We are bound by duty to remember it, realize its importance and follow its message.”10 Amplifying this stance, Armenian defense minister Davit Tonoyan called for “new wars for new territories” during a meeting in New York City with representatives of the Armenian diaspora.11 The Turkish security establishment read these statements as Pashinyan’s intent to spread the confict to Turkey and, provoked by Pashinyan’s confrontational rhetoric, Ankara decided to openly support Azerbaijan. Meanwhile, the Azerbaijani public and government apparently concluded that peace negotiations were never going to result in the return of their occupied territories. The point was confrmed in their view by attacks on civilians and the killing of a popular Azerbaijani general and his colleagues in a missile attack near the previously negotiated ceasefre lines of July 2020.12 The Armenian attack was a test run to gauge Azerbaijani resolve. It activated public opinion in Azerbaijan, propelled by the public display of grief at the funerals of the fallen soldiers and then by a massive demonstration in Baku and other towns demanding a corresponding response to Armenia’s aggression. Protesters shouted, “Liberation of Karabakh” and “Martyrs do not die; the homeland will not be divided.” Some protesters reached the parliament in Baku, caused some damage and called upon the government to act. The pro-war protests signaled a public concern that the government of Azerbaijan was not taking the confict seriously enough to fght for the repatriation of the contested territories. The protests strengthened the hand of the Azerbaijani political opposition, which Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy 285 echoed the public sentiment in favor of decisive action. Thus, Azerbaijanis bonded quickly around the premises and prospects of nationalism, igniting dormant passions behind the goal of integrating the occupied territories into the homeland. The Armenian government celebrated its military victory and Pashinyan orchestrated a ceremony where medals were presented to military personnel who participated in combat against Azerbaijan. The Azerbaijani government used all available means to cut the Gordian knot and end its national humiliation. Pashinyan’s visit to Karabakh on August 5, 2019, and his open declaration that it was part of Armenia erased realistic hopes for a peaceful solution. Turkey concluded that there was no room for a peaceful resolution and thus supported the Azerbaijani right to defend its territories. Turkey was worried about the potential for public anger to deepen the leadership crisis in Azerbaijan and lead the most powerful Caucasian country into a downward spiral into uncontrollable political crises.13 Pashinyan’s statements about Karabakh, his visit to the city of Shusha—considered by Azerbaijanis to be the cradle of their culture—and his declaration that Shusha would remain part of Armenia portended the forthcoming war. Turkey’s Role Turkey’s foreign policy toward Azerbaijan has been guided by three principles (Ergun, 2020). The frst is support for Azerbaijani political, military and economic independence against Russian aspirations. The second is support of Azerbaijani territorial integrity and sovereignty over Karabakh. The third is participation in Azerbaijani oil production and engaging in export trade over Turkey (Abilov, 2015). During the First Karabakh War, Turkey supported Azerbaijan diplomatically in international organizations, especially at the UN. Due to public pressure, Turkey closed its border with Armenia in response to the Armenian occupation of Karabakh and adjacent regions. Ankara also refused to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia. Turkey’s political leaders, such as Süleyman Demirel, whose personality was shaped by the Cold War, hesitated about pursuing a proactive foreign policy in the Caucasus because of concerns about possible Soviet/Russian reactions. Thus Ankara hardly pursued any policy which could be understood as a provocation against Moscow. Turgut Özal also worried about Russian and American pressure and hesitated to militarily support Azerbaijan. Until the 2000s, Turkey’s foreign policy relied on career diplomats and offcials with foreign ministry experience, as they remained above the political pressures of public opinion and focused on policy decisions to serve the state’s principal interests. During that time, Turkey’s policy responses accounted for other matters, such as the presence of the PKK and the civil wars in former Yugoslavian territories, as evidenced by the coverage in Turkish media. However, when Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s AKP government came to power in 2002, Turkish public opinion and the political leaders became more important in the making of the foreign policy. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
286 M. Hakan Yavuz Although international media and Armenian representatives, along with France, have blamed Turkey for instigating the current confict, there is no concrete evidence that would suggest this. Erdoğan’s combative personality and his international posture have subjected him to criticism in Europe and the Middle East (Yavuz, 2020, 2021). True, Erdoğan never hesitates to use gunboat diplomacy whenever he deems it necessary. However, he did not instigate this confict and was not involved in the ceasefre negotiations. Yet, he also exposed the Minsk Group’s failures and Armenian intentions to annex the occupied territories. Indeed, he has fully supported Azerbaijan, offering to provide whatever assistance the country needs—a position that aligns with both Azerbaijani and Turkish public opinion. Indeed, Erdoğan has always been critical of the failure of former Turkish leaders to act resolutely on the side of Azerbaijan. His position refects a sense of guilt on the part of the Turkish state for failing to help Azerbaijan during its most fateful period in the early 1990s, a point to which Erdoğan has referred previously. For instance, Turgut Ozal, then Turkish president, during the height of the war in the 1990s, refused to offer aid to Azerbaijan and declared, “Azerbaijanis are closer to Iranian culture and they are Shia; we are Sunni.”14 The Protocols After the Russian-Georgian War, Russia compelled Azerbaijan and Armenia to sign the Moscow Declaration in 2008 to fnd a political solution to the Karabakh confict.15 Just after the disastrous war in Georgia, Russia wanted to project a global image as peacemaker (Ismailzade, 2008; Pashayeva, 2009). Meanwhile, Russia’s main goal sought to keep the Minsk Group out of the negotiations, thereby clearing the way for Russia to set the tone for negotiations and actions in the Caucasus. In order to contain Russian infuence in the region, the US pressured Turkey to open its border with Armenia and establish diplomatic relations. Ankara moved forward by signing a set of documents with Armenia in 2009 (Mikhelidze, 2010). The goal was to open the borders with Armenia that were closed because of the Armenian invasion of Azerbaijani territories, and establish diplomatic relations between the two countries. The Foreign Ministry of Azerbaijan reacted to the protocols by claiming that Turkey’s decision “directly contradicts the national interests of Azerbaijan and overshadows the spirit of brotherly relations between Azerbaijan and Turkey built on deep historical roots.”16 The Azerbaijani government worried that with the opening of borders between Turkey and Armenia, the result would end the isolation of Armenia. Thus, Azerbaijan would lose crucial leverage to infuence any talks on the future status of Nagorno-Karabakh.17 Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev was resolute: We are getting a lot of offcial and non-offcial information about what’s happening between Turkey and Armenia. This is a deal between two Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy 287 sovereign countries, and we have no strategy to stop or impede it, but we, the Azerbaijani people, want to know the answer to one very simple question: Is the Nagorno-Karabakh confict a pre-condition for the rapprochement process or not? (Cited in Shiriyev and Davies, 2013) In response to criticism of the protocols from the opposition parties, which ignored the question of Armenian occupation of the Azerbaijani territories, Erdoğan, then Turkish prime minister, visited Baku in May 2009 and spoke to the Azerbaijan parliament: “Our borders were closed after the occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh. We will not open borders as long as the occupation continues. Who says this? The Prime Minister of the Turkish Republic says this. Can there be any guarantee here apart from this?” (Welt, 2012). Despite these maneuvers, Turkey had no option but to sign the protocols because it was under pressure from the US, a move the Turkish Foreign Ministry insisted might be the way to enhance Turkey’s position in the Caucasus for several reasons. Turkey would be better positioned to counter charges of genocide with regard to the events of 1915, pacify the radical and anti-Turkish Armenian diaspora, which was mostly dominated by the nationalist Dashnak Party (Armenian Revolutionary Federation), and encourage Armenia to move farther away from Russian infuence and establish trust and confdence in adding Turkey to the Karabakh negotiations (Yavuzb, 2020, 345–365). On October 10, 2009, in Zurich Ahmet Davutoglu, the Turkish foreign minister, and Edward Nalbandyan, the Armenian foreign minister, signed two protocols: the Protocol on Establishment of Diplomatic Relations and the Protocol on the Development of Bilateral Relations. According to the Protocols, the borders between the two countries would be opened within two months after the protocols were ratifed by the respective parliaments. But, the protocols did not mention the occupation of Karabakh and the seven regions of Azerbaijan. Despite Turkey’s public commitments to Azerbaijan, Turkey uncoupled the Karabakh issue from its relations with Armenia. Şükrü Elekdağ said, “these protocols have no chance of ratifcation since the parliament would never open the border with Armenia as long as the territories of Azerbaijan are under occupation.” The signing of the protocols angered and mobilized Azerbaijan. According to Baku, opening the border would end Armenia’s economic and physical isolation (especially after the Russian-Georgian War which stopped the fow of goods between Russia and Armenia) and Azerbaijan would have no choice but to agree to the dictates of Armenia. Aliyev responded, I am absolutely convinced that the resolution of the Karabakh confict and the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border must proceed in a parallel fashion... Between these two processes there is no offcial link, but an unoffcial one exists. This tie must be preserved and the two questions must be resolved in a parallel fashion and at the same time. (Cited Shiriyev and Davies, 2013, 199) Uploaded by S. M. Safi
288 M. Hakan Yavuz The Armenian constitutional court, however, provided the excuse for Turkey to distance itself from the Protocols. The court, in examining the international treaties before ratifcation by parliament, issued its interpretation, as based on the preamble to the Armenian constitution and to the country’s declaration of independence. The Court approved the Protocols, based on the following points (Mikhelidze, 2010): 1 The Republic of Armenia must carry the goals set by the Constitution of Armenia and the Declaration of Independence to work toward the international recognition of the 1915 Genocide in Ottoman Turkey and Western Armenia. 2 Implementation of these Protocols does not imply Armenia’s recognition of the existing Turkish-Armenian border, as established by the 1921 Treaty of Kars. 3 The protocols with Turkey are bilateral in nature and cannot be linked to the Karabakh issue.18 The Turkish Foreign Ministry rejected the Armenian court’s interpretation, adding in a statement that “this decision contains preconditions and restrictive provisions which impair the letter and spirit of the protocols.”19 The Armenian government rejected the move to recognize the border between Turkey and Armenia, which led to open debate in the Turkish parliament and the media. One of the key items in the Protocols was “the mutual recognition of the existing border between the two countries defned by relevant treaties of international law.” Baku used persuasive means, including its oil pipeline, over Turkey, along with the volumes of Azerbaijani oil companies’ investments, to mobilize Turkish public opinion against the diplomatic overtures intended to open relations between Turkey and Armenia. Eventually, the Turkish government retreated from the protocols and submitted to Baku’s inclinations. This crisis showed Baku that it could deploy Turkish public opinion to strengthen Azerbaijan’s relationship with Turkey. Turkey and the Second Karabakh War Several factors serve to clarify Turkey’s shift from indifference toward Azerbaijan to full support as a strategic partner: (1) the Turks’ view of the Azerbaijanis as ethnic kin whom they are obligated to support; (2) the fact that Azerbaijan is not attacking another country but seeking to restore its own territorial integrity—a cause that for many Turks is morally and legally just; (3) the ingrained and politically motivated feeling among the majority of Turks that Armenia has always been subservient to Europe and Russia in its quest to restore its status as a major power; and, most critically, (4) the role of economic relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy 289 The recent wave of nationalism is behind Turkey’s current assertive foreign policy. As its public opinion stances have become more nationalistic, so have the policies of its government. Erdoğan, for example, has allied himself with the nationalist party of Devlet Bahçeli to secure a majority bloc in parliament and in presidential elections. This alliance has had a major impact on foreign policy. The Karabakh confict has provided an opportunity for Erdoğan to display his nationalist qualifcations and enhance his legitimacy before Turkey’s nationalist voters (Arisan, 2020).20 Moreover, from the perspective of international law, Turkey has had frm ground upon which to choose siding with Azerbaijan. As Armenians have worked tirelessly to see their suffering during World War I recognized as genocide, the Turkish public has consistently distanced itself from the Armenians, whom they regard as a convenient tool in the hands of Turkey’s enemies to weaken the country and destroy its hard-earned positive image (Yavuz, 2020b, 345–365). Unfortunately, the use of Armenian suffering by the US Congress or the European Parliament against Turkey in well publicized formal resolutions has not helped to elucidate an unbiased historical account of what occurred in regard to Turkish consciousness and diplomacy in the region (Cannon, 2016). Whenever these countries have thought they were aggrieved because of Turkey’s actions, both historical and current, the response has often been to frame it as Turkey’s unwillingness to recognize the events of 1915 as genocide. Perceived as abusing the historical record by acknowledging that atrocities affected all groups in the relevant territories during the wars, contemporary generations of Turks have chafed at the insistence of Armenians to return repeatedly to the events of 1915 as the source of their grievances. Moreover, Armenian attempts to justify the occupation and ethnic cleansing of Azerbaijanis as revenge for the events of 1915 have forced the Turkish public to identify with the cause of Azerbaijan. Erdoğan, in this instance, is not shaping public opinion but responding to it. Rather than seeking to pause and understand the societal image and standing of Armenia and Armenians in Turkey, more than a few experts and scholars are quick to blame Erdoğan for antagonizing this particular confict. Finally, the economic and geopolitical situation compels Turkey to support Azerbaijan. Although Turkey and Azerbaijan describe their relationship in terms of “one nation with two states.” their economic interdependence has played a critical role in changing its dynamics (Ismayilov, 2016).21 As a growing economy and population, Turkey is an energy-dependent country that buys most of its oil and gas from Azerbaijan. Moreover, major Azerbaijani oil and gas pipelines pass through Turkey, which has been collecting fees from them. The two countries built the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway and two pipelines to integrate their economies, and Azerbaijan is the biggest investor in the Turkish energy sector. Its state-owned oil company (SOCAR) owns the biggest refneries in Izmir. The trade volume between the two countries is close to $5 billion and likely to increase to $15 billion by 2024. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
290 M. Hakan Yavuz As Turkey becomes more dependent on Azerbaijani oil and gas, its foreign policy will refect these facts. Economics also clarifes the general understanding behind Turkey’s unquestioned support for Azerbaijan, but it does not explain why the 2020 war erupted. Russian Infuence and Control The Caucasus is a region of global economic signifcance, as gas and oil pipelines run throughout Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey. Georgia has had poor relations with Russia since the 2008 war, which resulted in the fragmentation of Georgian territory when Russia occupied and recognized the breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Azerbaijan has pursued a sophisticated foreign policy by recognizing Russia’s hegemonic role in the Caucasus, and Baku has taken care not to provoke Russia. Yet, while President Aliyev has developed cordial relations with Putin, he has also cultivated ties with Turkey, Israel, and major European countries. In return, Russia has tried to keep Azerbaijan close, emphasizing to Aliyev that Moscow holds “the key to the Karabakh confict.” A major cause of instability in the Caucasus seems to be Russian imperialist nostalgia (Gatagova, 2020). Russia still sees itself as a great power and treats the Caucasus as its backyard. Moscow’s heavy-handed imperialist policies, however, have resulted in the loss of Ukraine and Georgia and the possible loss of Azerbaijan. According to Armenians including Pashinyan, Russia’s main goal has been to keep the Karabakh confict in limbo so that it can reduce Armenia to a vassal state while ensuring Baku does not follow a foreign policy independent of Russian interests (Batashvili, 2019). Russia has a military base in Gymri, Armenia, and Armenia’s borders with Turkey and Azerbaijan have been closed since 1993 as a result of the frst Karabakh confict. This, in turn, has been deleterious for Armenia’s economy. Its able-bodied young people are emigrating to Russia, Europe, and the US. The more vulnerable and isolated Armenia becomes, the more it risks lapsing into the vassal status that Russia desires. Armenia is the poorest state in the Caucasus, with failing infrastructure and a shrinking population, evidence of how irredentist Armenian nationalism has destroyed the country’s social fabric and well-being and compromised its independence from Russia. Upon Russia’s arrival in the Caucasus in the nineteenth century, its main challenger was Iran, followed by the Ottoman Empire. Today, its successor, Turkey, enjoys excellent economic relations with Georgia and has close ties with many north Caucasian Muslim communities. Turkey is home to more than fve million Muslims from the north Caucasus who were ethnically cleansed or deported by Tsarist Russia (Celikpala, 2005). As Russia is seeking to restrain Turkey’s efforts in Syria, Turkey is also seeking to expand its infuence in Russia’s southern and most vulnerable border regions. Presently, the Russia-Turkey relationship has been damaged by disputes over Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy 291 Syria and Libya, though the two regularly fnd some common ground for addressing their differences. Erdoğan and Putin have evinced a certain respect for each other despite numerous disagreements between them. Turkey has never recognized the Russian annexation of Crimea and defends, albeit quietly, the rights of the Crimean Tatars. As Russia becomes more dependent on oil and gas—a commodity whose market prices have declined, not only because of the pandemic, but also because of green-energy commitments around the world—it is becoming economically more vulnerable. Today, Russia sells raw materials and buys most of its goods from China. This is not the global image it prefers to portray, and Turkey is not what it was in the early twentieth century—the sick man of Europe. As Russia continues to anger the people of the Caucasus with its excessive aggressions, it will ironically open up more opportunity spaces for Turkey and other countries in the region to exploit. Shadows from the Past During the 44-day war, the Russian public overwhelmingly remained on the side of the Armenians. This indicates the entrenched prejudice against the Turks in Russian political consciousness. The enduring rivalry between Turkey and Russia is important to understand, as it reveals the orientation of the current Karabakh confict. In Russia’s national myth and character, the Turks, in general, and Turkey, in particular, have taken a historical role of signifcant geopolitical consequence. Russia and the Ottoman Empire were at war in 1569–1570, 1676–1681, 1687–1699, 1710–1713, 1736–1739, 1768–1774, 1787–1792, 1806–1807, 1809–1812, 1828–1829, 1853–1855, 1877–1878 and 1914– 1917 (Kurat, 1999). Yet, Soviet Russia and Kemalist Turkey were allies. Lenin economically and militarily supported the Turkish War of independence against European imperialist forces.22 Moreover, the contemporary borders of the Caucasus were, more or less, determined as a result of negotiations between Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and Vladimir Lenin (Gürün, 1991). Turkey remains the principal destination for persecuted Muslims from Russia and its former Central Asian Soviet republics. Moreover, Turkey is the guarantor of two autonomous regions: Ajaria in Georgia and Nakhichevan in Azerbaijan (Murtazaoğlu, 2004). Contrary to some claims that Turkey is seeking to enter the Caucasus and challenge the Russian position there, Ottoman Turkey was in the Caucasus long before the Russians arrived there in the nineteenth century (Allen and Paul Muratoff., 2011). As Russia expanded its eastern and southern borders into the territories previously held by Turkic groups, its history and identity were shaped by these long series of conficts. The perception of Russian threats comes from these wars that each Turkish student encounters in studying history at school. Russia has remained the enemy in the construction of the Turkish nationalist identity since this image was consolidated with the Cold War. When the author was a student in the provincial town of Bayburt in the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
292 M. Hakan Yavuz 1970s, the aggressive colonizing image of Russia as the Turks’ main enemy was part of both the offcial and unoffcial curricula. Relations between Erdoğan and Putin are rooted in this historical background. Although history does not explain everything, the constructed memories and images of the past do play an important role in how the two sides see each other. Today, neither Turkey nor Russia can completely free itself from the images of the past. Nor is either country captive to its past. Perceptions of Russia are much better than they were previously in Turkey, while any residual negative images might easily be mobilized to explain Russia’s imperialist designs in the Caucasus or the Middle East. Moreover, there is a shared feeling in Europe and the US, though perhaps not in Baku or Ankara, that Russia is a declining power in the Caucasus. Turkey has been careful not to challenge Russia directly, but Ankara is also acutely aware of Russia’s limitations in the region. If Russia allies itself completely with Armenia or fails to respect the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, it is more likely to lose Azerbaijan and turn Armenia into a garrison state in the service of Russia. Today, Azerbaijan is much richer and more developed than in the 1990s, when it was defeated and lost 20% of its territories. Azerbaijan’s military is also better trained and its morale projects national confdence. Pashinyan’s “Clash of Civilizations”? The Armenians portray Azerbaijanis as Turks and treat them as the children of the Oriental Ottoman Empire. On the basis of religion, they present themselves as European. David Laitin and Ronald Suny explain that “much of Armenian identity is wrapped up in what they have suffered at the hands of the Turks, and since the Azerbaijanis are “Turks” (Azerbaijani is a Turkic language), hostility felt toward one people is transferred to another” (Laitin and Suny, 1999, 147). Azerbaijani Turks were not part of the Ottoman Empire in the nineteenth century and were never involved in the events of 1915, which the Armenians consider as genocide. This hostility has been regularly activated to justify Armenian irredentist nationalism. During the Karabakh confict of the early 1990s, Laitin and Suny note, “Armenian militias along with civilian compatriots systematically cleansed the corridors separating Armenia from Karabakh [of its indigenous Azerbaijani population] in a cold-blooded campaign” (Laitin and Suny, 1999, 153). The hatred of Turks was thereby transferred to the Azerbaijanis who became the victims of systematic killings and ethnic cleansing. Pashinyan prefers to portray the confict as a war between Muslims and Christians, claiming that the Turks had to be stopped in Karabakh or they would have tried to seize Vienna again.23 Although Armenia worked to frame the war as a clash of Islam versus Christianity and presented itself as the outpost of Christianity against Islamic terrorism, very few radical groups adopted this line of propaganda. For instance, European fascists Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy 293 and some extremist factions rushed to defend the Armenian cause not because they see them as correct but rather because they are Christian. For instance, in October 2020, Marc de Cacqueray-Valmenier, the leader of the French extreme-right group Zouaves Paris, declared on his social media accounts that he had left to fght alongside the Christian Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh against Muslims. This irresponsible response to the war was expressed at the highest level in France, when President Emmanuel Macron openly supported Armenian occupation of the Azerbaijani territories and deliberately tried to portray the confict as a religious one by insisting that Syrian jihadists are fghting on the side of Azerbaijani troops. Pashinyan’s rhetoric echoes that of two convicted genocidal Serbian leaders: Slobodan Milosevic and Radovan Karadcic. Pashinyan wants to defend his occupation of another country and ethnic cleansing of 700,000 people on the basis of orientalist images of Muslims and Turks. Yet, in this confict, the Islamic Republic of Iran is fully supporting (Christian) Armenia.24 Meanwhile, Turkey, Israel, Great Britain and Hungary have supported Azerbaijan. This is neither a religious nor a civilizational war.25 The rhetoric ignores that this is a war over territory and a confict involving rival nationalist movements. Pashinyan has claimed that Armenia is defending the West against Turkey because Turkey wants once again to be at the gates of Vienna. The expressions of orientalism and otherization of the Azerbaijani Turks recycle repugnant motifs that the historical record has refuted. In order to gain the sympathy of other countries, Pashinyan presents the confict between Christian Armenia and Muslim Azerbaijan as a “civilizational front line,” even though Shia Iran stands with Armenia in the dispute. In many surveys and studies, Azerbaijan is consistently recognized as a predominantly secular country, similar to Finland or Vietnam. There have been several threads of persistent disinformation throughout the war. The frst is attributed to French president Macron. Apparently catering to Armenian-origin voters in the upcoming 2022 French presidential elections, he claims that Syrian-Islamist mercenaries are fghting on the Azerbaijani side. However, this disinformation was frst planted and spread by the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service, and Macron picked it up. Rather than being sensitive to global justice, international law, and norms, France has supported the occupation of Karabakh for 26 years. Erdoğan has angered Macron by exposing French intentions in Karabakh as well as in Libya. Meanwhile, Armenians from France, the US, Canada, and Lebanon have joined the fght, and those who have died in the confict have been acclaimed as heroes in social media posts. But, there is yet to be any evidence of a Syrian fghter fatality in Karabakh. This calculated stream of disinformation, similar in respects to the claim of chemical weapons raised before the 2003 US invasion of Iraq, has been advanced not only by France, but also by Russian interests. When the ceasefre was signed on November 9, 2020, neither France nor Russia raised the issue of mercenaries. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
294 M. Hakan Yavuz Moreover, in order to mobilize the Armenian diaspora around the world, Pashinyan has portrayed Armenia once again as a victim of Turkey, vulnerable to being wiped off the global map. The Armenian president and prime minister presented the Karabakh War as “the continuation of the genocide against the Armenian people.”26 This instrumentalization of past human suffering is an unmistakable example of how a victim can become the victimizer under specifc circumstances when it seeks to use the scars of healed wounds to justify a new round of retribution. Regrettably, the Armenian offcials have selective memories, failing to accept the worst atrocities of the 1991–1994 Karabakh War, such as a series of massacres carried out in Khojaly and elsewhere, in which hundreds of innocent Azerbaijani civilians were murdered. Russian-infuenced Truce Russia has always maneuvered to exploit the fears and insecurities of both sides in a confict to promote its own interests while seeking to preserve its status as the hegemon of the Caucasus. More than the Azerbaijanis, it has been the Armenians who relied on and demanded a Russian presence in the Caucasus, which Russia has sought to legitimize on its own accord. Facing a decisive defeat and the loss of the entire Karabakh area to the Azerbaijani army, Armenia had no option but to ask for Russia’s assistance. Russia used its leverage over Azerbaijan to prevent complete control of Karabakh by Azerbaijan, as refected in the truce that was imposed on November 9 and signed by Putin, Aliyev, and Pashinyan. Armenia had no option but to capitulate to Russian demands, while Azerbaijan reluctantly agreed, even as they took control of the contested region. Armenia had long ago accepted vassal status under Russian protection, but a historical analysis of conficts in the region leads to the following conclusion: Russia consistently exploits the fears of these ethnic groups by pitting one against another. Whenever Russian troops enter a region under the pretext of peacekeeping (as in the case in Georgia), it becomes much more diffcult to get rid of them. In the Caucasus, the idea of Russian troops as peacekeepers is an oxymoron; Russia is always tempted to behave unilaterally with the hope of reclaiming some level of imperialist intentions. Moscow never sought a solution to the confict but rather a framework for managing it to advance its interests. The current truce agreement is just that: a vague, open-ended, unclarifed instrument to deepen the Russian presence in the region. The nine-point truce agreement portends historical signifcance, as it will become the foundation for the fnal peace treaty.27 As news of the truce spread, celebrations broke out in Azerbaijani cities, while protests, unrest and chaos reigned in the Armenian capital of Yerevan, with people pouring into the streets, chanting, “Where is Nicol? Where is that traitor?” Armenian opposition parties, including nationalist diaspora communities, have called for the Pashinyan government to resign. Azerbaijan won the war, but Russia did not allow it to be translated into a full diplomatic victory, which would Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy 295 encompass recognizing the claim of territorial integrity and sovereignty of Azerbaijan. Still, Azerbaijan recovered the territories around Karabakh, including 30% of the former Nagorno-Karabakh autonomous region. Of course, this carries the caveat that Russian troops will guarantee the truce. Azerbaijan liberated its most important cultural center, Shusha, allowing displaced Azerbaijanis from the frst Karabakh War to return to their homes—constituting a symbolic strategic victory for Azerbaijan. Russia is also a winner; it crafted the truce while saving Armenia from total defeat. Moreover, it will deploy close to 2,000 troops in the confict zone as a peacekeeping force—meaning a Russian presence not only in Armenia but also in formerly occupied Azerbaijani territories. Meanwhile, Armenia bears the greatest losses. It paid a heavy price by losing thousands of soldiers, resources and territory, along with the failure of its state institutions to be honest to its population about the war conditions. The poorly trained, inadequately armed Armenian forces had no feasible option but to withdraw. Armenia paid the greatest price because of the failure of its politicians, who refused to compromise and differentiate the circumstances of the possible from the desirable. Armenia cared little for the well-being of its people, with the exception of those cliques who were the most loyal to the ruling government and most fnancially capable. Armenia could have salvaged much better terms had they pursued diplomacy after their military victory in 1994. However, with this new (2020) truce, there is no mention of an autonomous Karabakh nor any recognition of its political status. For example, in his address, President Aliyev announced to the nation, “What happened to the [political] status? The status has gone to hell. No status. And there won’t be any status. It won’t happen as long as I am president.” However, the widespread belief among Armenians is that there will be some form of cultural autonomy regarding Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. There are several consequences of the 44-day war and the truce agreement: • • First, although Turkey is not mentioned in the truce agreement, the country stepped forward from the back channels to be a partner to the center for monitoring the ceasefre between the parties. Azerbaijan has insisted on including Turkey, and President Aliyev made it clear that Turkey’s military role in Karabakh is inevitable and indispensable. Yet, due to Armenian opposition and Russian reluctance, Turkey’s role has not been fully articulated in the agreement. Nevertheless, Turkey stands as the second-most prominent regional power in shaping the outcome. On November 11, 2020, Turkish defense minister Hulusi Akar and his Russian counterpart, Sergei Shoigu, signed an agreement to establish a joint ceasefre-monitoring center in Azerbaijani-controlled territories. Second, the war and the truce have exposed the weakness of international institutions, particularly the fact that Western governments focus more on arms sales and the support of powerful lobbies with specifc geopolitical interests than on broader human-rights guarantees. This Uploaded by S. M. Safi
296 • • • • M. Hakan Yavuz realization may encourage players in other frozen (dormant) conficts to take matters into their own hands without relying on the support or guidance of international institutions. Third, the Karabakh War has already transformed the balance of power in the region. As Russia crafted and imposed a truce agreement resulting in the surrender of Armenia, this, in turn, has angered many in Armenia and its diaspora. As a result, there are some angry calls to shift dramatically the orientation of Armenia away from Russia. These calls will have little impact because Armenia cannot turn against Russia for reasons of economy, energy and security. Russia is aware of Armenia’s dependence and does not want to make an enemy of Azerbaijan. If Armenia fails to improve its economy, this would compel its able and young population to move away; its cities could become virtual ghost towns without an able labor force to sustain basic services. The truce agreement has prompted intense soul searching in Armenia and critical thinking about the balance of risks and benefts associated with irredentist nationalism. The worst act during the war occurred when Armenia emptied Karabakh of its civilian Armenian population, weakening Karabakh’s claim to autonomy more than its defeat on the battlefeld had accomplished. According to the International Crisis Group, one-half of the population and 90% of children, women and the elderly have fed to Armenia.28 There was no resistance to their leaving. Only 60% returned back to Karabakh. Fourth, as far as Azerbaijan is concerned, it won the war on the battlefeld but has yet to advance its claim at the negotiating table to assume full control over the former Nagorno-Karabakh region. The truce agreement is open-ended, and many people have genuine concerns about the presence of Russian troops in Azerbaijan. In other word, the future of Karabakh will be determined between Azerbaijan and Russia. Fifth, Azerbaijan obtained a land connection to the Nakhichevan enclave. After a fnal peace settlement is signed, there is a good chance that these two economies could be integrated to improve the daily lives of their people. Sixth, Azerbaijan lost the First Karabakh War because of deep political divisions within the Azerbaijani elite, that were aggravated by perceptions of a weakened, chastened national consciousness, felt both among the elite and of the general citizenry in the country (Goltz, 1998). However, the Karabakh confict profoundly shaped the Azerbaijani state formation and this state, in turn, engaged the Second Karabakh War. The ongoing occupation and the conditions of more than 1 million displaced Azerbaijanis accentuated a collective sense of shame and humiliation among the population. This sentiment and the accompanying soul-searching process defned the organic center of nation and state-building in Azerbaijan. It was Karabakh which propelled the national consciousness, and Azerbaijani nationalism has been imbued by the Karabakh confict as it set the stage for the Second Karabakh Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy • 297 War. In the course of the confict and continued occupation, the state and nation were redefned and ultimately merged into a single entity. The defeat in the First Karabakh War solely accelerated the Azerbaijani process of state- and nation-building. The victory over Armenia and the liberation of territories have enhanced the legitimacy of the Azerbaijani state and rehabilitated the prestige of its military institution, along with the presidency of Ilham Aliyev, who prepared the army and mobilized the nation to liberate its lands and restore Azerbaijani dignity. Finally, the Karabakh War suggests that frozen conficts are likely to be reactivated with little advance notice or preparation. International institutions should address genuine concerns rather than focus on the status quo. As a result of the failure of the negotiations mediated by the OSCE’s Minsk Group beginning in the mid-1990s, the Azerbaijani public had become disillusioned and gradually consolidated their resolve to make amends on the defeat they suffered during the frst war. Conclusion The war did not resolve the confict but the dimensions of it have been transformed. The Second Karabakh War ended for the time being the sense of national humiliation among Azerbaijanis but it also did not bring the confict to an end with a sustainable peace. The 44-day war shifted the confict from an Azerbaijani vs. Armenian one to an Azerbaijani vs Russian confict. This could produce a fresh round of complicated consequences for Azerbaijan, especially as the shift also took on a wider regional dimension with Turkey’s gradually expanding presence in the region’s geopolitical affairs. Azerbaijan freed the formerly occupied seven districts and 30% of the Karabakh region. The Republic of Armenia, a Russian ally, was defeated resoundingly. Moreover, the war exposed just how outdated Russian military technology is. As a new military actor, Turkey entered the equation in the South Caucasus as an Azerbaijan ally and key supporter of the Georgian republic. Although the war will not heal or ameliorate the deep geopolitical wounds in this region, it did restore a modicum of justice for the Azerbaijani public, which had been persecuted, ethnically cleansed, and humiliated by previous events surrounding this confict. The wounds will not heal, given that a majority of the Armenian population left the war zone despite calls from local Armenian authorities in Khankendi (Stepanakert) to remain. Those Armenians who departed from the region, because they could not tolerate living under Azerbaijani sovereignty, left behind serious damage and environmental destruction. International and Armenian news outlets have reported variously that Armenians burned their homes, gardens, and nearby forest areas surrounding Kelbajar and other regions before the territories were to be handed over to Azerbaijan. These scorched earth measures Uploaded by S. M. Safi
298 M. Hakan Yavuz defying the option to live side by side with the “Turks” (a pejorative term chosen deliberately by Armenians) elude rational analysis and undermine any hope of coexistence. Ankara should also realize that Armenia’s political culture emanates from ancient stories and myths as well as modern conspiracy theories about Turkey and the Turks. It will take several generations to overcome and neutralize the ingrained homegrown, Russian supported brand of Turkophobia that is evident in Armenia. Furthermore, the country will continue to rely on Russia to realize its aspirations. Turkey is not in the position to reverse this dominant mentality so it must work with Russia in order to cope with Armenia on the diplomatic front. Does Armenia want to remain a garrison state of Russia or become a truly independent state capable of cultivating good relations with its neighbors, including Turkey? If Turkey seeks to facilitate the domestic debate within Armenia on the matter of that country’s choosing a strategic alliance with Russia predicated upon Armenian hatred of Turks, Turkey could take unilateral steps to help “cure” Armenia’s fears regarding Turkey. But, one must also realize that Armenia not only constitutes the Republic of Armenia but also counts on the support and infuence of the regional and global Armenian diaspora, which has been fed anti-Turkish sentiments predominantly by the Dashnak Party. In the end, Turkey may or may not be able to overcome anti-Turkish sentiments, given how historically entrenched they have been. Ankara should probably treat Armenia as a state in the midst of transition and leave it to Armenian communities to carry out the debate about Russia and Turkey on their own grounds. As far as Azerbaijan is concerned, Ankara must remain fully committed to sustaining its policy support for Azerbaijani territorial integrity. Therefore, Ankara should continue to develop its Caucasus policies in terms of roads, energy pipelines, and free-economic zones in close cooperation with Azerbaijan as well as with the Republic of Georgia. The main obstacle to achieving coexistence persists, as past events always have been portrayed to exclude consideration of the other side. Despite these actions, however, there is hope for regional cooperation among the three South Caucasian states (Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan) if they set aside nationalist rhetoric to recognize that regional integration mutually would improve the economic and social conditions for their citizens. The fnal peace treaty for Karabakh should address the genuine concerns of all parties and recognize the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. It should also provide political-cultural space for Armenians to carry out their own local governance. If no party is satisfed with the terms in a fnal deal, the risk of resentment sparking a new round of confict will increase. Armenians and Azerbaijanis should commit to developing a shared language to acknowledge each other’s fears constructively and provide the essential space for their respective desires to be realized within the scope of international law. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy 299 Notes 1 More on the last population census, see http://www.ethno-kavkaz.narod.ru/rnkarabax.html. 2 Armenia’s Declaration of Independence, which was published in 1991, rejected the 1921 Treaty of Moscow and the Treaty of Kars between the Soviet Union and Turkey by claiming that it surrendered Armenian territories to Turkey. Thus, the Declaration rejects the boundaries between Turkey and Armenia, and it contained a clause on the task of the Armenian state to work toward the recognition of the Armenian genocide. 3 More on Hai Dat, see https://jamestown.org/program/irredentism-entersarmenias-foreign-policy/ 4 For more on the Minsk Group negotiations, see Esmira Jafarova, “Evaluating the OSCE Minsk Group’s Mediation of the Armenia-Azerbaijan Confict.” 2020, Center for Analysis of International Relations (Vienna), https://www. institutfuersicherheit.at/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/ISP-Working-PaperEsmira-JAFAROVA-Evaluating-the-OSCE-Minsk-Group%E2%80%99smediation-of-the-Armenia%E2%80%93Azerbaijan-confict.pdf 5 Haqqin.az, “Secret Talks between the Envoys of Nikol Pashinyan and Ilham Aliyev” (September 24, 2020), https://haqqin.az/news/190193. 6 Eurasianet, “Pashinyan Calls for Unifcation between Armenia and Karabakh.” August 6, 2020, https://eurasianet.org/pashinyan-calls-for-unifcationbetween-armenia-and-karabakh. 7 “Farid Shafyev Comments on Armenia’s Refusal from Madrid Principles.” September 4, 2020, Azərbaycan24, https://www.azerbaycan24.com/en/ farid-shafyev-comments-on-armenia-s-refusal-from-madridprinciples/ 8 Gerard Libaridian, a leading scholar on Armenian foreign policy and former adviser to President Ter Petrosiyan, criticized Pashinyan’s remarks. He called these statements equivalent to a declaration of a diplomatic war, See Gerard Labaridian, “Step, This Time a Big Step Back.” Aravot, September 2, 2020 https://www.aravot-ru.am/2020/09/02/335325/. 9 The Treaty of Alexandrapol (Gümrü in Turkish; 3 December 1920) between Turkey and Armenia annulled the Treaty of Sevres. Moreover, the Treaty of Kars (October 1921) between Turkey and the Armenian Soviet Government also annulled the terms of the Sevres Treaty. 10 Panorama, “Pashinyan: Treaty of Sevres Continues to be a Historical Fact.” August 8, 2020, https://www.panorama.am/en/news/2020/08/10/PashinyanTreaty-of-Sevres/2341518. 11 Asbarez.com, “‘New Territories in the Event of New War,’ Says Defense Minister.” April 1, 2019, http://asbarez.com/178701/new-territories-in-theevent-of-new-war-says-defense-minister/. 12 Jamestown Foundation, “Armenia-Azerbaijan Confict Escalates with Intense Border Confrontation.” July 14, 2020, https://jamestown.org/program/ armenia-azerbaijan-confict-escalates-with-intense-border-confrontation/. 13 Interview with a high-ranking Turkish government offcial, November 19, 2020. 14 See Ozal’s statement, Milliyet, February 16, 1990. 15 Shahin Abbasov, “Azerbaijan: Reaction in Baku Muted to Moscow Declaration on Nagorno-Karabakh.” eurasianet.org, (2008); http://www.eurasianet.org/ departments/insight/articles/eav110308.shtml. 16 Azerbaijan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Statement of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Azerbaijan, 12.10.2009, http://mfa.gov.az/eng/index. php?option=com_content&task=view&id=580. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
300 M. Hakan Yavuz 17 “Azerbaijan Threatens Turkey over Armenia Agreement”, Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty, 21.10.2009, http://www.rferl.org/content/Azerbaijan_Threatens_ Turkey_Over_Armenia_Agreement/1857198.html. 18 More on the decision of the Armenian Constitutional Court, see, http://www. concourt.am/english/decisions/common/pdf/850.pdf 19 Hurriyet, January 18, 2010. 20 Some scholars suggest that especially in the last decade, Erdoğan has returned to the nationalist discourse of his former political party (National Salvation Party [MSP]) which is the representative of the ideology of Milli Görüş (National Outlook) where Islamism is articulated with nationalism to a great extent. 21 It was Abulfaz Elchibey who coined the motto, “one nation, two states” to describe the deep emotional connection between Turkey and Azerbaijan. See Elchibey’s statement https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=owzJop9MzqE For more on the relations between the two states, see Murad Ismayilov and Norman A. Graham (2016). 22 A monument constructed by Italian sculptor Pietro Canonica and opened in 1928 in Taksim Square, Istanbul recognizes this fact. The monument was built to commemorate the formation of the Turkish Republic. The monument has two sides. One side incorporates military and civilian aspects of Ataturk. The other side honors two Russian generals (Mikhail Vasilyevic Frunze and Marshal Kliment Yefremovic Vorosilove) in recognition of the Russian military and fnancial aid to the Turkish War of Independence. 23 France24, “‘Turkey Has a Clear Objective of Reinstating the Turkish Empire’, Armenian PM Says.” October 2, 2020, https://www.france24.com/en/20201002turkey-has-a-clear-objective-of-reinstating-the-turkish-empire-armenian-pmsays. 24 For more on the relations between Iran and Armenia, see Maziar Motemedi, “Iran’s Delicate Balancing Act in the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict.” Aljazeera, October 5, 2020. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/10/5/iran-nk 25 Jamestown Foundation, “Armenian-Azerbaijani Confict: Clash of Civilizations?” October 13, 2020, https://jamestown.org/program/armenian-azerbaijani-confict -clash-of-civilizations/. 26 Ben Judah, “Armenian President Wants NATO to Explain Turkey’s Involvement in Nagorno-Karabakh.” October 17, 2020, https://www.politico.eu/article/armenia-president-armen-sarkissian-nato-turkey-involvement-nagorno -karabakh/ 27 The Truce Agreement of November 9, 2020 represents more than an end to the confict, as it provides a framework for negotiating future treaties. 28 For more information, see https://www.crisisgroup.org/europe-central-asia/caucasus/nagorno-karabakh-confict/reducing-human-cost-new-nagorno-karabakhwar. References Abilov, Shamkhal. 2015. “The Course ‘One Nation Two State’: The Position of Turkey in the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict.” Journal of Caspian Affairs 1(2): 29–58. Alla Mirzoyan, Alla. 2010. Armenia, the Regional Powers, and the West. New York: Palgrave. Allen, William and Paul Muratoff. 2011. Caucasian Battlefelds: A History of the Wars on the Turco-Caucasian Border 1828–1921. New York: Cambridge University Press. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Turkish Foreign Policy 301 Altstadt, Audrey L. 1992. The Azerbaijani Turks: Power and Identity under Russian Rule. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press. Arısan, Mehmet. 2020. “From ‘Clients’ to ‘Magnates’: The (Not So) Curious Case of Islamic Authoritarianism in Turkey.” South East European and Black Sea Studies 19(1): 25 Asenbauer, Haig E. 1996. On the Right of Self-Determination of the Armenian People of Nagorno-Karabakh. New York: The Armenian Prelacy. Batashvili, David. 2019. “Nikol Pashinyan’s Russian Problem.” Security Review, January 12, 2019, https://www.gfsis.org/publications/view/2684. Cannon, Brendon J. 2016. Legislating Reality and Politicizing History: Contextualizing Armenian Claims of Genocide. Hamburg: Manzara Verlag. Celikpala, Mithat. 2005. “Türkiye’de Kafkas Diyasporası ve Türk Dış Politikası’na Etkileri.” Uluslarası Ilişkiler 2(5): 71–108. Chorbajian, Levon. 2001. The Making of Nagorno-Karabakh: From Secession to Republic. New York: Palgrave. Coyle, James J. 2021. Russia’s Interventions in Ethnic Conficts the Case of Armenia and Azerbaijan. New York: Palgrave. Ergun, Ayça. 2020. “Special, Exceptional, and Privileged Azerbaijani-Turkish Relations.” Baku Dialogues 4(2): 52–64. Fuller, Elizabeth. 1994. Azerbaijan at the Crossroads. London: Royal Institute of International Affairs. Gatagova, Liudmila. 2000. The Russian Empire and the Caucasus: The Genesis of Ethnic Conficts. London: Macmillan. Geukjian, Ohannes. 2012. Ethnicity, Nationalism and Confict in the South Caucasus: Nagorno-Karabakh and the Legacy of Soviet Nationalities Policy. New York: Ashgate. Goltz, Thomas. 1998. Azerbaijan Diary: A Rogue Reporter’s Adventures in an OilRich, War-Torn, Post-Soviet Republic. London: ME Sharpe. Grigoryan, Arman. 2018. “The Karabakh Confict and Armenia’s Failed Transition.” Nationalities Papers 46(5): 854 Ishkhanian, Rafael. 1999. “The Law of Excluding the Third Force,” in The Challenge of Statehood: Armenian Political Thinking since Independence, ed. Gerard J. Libaridian Watertown, Mass.: Blue Crane Books. Iskandaryan, Alexander. 2018. “The Velvet Revolution in Armenia: How to Lose Power in Two Weeks.” Demokratizatsiya: The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization 26(4): 465–482. Iskandaryan, Alexander. 2019. “Armenia-Russia Relations: The Revolution and the Map.” Russian Analytical Digest 232: 2–4. Ismailzade, Fariz. 2008. “Moscow Declaration on Nagorno-Karabakh: A View from Baku.” Turkish Policy Quarterly 7(3): 67–74. Ismayilov, Murad and Norman A. Graham, eds. 2016. Turkish-Azerbaijani Relations. One Nation – Two States? Abingdon: Routledge. Kamuran Gürün, Kamuran. 1991. Türk-Sovyet İlişkileri (1920–1953). Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Yayınları. Kurat, Akdes Nimet. 1999. Rusya Tarihi: Başlangıçtan 1917’ye Kadar. Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu, Yayınları. Laitin David D. and Ronald Grigor Suny. 1999. “Armenia and Azerbaijan: Thinking a Way Out of Karabakh.” Middle East Policy 7(1): 166. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
302 M. Hakan Yavuz Mikhelidze, Nona. 2010. “The Turkish-Armenian Rapprochement.” Istituto Affari Internazionali 10(5): 1–9. Minasyan, Sergey. 2017. “The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict in the Context of South Caucasus Regional Security Issues: An Armenian Perspective.” Nationalities Papers 45(1): 131–139. Murtazaoğlu, Fahrettin. 2004. “Acaralıların Siyasi Ozerklik Hakkının Süjesi Haline Gelmeleri ve Türkiye’nin Bu Sürece Etkisi.” Bilig 2(3): 41–82. Panossian, Razmik. 2006. The Armenians: From Kings and Priests to Merchants and Commissars. New York: Columbia University Press. Pashayeva, Gulshan. 2009. “The Nagorno Karabakh Confict in the Aftermath of the Russia-Georgia War.” Turkish Policy Quarterly 8(4): 55–69. Petersen, Alexandros. 2013. “Russia Shows Its Hand on Karabakh.” EU Observer, 18 November 2013, available at http://euobserver.com/opinion/122032. Shiriyev, Zaur Celia Davies. 2013. “The Turkey-Armenia-Azerbaijan Triangle: The Unexpected Outcomes of the Zurich Protocols.” Perceptions 18(1): 192. Swietochowski, Tadeusz. 1985. Russian Azerbaijan, 1905–1920: The Shaping of a National Identity in a Muslim Community. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Ter-Petrossian, Levon and Arman Grigoryan. 2017. Armenia’s Future, Relations with Turkey, and the Karabakh Confict. New York: Palgrave. Valiyev, Anar and Narmina Mamishova. 2019. “Azerbaijan’s Foreign Policy Towards Russia Since Independence: Compromise Achieved.” Southeast European and Black Sea Studies 19(2): 269–291. Welt, Cory. 2012. “To Link or Not to Link: Turkey-Armenian Normalization and the Karabakh Confict.” Caucasus International 2(1): 54. Yavuz, M. Hakan. 2020a. Nostalgia for the Empire: The Politics of Neo-Ottomanism. New York: Oxford University Press. Yavuz, M. Hakan. 2020b. “The Turkish-Armenian Historical Controversy: How to Name the Events of 1915.” Middle East Critique 29(3): 345–365. Yavuz, M. Hakan. 2021. Erdoğan: Making of an Autocrat. Edinburg: Edinburg University Press. Yavuz, M. Hakan and Vasif Huseynov. 2020. “The Second Karabakh War: Russia vs. Turkey?” Middle East Policy 27(4): 103–118. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
13 Georgia and the Second Karabakh War Emil Avdaliani The Second Karabakh War of 2020 brought about tectonic changes to the geopolitical landscape of the post-1994 South Caucasus – the year when the frst Karabakh War ended. Connectivity patterns stopped to operate as they used to in Soviet times and both warring sides, Armenia and Azerbaijan, began contemplating strategies on how to either keep or reverse the established status quo. The 2020 war tested not only the resilience of Armenia and Azerbaijan, but more so the geopolitical positions of the neighboring states. In comparison with the First Karabakh War and numerous subsequent escalations since, the intensity of the 2020 confict as well as involvement of regional actors, primarily Turkey and later on Russia, defed all expectation, inextricably linking outside powers to the developments on the ground. Turkey notably increased its diplomatic and military support for Azerbaijan becoming Azerbaijan’s source of victory.1 Iran’s at times preferential ties with Armenia, which over decades caused concerns in Baku, were also tested, resulting in signifcant geopolitical changes along Iran’s northern border and Tehran’s shift in rhetoric.2 Russia, which traditionally aspired to strike a balance between the two sides, also found itself in a troubled position where it was no longer able to maintain the status quo because of Azerbaijan’s military superiority over Armenia and the latter’s unwillingness to make changes to its policy of refusing concessions unless they are ties to the advancement of Nagorno-Karabakh’s status and its eventual independence from Azerbaijan. An interesting case study, however, was the neighboring Georgia, which perhaps was the most vulnerable to the effects of the Armenia-Azerbaijan clashes.3 The reasons for this range from a purely geographic context to potentially combustible Armenia-Azerbaijani ethnic rivalry within Georgian borders. The Armenian and Azeri minority communities are the largest in the country and although there are cases of coexistence and even cohabitation in several villages, towns and cities,4 most communities remain largely separate largely concentrated in the Javakheti and Kvemo Kartli regions of Georgia. This separation is a cause for concern as it feeds rivalry and even open antagonism between the two communities, which potentially DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-18 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
304 Emil Avdaliani could lead to a large-scale ethnic confagration. Moreover, Georgia also serves as geographically the shortest way for Armenia and Azerbaijan to receive armaments from abroad (primarily Russia and Turkey). This reality has placed offcial Tbilisi in an uncomfortable position since the break-up of the Soviet Union. Tbilisi’s “loyalties” were regularly tested and criticized at times by both Armenia and Azerbaijan. For instance, in July 2020, right after the battles in Azerbaijan’s Tovuz region, the Azerbaijani media accused Georgia of letting shipments of weapons sent to Armenia from Serbia transit through Georgia. According to the allegations, those were rocket launchers and trucks, which were reportedly used by Armenia in Tovuz.5 Though later on September 19, Azerbaijan’s president Ilham Aliyev dropped the claims in an interview announcing that “Georgia acted like a very reliable partner” by “not allowing the transportation of weapons to Armenia through its territory”,6 Georgia’s uncomfortable position in the context of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict was once again underlined. Armenia on the contrary was unhappy, though not protesting it offcially, about long routes the shipment of weapons from Russia through Iran usually took. Though the reason is Georgia’s decision to close air-traffc to Russian military planes because of complicated Georgian-Russian relations since 2008, it nevertheless caused occasional frictions in Armenia-Georgia ties. Therefore, when in autumn 2020 the war in Karabakh erupted this geographic dilemma underlined Georgia’s geopolitical vulnerabilities: increased chances of undermining bilateral relations with either Armenia and Azerbaijan or both simultaneously. Both Yerevan and Baku continued to keep a close watch on Tbilisi for perceived favoritism. To forestall any allegations, on October 3 Georgia’s National Security Council issued a statement that the country temporarily suspended the transport of military cargo to both countries through Georgian land and air space.7 No restrictions were imposed on civil or humanitarian freight. However, though the offcial Yerevan abstained from making allegations, ordinary Armenians cast doubt on Tbilisi’s position of neutrality. Data drawn from fightradar24 indicated that Azerbaijan’s planes frequently fy through Georgian airspace to and from Israel and Turkey.8 Additionally, Russia’s military intelligence agency GRU disseminated information alleging that Georgia allowed Turkish weapons to be provided to Azerbaijan through its airspace despite Tbilisi’s clear policy of banning such transits to either side.9 Though no evidence suggested that the planes were transporting arms to Azerbaijan, this fed into the overall perception held by many in Armenia that Georgia had always been secretly supporting Azerbaijan’s efforts to restore its territorial integrity. There was also an issue of Russia seeking a transit through the Georgian territory to reach Armenia. This could have taken place through the provisions of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) protocols which Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Georgia and the Second Karabakh War 305 aim at securing the borders of member states, one of which is Armenia. In case the fghting spilled over onto Armenian soil, Moscow would have every legal ground to request a direct land/air corridor. Since Azerbaijan would have been against letting Russian troops through its territory, while transit through Iran would take much longer time (provided Tehran agreed to such a scenario) seeking a corridor through Georgia seemed a real possibility. Such a scenario may have had devastating consequences for Tbilisi fraught with numerous geopolitical dangers as the shortest supply route to Armenia would most likely go through Georgia’s Russia-controlled region of South Ossetia. Then the route would either go through Tbilisi or, alternatively, through Samtskhe-Javakheti, the region potentially prone to instability. The sighting of Russian troops in the region – where in the 1990s the mostly Armenian population was often accused of silently seeking independence from Tbilisi,10 possibly with Russian help – would have evoked historic grievances and traumas in Tbilisi. If Tbilisi offcially granted Russian transit, it would have also caused widespread protests across the country, which the ruling government mostly likely would have been unable to survive. Altered Geopolitical Balance of Power Georgia, a long-aspiring NATO and EU candidate, has often portrayed itself as the bastion of Western infuence in the region. But the Second Karabakh War revealed the lack of the regional security architecture when neither the collective West nor the OSCE’s Minsk Group (with Russia, France and the US as co-chairs) offered any viable solution to the confict. This, much to Tbilisi’s chagrin, indicated the worsening geopolitical situation around Georgia when the West was increasingly distancing itself from the region. Though in the initial stage of the confict Russia remained passive, it eventually re-asserted itself. What remained as a fxture was the sidelining of the collective West. For instance, Russia’s and Turkey’s plans to (re-)open trade routes which would increase the regional connectivity, potentially further sidelined the collective West. This concerned not only the actual infrastructure projects. The collective West’s limited presence is also seen in the way the Western peacemaking standards and confict resolution methods are being trumped by Russian alternatives. The sidelining of the West also concerns actual long-term political visions for the South Caucasus. Russia’s vision is versatile: a mixture of economic measures to keep Armenia and Azerbaijan closer, partly through military moves such as physical presence on Armenian and Azerbaijani soil, and partly through fostering one-to-one bilateral ties. Turkey’s vision is similar along with its pursuit of regional infrastructure development. Moreover, at the political level the suggestion on creating a six-nation pact involving the South Caucasus states plus Russia, Turkey and Iran, could be seen as yet another example of growing Western political regress from the region. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
306 Emil Avdaliani The war also changed Georgia’s perception of the South Caucasus. If previously the region increasingly was being attached to the West, the West’s distancing and the action of the regional powers now signals a different development. Though since the end of the Soviet Union the South Caucasus has held a strategically important position in the calculus of regional powers, it has not been high on the agenda of regional powers’ foreign policy. From serving as a periphery to greater geopolitical games, the Second Karabakh War results ushered in a major tectonic change: the Caspian basin and the South Caucasus have become inextricably linked to the Middle East. Russia and Turkey, which have increased their footprint in the Middle East over the past decade, and now look at the South Caucasus as a part of a great geopolitical game from the Mediterranean to the Caspian region. Ankara and Moscow now make their strategic moves in the South Caucasus within the context of the developments in the Middle East. This portends more challenges to Georgia as the South Caucasus could be subject to geopolitical trade-offs. It also means that the space has been elevated in status; it now occupies a near primary geopolitical theater for Turkey, Russia and the West. What concretely disturbs political minds in Tbilisi is that after the war, Russia increased its military presence in the region by adding nearly 2,000 peacekeepers in Karabakh – effectively establishing a new military outpost. Moscow now enjoys an unchallengeable position in the region with its military bases in Armenia and in Georgia’s regions of Abkhazia and Tskhinvali. This allows Russia to establish control over the South Caucasus corridor, which includes critical pipeline and railroad infrastructure spanning from the Caspian to the Black Sea via Georgian territory. For Tbilisi this means that Russian troops are now essentially closing in on Georgia from all sides and could easily disrupt regional connectivity, the backbone of Georgia’s geopolitical importance to both China and the collective West. Georgia's political elites view the Russian peacekeeping force in Karabakh with much suspicion because of the country's own experience of hosting Russian troops in the early 1990s. One of the conclusions is that Russian peacekeeping forces are a good tool for solidifying Moscow's geopolitical positions in the neighborhood. Considering the unwillingness to withdraw from Abkhazia and South Ossetia, for Tbilisi the Russian presence in Karabakh is more of a long-term than short-term perspective. Tbilisi also understands that Russia will likely play a long game where in order to persuade Azerbaijan to allow the Russian peacekeeping mission to remain on its soil beyond the end of 2025, it will use various tools such as incidents on the contact line in Karabakh, and revanchist calls from whatever government in Armenia there will be at that time. If this fails, a more concrete plan could be extensive supplies of military hardware to Armenia which will be used to build a battle-ready military capable of offensive operations, a useful tool for the Kremlin to secure its continued presence in the confict zone. Context always differs, but much similar developments Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Georgia and the Second Karabakh War 307 were taking place in Abkhazia and South Ossetia in the 1990s and early 2000s. Instability provided Russia with perfect opportunities to interfere and play a subtle game by increasing distrust between Tbilisi on the one hand and Sokhumi and Tskhinvali on the other. Overall, Russia’s policies toward Georgia’s two regions represented a building bloc in Russia’s emerging grand strategy since the early 1990s – namely the use of confict zones across the post-Soviet space for keeping Moldova, Ukraine, and the South Caucasus away from NATO and the EU often through the deliberate stoking of separatist conficts. This policy has been successful so far, as the EU and NATO have refrained from extending membership to Georgia, Moldova, and Ukraine.11 In the Karabakh case, the West is largely absent, but Turkish infuence has been on the rise, so Russia had to step in to keep Ankara at bay, and not let Baku gain control over its entire territory as it would free Azerbaijan from the existent geopolitical shackles. Seen from this perspective, the Russian move to place its peacekeepers in Karabakh fts into the overall strategy of keeping its neighborhood from third countries. So far, all signs indicate the Russian troops in Karabakh are likely to seek a near-permanent position. Another important post-Karabakh War development for Georgia has been the issue of re-opening the Soviet-era railways. The restoration of the old routes follows Soviet patterns. For instance, there were two corridors from Azerbaijan to Armenia and both guaranteed the connection to Turkey via the Nakhchivan exclave. One route was from Ijevan, a town and urban municipal community in Armenia, and Yerevan, and the second southern one through Zangilan. The two corridors were fully operational in the Soviet period, but were completely closed since the early 1990s, as a result of the Karabakh confict. The closing of these routes constrained Russia’s and Turkey’s ability to penetrate the South Caucasus. Various economic and military conditions apply as to which side prefers the opening of one of the corridors. Armenia is more willing to open up the northern route, while Azerbaijan would support the southern alternative. From Baku’s perspective, the latter corridor would go through the newly claimed territories, as a result of the Second Karabakh War, and a narrow swath of Armenian land which would make it easier to control security-wise. For Yerevan the restoration of the northern railway section would be more proftable as most of the route is in a working condition. The line runs from Yeraskh, a village in Armenia’s Ararat province, into Nakhchivan and then enters into southern Armenia to Azerbaijan proper and heads north into Russia. Over the past three decades, Georgia served as a major lifeline for Armenia as it connected the country to Russia. Trains from Armenia head only north to Tbilisi, and trade with Russia is made via the Georgian Military Highway. But the road is largely unreliable often closed due to natural cataclysms such as snow and landslides. Though Armenian leadership has been searching for additional routes to the Georgian one, for the moment Yerevan seems Uploaded by S. M. Safi
308 Emil Avdaliani to be more interested in the railway openings rather than road routes. After all, an alternative to the Georgian road route would be the one through Azerbaijan or some 900 km more, which would be less proftable economically for Armenian and Russian businesses. In Georgia’s case the potential gains are not as clear cut. The country benefts from being the only connection route between Armenia and Russia. Alternatives could naturally bite at transit revenues. To hold the initiative Georgia might play the Abkhazia Railway card. Long-supported by Armenia and Russia, the opening of this Soviet-era connection would have to go through Georgia’s Moscow-controlled Abkhazia. This raises numerous questions as to which stamps – Georgian or Abkhazian – would have to be on offcial documentation. Georgia always wanted this issue to be linked to the withdrawal of Russian troops from Georgian territory, and to the return of the displaced ethnic Georgian population of Abkhazia, who constituted a majority of the pre-confict Abkhazian population. Furthermore, economic benefts from the project are far from clear as gains of using the railway for Armenia-Russia trade might not suffce to cover the restoration and operation of the route. Still, the Russians have been consistent in their efforts to bring the connection back to life. Various reports from previous years hinted at parts of the Abkhaz section being cleared and near-ready for operation. If previously the opening of the Abkhaz section would bring about deterioration of Georgia’s relations with Azerbaijan and Turkey because of probable Russian military supplies to Gyumri today following the Karabakh War, Tbilisi is unencumbered. In the new geopolitical context, when Azerbaijan itself plans to allow Russian transit to Armenia, this may become a less sensitive issue for Azerbaijan. This context serves as a potential for the Abkhaz railway re-opening. The connection will be important to Armenia, serving as an alternative for securing the link to Russia through a friendly Georgia as opposed to the planned railway line which would go via Azerbaijan – always a precarious route considering the unresolved issue of the Karabakh confict. Still, Georgian pre-conditions for opening the railway laid out above are unlikely to change signifcantly. There is also a potential blowback from the Georgian opposition forces. The issue is politically charged, which could galvanize large sections of the population to stage street protests. In a time when the ruling Georgian Dream (GD) party experiences public discontent inside the country, engaging the talks on the Abkhaz railway re-opening could be especially damaging. There is also a wider issue at stake: Georgia’s ally the US will be strongly against the re-establishment of the railway through Abkhazia as it would re-connect Russia with Iran, Washington’s geopolitical nemesis. Furthermore, how far the Russians would like to go in pushing for the restoration of the Abkhaz railway is also unknown. Economically its benefts are questionable. Moscow is also afraid that the operation of the link would boost economic ties between Sokhumi and Tbilisi and could potentially Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Georgia and the Second Karabakh War 309 lead to some sorts of rapprochement. Any such scenarios would bite at Russia’s geopolitical standing. Another potentially signifcant development following the November 2020 tripartite agreement between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia is the emerging Nakhchivan corridor.12 Turkey is set to gain a land corridor from Azerbaijan’s exclave of Nakhchivan to the rest of Azerbaijan via Armenia. The stipulation in the document reads: “Armenia guarantees the security of transport links … [for] unimpeded movement of citizens, vehicles, and cargo in both directions”. Moreover, “Transport control is exercised by the Border Service of the Federal Security Service of Russia. By agreement of the parties, the construction of new transport communications connecting the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic and Azerbaijan's western regions will be provided”.13 This would allow Turkey to anchor its infuence in Azerbaijan, on the Caspian seashore and perhaps, in the longer term, look even further toward the wider Central Asian region. Ankara had this vision since the establishment of the Turkish republic following World War I, when measures were taken to obtain a direct land corridor to Nakhchivan. A special relationship was cultivated with Iran in the 1930s to guarantee the security of Turkish interests in Nakhchivan. As said, Ankara has been long looking at using the Nakhchivan corridor for geopolitical purposes. In 2020 the Turkish government announced the plans to build a railway14 to Nakhchivan following the earlier announcement of a gas pipeline15 construction to the exclave. Usually this higher level of connectivity would be a boon for other landlocked regions. But in the South Caucasus it could also be a cause of geopolitical separation and even isolation as lager states pursue their respective geopolitical agenda for connectivity. For decades, Armenia was cut from regional pipelines, roads and a major railway connecting the Caspian and Black Sea and Turkey. As the stipulation on the Nakhchivan corridor was announced, many began wondering whether Georgia’s transit capabilities would be challenged. In the short and medium major reshuffing in the region’s connectivity patterns it is hard to fathom as Baku and Ankara already have the well-functioning railway and pipeline infrastructure, which runs through Georgia. This is also buttressed by Georgia being engaged in the offcial trilateral partnership with Turkey and Azerbaijan since its inaugural meeting in 2012. The endurance of the format has been proved by changes of governments and region-wide geopolitical transformations over the last decade and despite Russian military pressure the Georgian transit proved effective. To become operational major unresolved issues around the Nakhchivan corridor should frst be addressed: will the road be open only to Turks and Azerbaijanis? It is for the moment unlikely that Azerbaijan and Turkey will be willing to commit large fnancial resources to rebuild links through the Armenian territory. Moreover, will control over the route through the Armenian territory fall under the tripartite administrative regime or solely Uploaded by S. M. Safi
310 Emil Avdaliani under Russian surveillance? One could also imagine constant incidents along the corridor as Armenia will remain unhappy with the stipulation, even though transit fees could soften Yerevan’s position. There is also a wider geopolitical question of why should Russia be interested in the operation of the Nakhchivan corridor? Restoration of Soviet-era links discussed above ft neatly into the Russian attempts of further integrating the South Caucasus into its connectivity patterns, namely the north-south vector of railroads and pipelines. The decrease in the use of the Georgian transit would also have a negative economic impact on the country as around 5% of its GDP emanates from transit-related income. To this is directly related the infow of foreign direct investments (FDI) into the country16 as the largest FDIs into Georgia were generally linked to the trans-regional infrastructure projects. Even a partial loss of transit potential would negate Georgia the infow possibility. A modest forecast on the effectiveness of the Nakhchivan corridor would be that the link will be operating frst perhaps only for local connections – limited trade from Azerbaijan proper with the exclave to avoid using the Iran connection. The emergence of a major corridor through Nakhchivan is likely to happen if at least a meaningful improvement of Turkey-Armenia relations takes place. Even in case of the corridor becoming fully operational with the Chinese transit passing through it, as the Turkish politicians argued, both Georgian and Nakhchivan routes might not be in fact openly rival routes. In fact, an opposite scenario might develop where the two routes could be complementary in nature. The prospects of new transit routes denting at Georgia’s transit capabilities could also serve as a good motivator for successive Georgian governments to develop the country’s transit potential. This could include improvement and enlargement of the east-west highway, which connects effectively the Caspian basin with the Black Sea and Turkey. Not least important could be the expansion of existing and construction of new ports on Georgia’s Black seashore. Enlargement of the Batumi and Poti ports has already been announced. The stalled construction of the Anaklia deep sea port could see another possibility for construction17 within the context of quickly evolving connectivity patterns in the South Caucasus and Tbilisi’s determination to remain at the center of transit routes. Yet another dimension of importance for Georgia’s evolving geopolitical position has been numerous calls by the Turkish side for the six-party union between the three South Caucasus countries plus Iran, Russia, and Turkey itself. Presented by the Turkish side, it follows earlier similar initiatives such as the Pact for Stability and Cooperation in the South Caucasus in the 1990s. Similar initiatives usually gain support from Russia, Turkey and Iran. All three feel pressured by the collective West, which make them opt for measures which would limit or even undermine Western infuence in the South Caucasus. Georgia thus fnds itself at odds with the regional initiatives mainly because of its Western aspirations, but also because of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Georgia and the Second Karabakh War 311 Russian pressure. It would be hard to fathom that Tbilisi cooperates with a state which has troops deployed on its soil and has two embassies, one in Sokhumi, another in Tskhinvali. Moreover, it is unlikely that Russia would allow restoration of the territorial integrity of Georgia by withdrawing its troops from Georgia. Thence comes the suspicion with which Tbilisi usually looks at these ideas.18 The Second Karabakh War results have also brought about discussions in Georgia at both analytical and government levels on the need to address the country's defciencies in the military sphere. The air defense system has been the weakest spot in Georgia's defense. The 2008 war with Russia highlighted the holes in this area when Russia with its obvious aerial superiority easily targeted and destroyed Georgia's defense capabilities. This lack of air defense was the single most important defciency which led to the defeat of 2008. The Second Karabakh War highlighted the need to address the issue in a timely manner. Even before the confict broke out, in September 2020 Georgia signed an agreement with representatives from the defense concern Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, which belonged to the Israeli Ministry of Defense.19 Successful use of drones by Azerbaijan showed the need to buy and perhaps in the longer term even develop domestic production of similar capabilities. What was also uncomfortable for Tbilisi was that the major supplier of combat drones to Azerbaijan was Georgia’s other neighbor, Turkey. This underlined Tbilisi's insecurities because in case of a military confict the country is surrounded by militarily and technologically far superior armies. As argued above, the growth of Russian power along Georgia’s borders is of grave concern for Tbilisi. But in the longer term the robust Turkish-Azerbaijani alliance could be also an irritant as the war changed the very fabric of Georgia’s geopolitical position vis-à-vis Ankara and Baku. Previously Tbilisi enjoyed the benefts of Armenia's seclusion and Baku and Ankara needed Tbilisi. In the aftermath of the 2020 war, however, much has changed. Georgia from now on is unlikely to serve as the only transit for Azerbaijan and Turkey, which potentially is fraught with relative diminution of Georgia's bargaining clout. Despite Tbilisi’s institutional connections to Turkey and Azerbaijan, there is greater civilizational affnity for Armenia, whose own historical narrative would appear to mirror Georgia’s in certain ways. Both are culturally distinctive, ancient Christian nations, which for millennia fought off invaders and worked on keeping its religious uniqueness. And yet Baku's victory is nevertheless seen as a somewhat positive geopolitical development in Georgia. Long constrained by its own separatist conficts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Tbilisi has been actively crusading against separatism in the region. Baku's victory is regarded by many as a vindication of the concept of state sovereignty in the region prone to bloody territorial conficts. For Tbilisi, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
312 Emil Avdaliani Nagorno-Karabakh also was an irritant because of an informal axis which was being entertained between the separatist regions of Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno-Karabakh. Contacts were timid, but they caused tensions in Tbilisi which often appealed to Yerevan to forestall the contacts. Though it is unlikely that Tbilisi would be considering a military solution to its territorial questions, Baku's victory nevertheless underlined the need to pay larger attention to the development of the national army. It also showed that territorial conficts could be resolved through the military Internal Georgia and Nagorno-Karabakh Beyond Georgia’s geographic dilemma, decline of the West’s infuence and the South Caucasus’ overall elevation in geopolitical signifcance, another aspect of grave concern for Tbilisi was the large Armenian and Azerbaijani communities living in Georgia. Though both ethnic groups have lived comfortably together, the Second Karabakh War heightened tensions inside the country. A small protest or demonstration by either of the ethnic group could have turned into inter-communal fghting. For instance, on October 1,300 protesters from the ethnic Armenian community held a rally outside Georgia’s pro-opposition Mtavari Arkhi TV offce, protesting against the channel’s presumably “pro-Azerbaijani” coverage of the ongoing Azerbaijani-Armenian clashes.20 In another instance of potential spillover in the mostly Armenianpopulated southern region of Georgia, Samtskhe-Javakheti, the locals began assembling goods and even enlisting to go fght in Karabakh, while others even managed to temporarily block Georgia’s border with Turkey. This caused fears and concerns among Georgian politicians and the society at large. Meanwhile, Georgian politicians of Armenian and Azerbaijani background in some cases openly voiced their support for either of the warring parties of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict. For instance, Ruslan Gadjiev, an MP in the Georgian Parliament from the ruling party Georgian Dream (GD), voiced his support for the Azerbaijani government in the ongoing military confrontation. A candidate of Armenian background from the UNM, Melik Raisyan, said that The entire Armenian people, including us, the Javakh people, will stand up for the freedom and rights of Armenia and Artsakh, as before, both at the moment and in the future. In Armenia and Artsakh, they must be sure that we are ready to help not only with words and materials, but if there is a need to pick up arms and fght against human-hating tribes.21 Enzel Mkoyan, an ethnic Armenian MP who at the time was running independently for the 2020 parliamentary elections from the Ninotsminda-Akhalkalaki constituency, toned down the sentiments by responding to the desire of ethnic Armenian youth living in Javakheti to volunteer in Nagorno-Karabakh, urging them: “Do not take certain steps Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Georgia and the Second Karabakh War 313 and do not interfere with the Armenian army in carrying out its sacred mission”.22 Those statements nevertheless emboldened ethnic Armenians and Azerbaijanis to get actively involved either through military volunteering or fnancing. Azer Suleymanov, an MP from UNM, in his Facebook post also indirectly called on the Azerbaijani population living in Georgia to get involved in the confict: You can be sure that our compatriots in Georgia, as they voluntarily participated in the Karabakh and Abkhazia wars in the 1990s, are now ready for any challenge to the territorial integrity of our National State, Azerbaijan, and our Great Motherland, Georgia.23 Dispatching products to those in need in the confict zone was one of the activities. For instance, the Armenian population in Akhalkalaki and Ninotsminda began collecting tires, food and medicine in order to help Armenian soldiers, though, some media reports indicated that the Georgian border guards refused to allow the trucks to pass, an allegation later refuted by the Armenian embassy in Georgia.24 The channel TV9 reported that approximately 1,000 protesters demanded that the Ninotsminda-Bavra crossing point between Georgia and Armenia be fully operational for the humanitarian aid to be sent to Armenia. TV9 also reported that in Ninotsminda and Akhalkalaki, youth registration for volunteering in the war has started in support of Armenia.25 On 29 September, the central road connecting Georgia with Turkey was blocked by the local population.26 A primary motivator was that Georgia did not allow them to help Armenian soldiers and victims while the road for Azerbaijan was open. Samkhretis Karibche, a media resource from southern Georgia, quoted one of the demonstrators: “We read on Facebook that Georgia opened the road for Azerbaijan easily while we hardly managed to send food yesterday. We want to know why Georgia does not allow us to help Armenian soldiers”.27 AliQ Media and the Akhalkalaki-based TV channel ATV 12 reported similar reasons for the road blockage.28 These sentiments penetrated the Armenian public in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. On 30 September, the Armenian politician and head of the Republican Party of Nagorno-Karabakh, Karen Ohanjanyan, argued that Georgia passes military goods from Turkey to Azerbaijan and stated that Javakheti should declare independence from Georgia. The heightened nationalistic sentiments even posed a direct threat to the trans-regional infrastructure. On September 29, 2020, fber-optic cables of underground telecommunication of international importance that provided Armenia with the internet were damaged.29 Ethnic Azerbaijani youth and students living in Georgia rallied in support of Azerbaijan in central Tbilisi, near the monument to Heydar Aliyev with banners “Karabakh is Azerbaijan”. Some even claimed that they were ready to join the army and Uploaded by S. M. Safi
314 Emil Avdaliani go to war. Rumors also swirled that Vahagan Chakhalyan, who has been famous for his separatist activities in the Javakheti region and was even imprisoned in 2008, could have been among those who joined the Armenian army. The war also helped to reinvigorate the nationalist rhetoric among some overall marginal political parties. The Alliance of Patriots, an openly pro-Kremlin party which was represented in the Georgian parliament of 2016–2020, exploited the escalation of confict to amplify its anti-Turkish and anti-Azerbaijani campaign. This effectively meant shifting the focus from the Russian control of Georgia’s two regions, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, to the existing problems Georgia has with Azerbaijan and Turkey, both Tbilisi’s strategic partners, by heightening historic grievances that both countries currently have with parts of historical Georgian lands within their borders. This shift in rhetoric came amid a sensitive unresolved border issue Georgia still has with Azerbaijan, namely, the border-stridden orthodox David Gareja monastery complex. Samvel Petrosyan, the then Majoritarian candidate of the Alliance of Patriots said that the threat to Georgia is Azerbaijan “since it is Azerbaijan today that occupied the Georgian territory where the Georgian historical monument David Gareji is located”.30 Exploitation of religious sentiments amid the ongoing Karabakh War was a tactic to gain political points among nationalistically charged population groups. The rhetoric spurred a series of comments by politicians, experts, as well as various articles in newspapers on the need to tackle the problem of potentially purposefully damaging political rhetoric. Other actors too tried to use the ongoing Armenia-Azerbaijan confict and complicate Tbilisi’s relations with Baku. The “Georgian March”, an ultra-nationalist party, held a rally near the Azerbaijani border and even handed an ultimatum to the authorities in Baku to hand back parts of the David Gareja monastery. Both political parties enjoy meager support among the Georgian public, but they nevertheless receive large media coverage. The latter was spurred by the fact that the Georgian authorities launched at that time a full-scale investigation into an allegedly purposeful hand-over of Georgian territories to the Azerbaijani side, reportedly in exchange for money. While it is diffcult to argue whether there was a calculated pro-Russian narrative behind their anti-Turkish and anti-Azerbaijani rhetoric, it nevertheless could potentially have harmed Tbilisi’s ties with Ankara and Baku. The geopolitical axis of Turkey-Georgia-Azerbaijan serves as a backbone to the South Caucasus corridor – the very project which circumvents Russia and therefore is targeted by Moscow. Political reactions from members of the Georgian ruling party, Georgian Dream, and opposition forces were in line with the country’s geopolitical interests, the strict observance of neutrality. The then MP Irakli Sesiashvili from GD, serving also as Parliamentary Defense and Security Committee Chairman, stated: Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Georgia and the Second Karabakh War 315 Our Foreign Ministry is constantly in touch with its counterparts… urging for peace and ceasefre. If the [Armenian and Azerbaijani] sides wish Georgia to participate in peace talks, we are fully ready, … but unfortunately today we cannot see the signs of it. The international community is involved [in the process] and we could also get involved if needed. We are ready in any direction, [including] humanitarian, to assist both parties…31 Mixed reactions were caused by the former Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili’s statement that de-jure Nagorno-Karabakh was a part of Azerbaijan: “My position is unequivocal and is based on the principle of territorial integrity, which implies that Nagorno-Karabakh is a sovereign territory of the Republic of Azerbaijan…”.32 The statement alienated large parts of the ethnic Armenian population from Saakashvili and his party, United National Movement, while ethnic Azerbaijanis seemed jubilant. The confict also showcased Georgia’s vulnerabilities in the propaganda realm and defciencies in expertise regarding the confict.33 The latter included the occasional use of incorrect terms as well as mistranslations. An example was a mistake by another opposition channel, Formula TV, which mistranslated the Roman Catholic Pope Francis regarding the status of NK. Later, following protests on social media, the channel corrected the report. This led to allegations that since both channels are connected to the UNM and Saakashvili himself, the moves by the channels could have been orchestrated from above, especially in the light of Saakashvili’s above statement. Meanwhile, new disinformation appeared in the Azerbaijani media, arguing that in the support of Azerbaijan, Tbilisi TV Tower and Liberty Bridge were lightened in the colors of the Azerbaijani fag. This was shared by the different Azerbaijani and Armenian media outlets. In fact, of course, after the renewal of armed confict in Karabakh, neither the Tbilisi TV Tower nor the Liberty Bridge was lightened in the colors of Azerbaijani fag. The last time this happened was on 28 May 2020 when Azerbaijan celebrated the establishment of the First Democratic Republic.34 The vulnerability of Georgia to malign propaganda was further underlined when numerous fake accounts with Armenian surnames on Facebook and other social networks inundated the Georgian internet segment propagating hatred toward Georgians. Local NGOs helped to dissipate the danger and the Armenian embassy in Tbilisi even released a special statement regarding the matter. Allegations were spread of those accounts’ foreign provenance. Therefore, Tbilisi’s policy toward the confict has been quite straightforward: avoiding being pulled into the Armenia-Azerbaijan clashes and acrimonious diplomatic exchanges and holding direct diplomatic contact with both Baku and Yerevan with the aim to facilitate the minimization of the effects of the fghting and its potential threat to Georgia. Thence come rare efforts by the Georgian government to mediate the confict. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
316 Emil Avdaliani Opportune Moment for Mediation Georgia’s longstanding policy on the Karabakh confict has been one that can best be described as passive neutrality. It has developed good ties with both Armenia and Azerbaijan, and has abstained from playing an active political role in settling the confict. For successive Georgian governments active involvement was fraught with the risk of being dragged into the confict where such heavyweights as Russia and European powers rarely managed to make Yerevan and Baku reach compromises. In other words, for Tbilisi risks of active positioning far outweighed meager geopolitical benefts this policy could bring.35 Nevertheless, during the Second Karabakh War, Georgia, because of potential geopolitical threats, saw the need to play a more active diplomatic game, which could be best described as a shift from a neutral position to active neutrality. Indeed, as a neighbor to both states Tbilisi aimed to play a positive role in alleviating the mutual distrust between both Baku and Yerevan and also to limit geopolitical threats to regional security, namely transit routes and internal threats emanating from potential communal infghting between Armenian and Azerbaijani populations. This served as a background to the September 30 announcement by the then Georgian Prime Minister, Giorgi Gakharia, regarding the initiative to host potential bilateral Armenia-Azerbaijani talks in Tbilisi, thereby facilitating the peace process.36 Later, the National Security Council of Georgia released the statement reiterating the support for peace and stability in the region.37 In fact, Georgia’s willingness to play a mediating role was present in other cases. For instance, in 2016 during Armenia-Azerbaijan military escalation, statements by Georgian politicians were made to underline the country’s unique position to bring both parties to the negotiating table.38 But the timing for presenting the initiative in 2020 was more propitious and as argued above, there were practical geopolitical reasons to seek an active diplomatic position. While world leaders were actively calling for a ceasefre between Baku and Yerevan, no groundbreaking diplomatic activity to stop the renewed clashes was taking place. Even Russia, traditionally the biggest external player with military and economic tools to force a compromise on both parties, was noticeably absent from diplomatic activity throughout the frst several weeks. Indeed, if during the 2016 clashes, Moscow had intervened after the fourth day of fghting, in the autumn of 2020 Russia abstained from diplomacy beyond simple diplomatic formulas on the need to stop fghting. Moreover, other players too were at a disadvantageous position. Turkey was supporting Azerbaijan, which excluded the possibility of Ankara playing a mediating role because of Yerevan’s active resistance. Iran’s close ties with Armenia caused concerns in Baku, which from Baku’s perspective, limited Tehran’s chances for active and, what is more important, rather neutral diplomacy. Further afeld from the region, Western leaders seemed Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Georgia and the Second Karabakh War 317 mostly pre-occupied with the internal issues (whether it was the US elections, pandemic-related troubles in the EU, ongoing protests in Belarus, etc.). China’s involvement was limited to diplomatic statements on the need to stop to the fghting. There is also a question of how realistic were the hopes for the collective West and China to be more active in the confict. Neither Armenia nor Azerbaijan were closely linked to Europe or other global players to expect any major outside involvement. Thus, there was a certain diplomatic vacuum Georgia sought to fll. One advantage Georgia possessed over Russia or other regional powers was that it was closer to being a truly neutral actor interested in de-escalation. However, to play an active diplomatic role, hard geopolitical power matters. Georgia’s weight is not as large as is usually necessary for a country to pursue a strong mediating role. Even the experience of larger states proves how futile at times it was to bring both Armenia and Azerbaijan to the negotiating table. For instance, Iran was unable to pursue a successful mediation work between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the 1990s. Even Russia was often unable to strike a balance between the two sides, which often caused criticism in Baku and Yerevan. In the 2020 war, for instance, the Russian mediating role publicly failed at least once as did the West’s half-hearted attempts. Additionally, mutual distrust between Baku and Yerevan was the biggest obstacle. These realities, quite understandably, limited Tbilisi’s chances for a successful mediation. Thus, what Georgia sought was not a grandiose ambition of replacing Russia or other major powers in a major negotiating capacity. Nor did it entertain ideas of being involved in a potential peacekeeping mandate. As Tbilisi’s strategic interests have long been fxed on the safe operation of pipeline and railway infrastructure, Georgia’ overriding interest was to build bridges between Yerevan and Baku, which would lead to de-escalation. Indeed, the July 2020 fghting served as a good example of how a confict could have harmed Georgia’s transit capabilities when the Tovuz region, which borders on a part of Georgia’s south-east border, became an epicenter of active warfare with the potential spill-over effect; second, the large infrastructure (pipelines, a major railway, roads) which runs through the region and connects the Caspian Sea to the Black Sea region also were threatened.39 This showed that the Armenia-Azerbaijani confict, traditionally thought to be focused on/around Nagorno-Karabakh could be played out elsewhere, especially near the Georgian border. Moreover, since Georgia had benefted fnancially as a transit state, more expansive military operations could have directly hit the country’s transit potential and fnances. Conclusion Georgia's political elites view the foreign peacekeeping force in Karabakh with much suspicion because of the country's own experience of hosting Russian troops in the early 1990s. One of the conclusions is that Russian Uploaded by S. M. Safi
318 Emil Avdaliani peacekeeping forces are a good tool for solidifying Moscow's geopolitical positions along its borders. Considering the unwillingness to leave Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the Russian presence in Karabakh is more of long-term than short-term perspective. Though a neighbor to Armenia and Azerbaijan, Georgia has traditionally expressed the least geopolitical interest in being involved in the Nagorno-Karabakh confict. The 2020 war between Baku and Yerevan and the threats emanating from it, however, changed the way Georgia viewed the confict. Challenges ranged from internal to external. The Armenian and Azerbaijani ethnic minorities in Georgia were engaged in various activities to provide direct support for the warring sides. Another novelty in the Georgian approach was an active diplomacy stressing Tbilisi’s potential to play a positive role in alleviating the mutual distrust between Baku and Yerevan and limiting geopolitical threats to regional security. The war also burst into the open Georgia’s geographic dilemma, serving as a quickest way for Armenia and Azerbaijan to receive armaments from abroad. It tested the country’s relations with both neighbors and required a high-level diplomatic maneuvering. More importantly for Georgia are larger, regional-level results of the Second Karabakh War. The emerging Nakhichevan corridor brought about multiple discussions on Georgia’s transit role. Though not directly threatening the country’s regional hub position, the development nevertheless showed the need for further development of the road and railway infrastructure. The Second Karabakh War tested Georgia internally, accentuated the country’s unfavorable position and propelled the military and political establishment to adjust to the changing dynamics in the South Caucasus. Tbilisi will continue abstaining from joining or supporting any of the confronting sides. Even internally Georgia’s major political parties avoided making radical statements. Rather, pronouncements were mostly limited to the general necessity of upholding the peace in the South Caucasus. Nevertheless, a two-pronged threat to Georgia will continue to exist: frst, a potential internal spill-over effect on the local Armenian and Azerbaijani communities, and also the potential threat to Georgia’s southern border, the pipelines and other major transit infrastructure. For Tbilisi there is an undeniable trajectory of the Armenian-Azerbaijani confict showing no future lack of tensions. Over time new challenges will emerge as the region is slowly entering the era of great power competition. Notes 1 Toksabay, Ece. (2020, October 14). “Turkish arms sales to Azerbaijan surged before Nagorno-Karabakh fghting”. https://www.reuters.com/article/armeniaazerbaijan-turkey-arms-int-idUSKBN26Z230 2 Avdaliani, E. (2021, February 21). “Iran in the South Caucasus: Adjustment and evolution”. https://rusi.org/commentary/iran-south-caucasus-adjustmentand-evolution?page=2 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Georgia and the Second Karabakh War 319 3 Seskuria, N. (2020, September 29). “The Nagorno-Karabakh confict and the challenge for Georgia”. RUSI. https://rusi.org/commentary/ nagorno-karabakh-confict-and-challenge-georgia 4 “Armenians And Azeris Live in Harmony in Georgian Village”. (2020, November 11). https://www.rferl.org/a/armenians-and-azerbaijanis-live-in-harmony-in-georgian-village-/30942579.html 5 “Минометы для бомбардировок Товуза выслала Сербия с помощью Грузии”. (2020, July 19). Haqqin.az. https://haqqin.az/news/184175 6 “Azerbaijan’s Aliyev praises Georgia for not allowing arms transit to Armenia”. (2020, September 21). Civil.ge https://civil.ge/archives/369389 7 https://www.interpressnews.ge/ka/article/621643-sakartvelos-erovnuli-usaprtxoebis-sabcho-azerbaijansa-da-somxets-shoris-samxedro-dapirispirebastan-da-shekmnil-vitarebastan-dakavshirebit-gancxadebas-avrcelebs 8 https://www.panarmenian.net/arm/news/287005/ 9 https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/4537733#id1962785 10 Remler, P. (2020, October 20). “Russia’s stony path in the South Caucasus”. https:// carnegieendowment.org/2020/10/20/russia-s-stony-path-in-south-caucasuspub-82993 11 Avdaliani, E. (2020, December). “Russia and the dilemma of separatist territories”. UA: Ukraine Analytica. 4 (22), pp. 28–30. 12 Avdaliani, E. (2020, November 23). “The emerging Nakhichevan corridor”. Caucasus Watch. https://caucasuswatch.de/news/3277.html 13 “Pashinyan, Aliyev and Putin sign agreement to end Karabakh War”. (2020, November 9). https://armenianweekly.com/2020/11/09/pashinyan-aliyev-andputin-sign-agreement-to-end-karabakh-war/ 14 “Turkey’s infrastructure projects, investments total almost $6B in 2020”. (2020, November 12). TRT. https://www.trtworld.com/business/turkey-sinfrastructure-projects-investments-total-almost-6b-in-2020-41399 15 O’Byrne, D. “Turkey to build gas pipeline to supply Nakhchivan”. (2020, June 11). https://eurasianet.org/turkey-to-build-gas-pipeline-to-supply-nakhchivan 16 Anjaparidze, Z. (2021, February 16). “The Second Karabakh War and Georgia’s threatened transit role”. https://jamestown.org/program/the-secondkarabakh-war-and-georgias-threatened-transit-role/ 17 “Will Georgia still build the ambitious Anaklia port? New tender in the works”. (2021, March 5). https://jam-news.net/will-georgia-still-build-the-ambitiousanaklia-port-new-tender-in-the-works/ 18 “Georgian Foreign Minister visits Turkey”. (2021, March 3). Civil.ge. https:// civil.ge/archives/403002 19 Daly, J. (2020, October 5). “Georgia buys Israeli-made air-defense system, unsettlingMoscow”.https://jamesown.org/program/georgia-buys-israeli-made-air-defensesystem-unsettling-moscow/ 20 “Tbilisi Armenians Rally against Mtavari Arkhi TV’s ‘Pro-Azerbaijani’ coverage”. (2020, October 1). Civil.ge. https://civil.ge/archives/372330 21 “მელიქ რაისიანი: ჩვენ სომხეთისა და ყარაბაღის თავისუფლებას ვუჭერთ მხარს”. (2020, September 28). Jnews.ge. https://ka.jnews.ge/?p=8082 22 Ayvazyan, A. (2020, October 1). “How the escalation in Karabakh has affected Armenians living in Georgia”. Jamnews. https://jam-news.net/georgiajavakheti-saakashvili-armenia-azerbaijan-karabakh-war/ 23 “Ethnic Azeri MPs of Georgian Parliament Back Baku amid Karabakh Clashes”. (2020, September 29). Civil.ge. https://civil.ge/archives/371145 24 “Armenian Embassy to Georgia rejects internet allegations that Georgia hindering fuel, humanitarian aid imports to Armenia”. (2020, October 6). Agenda. ge. https://agenda.ge/en/news/2020/3111 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
320 Emil Avdaliani 25 “Georgian-Turkish border crossing blocked last night”. (2020, September 30). OC-Media. https://oc-media.org/live-updates-stepanakert-reportedly-hit-fromthe-air-as-fourth-day-of-fghting-begins/ 26 “რის გამო გადაკეტეს ჯავახეთში საქართველო-თურქეთის გზა”. (2020, September 30). https://netgazeti.ge/news/485898/ 27 “რატომ გადაკეტეს გზა კარწახის საბაჟოსთან – ადგილობრივების განმარტებები”. (2020, September 30). http://sknews.ge/ka/old/29535 28 “Disinformation related to Georgia’s position on Karabakh confict in Armenian and Azerbaijani Media”. (2020, October 6). https://idf.ge/en/disinformation -karabakh_confict 29 “Investigation launched into damaged fber-optic cables that supplied Georgia, Armenia with internet”. (2020, October 2). Agenda. https://agenda.ge/en/ news/2020/3067 30 Ayvazyan, A. (2020, October 1). “How the escalation in Karaakh has affected Armenians living in Georgia”. Jamnews. https://jam-news.net/georgia-javakheti -saakashvili-armenia-azerbaijan-karabakh-war/ 31 “In Quotes: Georgian politicians on Nagorno-Karabakh developments”. (2020, October 29). Civil.ge. https://civil.ge/archives/371383 32 “In Quotes: Georgian politicians on Nagorno-Karabakh developments”. (2020, October 29). Civil.ge. https://civil.ge/archives/371383 33 https://medium.com/dfrlab/pro-kremlin-actors-cast-doubt-on-georgias-neutrality-in-nagorno-karabakh-confict-1b7c57ac557d 34 “Disinformation related to Georgia’s position on Karabakh Confict in Armenian and Azerbaijani media”. (2020, October 6). https://idf.ge/en/ disinformation-karabakh_confict 35 Scrivener, A. (2020, October 22). “COLCHIS: Georgia’s Karabakh conundrum”. https://intellinews.com/colchis-georgia-s-karabakh-conundrum-194771/ 36 Lomsadze, G. (2020, October 6). “Armenia and Azerbaijan to Georgian mediation: Thanks, but no thanks”. Eurasianet. https://eurasianet.org/armeniaand-azerbaijan-to-georgian-mediation-thanks-but-no-thanks 37 “National Security Council of Georgia releases statement on military confrontation between Azerbaijan and Armenia”. (2020, October 3). Interpressnews. https:// www.interpressnews.ge/en/article/109509-national-security-council-of-georgiareleases-statement-on-military-confrontation-between-azerbaijan-andarmenia/ 38 როლი ყარაბაღის კონფლიქტში” (2016, May 6). http://reporter.ge/%E1%83% A1%E1%83%90%E1%83%A5%E1%83%90%E1%83%A0%E1%83%97%E1%83% 95%E1%83%94%E1%83%9A%E1%83%9D%E1%83%A1-%E1%83%A0%E1%83 %9D%E1%83%9A%E1%83%98-%E1%83%A7%E1%83%90%E1%83%A0%E1%83 %90%E1%83%91%E1%83%90%E1%83%A6/. 39 Avdaliani, E. (2020, November 13). “Turkey’s win-win strategy in the Nagorno-Karabakh confict”. BESA. https://besacenter.org/perspectives-papers/ turkey-nagorno-karabakh-strategy/. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
14 The Role of the United States in the Armenia–Azerbaijan Confict Esmira Jafarova Introduction The Armenia–Azerbaijan confict was among the most intractable ones in the post-Soviet space. The continuation of the confict, which lingered on for about three decades, was assisted by the international community, specifcally, the OSCE Minsk Group. As one of the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group and a global superpower, the role of the U.S.A. in the Armenia– Azerbaijan confict deserves academic attention. This chapter aims to delve into this particular issue. In an attempt to highlight the U.S. role in the confict, the chapter will cover the early years of U.S. engagement with the South Caucasus, its interest in the energy and geopolitics of the region, lobby politics, as well as subsequent U.S. disengagement and its low-key political profle in confict resolution. The chapter will also suggest that the role of the U.S.A. in the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict may not have been as conspicuous as those of the regional players, who have more invested interests in regional affairs. Having looked into these and other relevant factors, including the role of the U.S.A. in the 44-day Karabakh War, the chapter will draw conclusions in this regard. Specifcally, it will conclude that, having conceded the political role in delivering a fnal resolution to the confict to the warring parties themselves, as well as to regional players such as Russia and Turkey, the U.S.A. might from now on be more engaged in post-confict rehabilitation in the liberated Azerbaijani territories and in supporting long-term peace and cooperation initiatives in the South Caucasus. Discovering the Region The U.S.A., as an external player, was introduced to the three republics only after the disintegration of the Soviet Union and became one of the very frst states to recognize their independence. However, the realization of the region’s peculiarities did not happen immediately as the U.S.A. followed a one-size-fts-all type of policy toward all of the former Soviet republics, including Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia (Rumer, Sokolsky, DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-19 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
322 Esmira Jafarova and Stronski 2017). Recalibration of the defnitive U.S. strategy toward the South Caucasus took some time to happen. The early 1990s, therefore, did not witness a high profle of the U.S.A. in the region, but were remembered as a period of efforts to understand the region and its relevance in strategic, economic, and security terms. Moreover, it is also assumed that organizational problems in the U.S. administration in the early years of dealing with the region added up to confusion about how best to address this part of the world. In 1992–1996, relevant topics in regard to the newly independent states were said to be tackled by different governmental structures (Kasim 2012, 232). It was only after gradually garnering awareness of the South Caucasus that the U.S.A. formed its own—although still often inconsistent—policy attitude that enabled it to secure infuence on a variety of matters of strategic and economic importance. One way of engaging with the states of the South Caucasus was through assistance to the state-building efforts of the region’s states, the promotion of democracy, and the facilitation of their integration into the community of Western states, objectives that were set as the factors that would strengthen the South Caucasus republics’ independence. To this end, the U.S.A. strongly backed these states’ inclusion in the NATO Partnership for Peace (PfP) program in 1994 and contributed economic and other kinds of aid to the republics (Jafarova 2015, 106). When it came to the conficts plaguing the region, and specifcally the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict, the U.S.A., although overtly supporting the territorial integrity and sovereignty of all regional states, did not, however, assume a high-profle in actually facilitating the achievement of a fnal resolution. This role was mostly left for the OSCE Minsk Group, regional powers, and the conficting parties themselves. Engaging with the Region: Energy and Geopolitics The volte face in the U.S.’s attitude toward the South Caucasus happened with the signing of the “Contract of the Century” in 1994 and the opening of the Caspian oil and gas resources for international exploration that underscored the importance of the South Caucasus as an energy-rich region. The exploitation of the Caspian hydrocarbon resources had to provide alternative sources and routes for energy and contribute to the diversifcation of Europe’s energy needs. It was through this very logic that the U.S.A. extended its full and unequivocal support to the development of long-term cooperation in the energy feld in the region, and with Azerbaijan in particular. The U.S.A. backed the construction of the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan oil pipeline, which, at the time, was politically motivated and fnancially more expensive compared with other alternatives, including if the main export pipeline transited through Russian territory. The Baku– Tbilisi–Ceyhan oil pipeline became operational in 2005 and proved to be Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Role of the United States in the Confict 323 an important milestone in securing the region’s stance as an energy hub capable of providing alternative sources and routes for energy. In the same vein, the U.S.A. also supported the construction of the Baku– Tbilisi–Erzurum gas pipeline, as well as the Southern Gas Corridor that, besides consolidating Azerbaijan’s role as an exporter not only of oil, but also of natural gas, also added to the efforts for the diversifcation of sources and routes of energy for Europe. The Southern Gas Corridor, which was completed on December 31, 2020, contributes greatly to the decarbonization efforts of the continent and will contribute to the energy security of Italy as well as countries in southeastern Europe. Through the SGC, Azerbaijan will also assist in the continent’s efforts to decrease carbon emissions. The support extended by the U.S.A. to the SGC during the initiation and entire duration of the construction process was instrumental to make this multimillion-dollar project happen. The U.S. interest in supporting the region’s increasing profle as an energy producer was also conditioned by the commercial interests of the U.S. companies to do business in this new region, full of opportunities. Beyond economic considerations, however, the South Caucasus is also attractive in a strategic sense. The region, at the crossroads of Europe and Asia, borders Russia, Iran, and a NATO member, Turkey, and is also a vital transit location to access Central Asia’s vast hydrocarbon resources. In his address on July 21, 1997, Strobe Talbot depicted the Caspian area as a “strategically vital” region that has to become part of the EuroAtlantic Community, and which the U.S.A. could no longer neglect (Nation 2007, 10). As Cornell (2005, 115) also put it: “Its [read: South Caucasus] proximity to Russia, Iran and the Middle East is the primary facet of this importance.” The strategic value of the South Caucasus became more apparent after the tragic terrorist acts of 9/11 that spurred U.S. actions in Afghanistan, Iraq, and the further Middle East. Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Georgia supported the U.S. “war on terror,” providing troops and aligning with the allied coalition operations in Iraq and Afghanistan (Nichol 2010). The South Caucasus region started to gain more attention on the foreign policy agenda of the U.S.A., with occasional inconsistencies in the policy approach nevertheless still persisting. Azerbaijani relations with the U.S.A. therefore thrived over the years, with cooperation on energy issues constituting the core of bilateral relations. As was noted above, U.S. support was indispensable in building the Baku– Tbilisi–Ceyhan oil pipeline and in the coming into being of the Southern Gas Corridor. This support attests to the importance the U.S.A. attaches to Azerbaijan’s potential to offer diversifcation of sources and routes of hydrocarbon resources that would reduce dependence on a single source of energy. Energy diplomacy was therefore an important component of U.S. engagement with Azerbaijan. The U.S. support to energy projects stemming from Azerbaijan also aimed at supporting the establishment of an east-west corridor through which access to the region’s oil and gas resources for the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
324 Esmira Jafarova West would be ensured. Beyond economic factors, it is also known that Azerbaijan’s strategic location at the crossroads of Europe and Asia, as well as its geographic proximity to Iran, also conditioned continuing U.S. interest in the country. However, when it came to Iran’s role in the transportation of the region’s energy resources, the U.S. position was rather rigid in not welcoming Iran’s participation (Kasim 2012, 232). Although it may have seemed that the U.S. policy toward the region changed after the 2008 August War in Georgia, in reality, the policy of the U.S.A. in regard to the South Caucasus was mostly described as “managing the status-quo rather than seeking breakthroughs or launching new initiatives.” The bold diplomatic initiative of the U.S.A. to normalize relations between Armenia and Turkey did not bear fruit and the U.S. focus afterwards lay in prevention of a new confict in the region (Rumer, Sokolsky, and Stronski 2017). This issue will be discussed later in the chapter. Lobby politics and U.S. Relations with Azerbaijan It appears in retrospect that, concerning the business interests of all three republics of the South Caucasus, those of Azerbaijan should have attracted more attention from the U.S.A. Although one would expect the U.S.A. to express unequivocal and stronger support to Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity,1 which would inevitably strengthen the relations between the two countries, their relations remained bumpy owing to the introduction in 1992 of Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act (FSA) (“Statement on Signing the FREEDOM Support Act” 1992)2 by pro-Armenian lobby groups in the U.S. Congress. The U.S. policy toward Azerbaijan fell victim to its own domestic constraints. Because of this clause, Azerbaijan was deprived of all kinds of assistance, including military, that all other post-Soviet countries received from the U.S.A. The purpose of Section 907 was said to be to exert punitive measures against Azerbaijan unless it was “taking demonstrable steps to cease all blockades and other offensive uses of force against Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh” (“Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act [Public Law 102–511]” 1992), although in reality it was Azerbaijan that suffered from the occupation of about 20% of its territories. Both Armenia and Georgia were receiving substantial U.S. fnancial aid through the Freedom Support Act, while Azerbaijan was the only country, that perhaps was most in need of assistance due to the devastating socio-economic consequences of the war with Armenia, to be stripped of this opportunity due to the pressure from the Armenian diaspora. Azerbaijan’s objections notwithstanding, this amendment, which epitomized the unjust sanctions policy of the U.S.A. against Azerbaijan, remained in force up until 2001, when the U.S. Senate fnally adopted a waiver of the section in view of Azerbaijan’s unwavering support to the U.S. war on terror and the country’s strategic signifcance Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Role of the United States in the Confict 325 against the backdrop of the U.S. anti-terror operations in Afghanistan (Nichol 2010, 17).3 Azerbaijan also made military contributions to operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. Section 907 still remains in force; however, since 2001 it has been waived annually. In addition to Section 907, the U.S.A. continued to remain disengaged from the actual issues plaguing Azerbaijan since its early independence, including, as mentioned before, the fact of the occupation of its territories. Related developments included Washington’s backing of the Turkish–Armenian protocols on rapprochement in 2009 and its insistence on decoupling this process from the Nagorno-Karabakh issue; problems with the appointment of Ambassador Matthew Bryza as the U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan in 20114 after a long hiatus with no U.S. Ambassador in the country; and confrontational political rhetoric between the two countries during the Obama administration over issues relating to human rights and civil society, which ushered in further disengagement from the region and Azerbaijan. All attest to the inconsistencies of U.S. policy toward Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan did not hide its disappointment with such vicissitudes of U.S. policy. The U.S. disengagement policy also continued well into Trump presidency. This will be discussed further below. First Karabakh War and U.S. Policy toward the Armenia–Azerbaijan Confict When Azerbaijan and Armenia became independent from the Soviet Union in 1991, their independence did not mark the beginning of peaceful and prosperous relations in the South Caucasus. A tinderbox of confict erupted between the two states and the First Karabakh War resulted in the occupation of the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven adjacent regions of Azerbaijan by Armenia, while the four UN Security Council resolutions (822, 853, 874, 884) demanding the liberation of the occupied Azerbaijani territories were ignored for the entire duration of the confict. During the war, hundreds of thousands of ethnic Azerbaijanis were displaced from the region and tens of thousands on both sides died. The negotiation process between Armenia and Azerbaijan continued for almost three decades following the establishment of the OSCE Minsk Group in 1992 (“Statement by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair Countries” 2009). The Minsk Group, co-chaired by the U.S.A., France, and Russia, explored many avenues to fnd a solution to the confict. However, the confict remained intractable and did not lend itself to a peaceful solution through diplomacy and good offces. In the early years, the U.S.A. did not demonstrate any high profle in regard to the confict. According to some estimations, the U.S.A. was not only not cautious toward Russia’s role in the former Soviet space, but also fostered hopes that Russia might be successful in the pursuance of its Atlanticist policy that would eventually bring Russia closer to the West. This thinking did Uploaded by S. M. Safi
326 Esmira Jafarova not bring higher U.S. engagement in confict resolution, and it remained confned to its role within the OSCE Minsk Group (Kasim 2012, 233). The U.S. policy toward confict resolution in the region has been pretty straightforward, but also a balancing act between the interests of the conficting parties themselves, Armenia and Azerbaijan, and those of the regional powers, especially Russia. The U.S.A. has always been vocal in backing the territorial integrity of all the region’s states, although the expression of this support has taken different forms. In the case of the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict, although the U.S.A. has continually expressed its support for Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, including through various documents,5 the infuence of large Armenian lobby groups on Congress and other state institutions has constrained stronger U.S. support for Azerbaijan’s cause for its territorial integrity. This in fact meant that, as one of the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, the U.S.A., although always supportive of the peaceful resolution of the confict, still emphasized that the solution had to be forged by the parties themselves. This, in turn, entailed equivalizing the victim and the occupier, and turning a blind eye to the fact of the occupation of Azerbaijani territories. Over the years, the expression of the U.S. position on the solution of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict has usually happened along the following lines: The United States supports the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and holds that the future status of Nagorno-Karabakh is a matter of negotiation between the parties with the aim of achieving a lasting and comprehensive political resolution of the confict. The United States remains committed to fnding a peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict through the Minsk Group process. (Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs 2008) This position remained unchanged through the years the peace process was happening under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk Group. This language never entailed any punitive measures or sanctions against Armenia, which kept about 20% of Azerbaijani territories under occupation for three decades. On the contrary, as noted above, the imposition of Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act in the early 1990s under pressure from Armenian lobby groups further aggravated Azerbaijan’s predicament, having deprived the country of an important share of U.S. support in the face of all of the challenges caused by the fact of the occupation of its territories. However, after the commencement of the annual waiver in 2001, there were also some U.S. policies that were directed at mitigating the consequences resulting from the imposition of Section 907, including demining assistance and separate capacity-building assistance to Azerbaijan for border and maritime security (Welt and Bowen 2021, 20). Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Role of the United States in the Confict 327 Initiatives However, there were also some initiatives introduced by the U.S.A. to systematize the negotiation process. “The Baker rules” that established the format of negotiations and defned Azerbaijan and Armenia as the main negotiating parties and the Armenian and Azerbaijani communities of the Nagorno-Karabakh region as the interested parties formed perhaps the most signifcant attempt by the U.S.A. thus far to infuence the Nagorno-Karabakh confict resolution process (Kasim 2012, 235). In 1992, an American analyst and expert on Russia, Paul Goble, proposed what was later recognized as the “Goble plan” that entailed the territorial exchange formula: transferring to Armenia parts of the Nagorno-Karabakh region, including the Lachin corridor, in exchange for transferring the Mehri corridor to Azerbaijan, which would eventually link Azerbaijan’s main territory with the Nakhchivan exclave. The plan, which was laid out in Goble’s article “Coping with the Nagorno-Karabakh Crisis” that was published in 1992, stated: Consequently, the various participants need to begin to consider the possibility of a territorial swap including the following concessions: sending part of the NKAO to Armenia, with the area controlling the headwaters of the river fowing to Baku and areas of Azerbaijani population remaining in Azerbaijani hands; and transferring the Armenian-controlled land bridge between Azerbaijan and Nakhichevan to Azerbaijani control. (Goble 1992) This plan, supported by then President George H. W. Bush, was however rejected by both parties to the confict (Naumkin 2020). In the mid-1990s, former U.S. representative to the CSCE Minsk Group Ambassador John Maresca proposed his vision for the resolution of the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict. In his work titled “Lost Opportunities in Negotiating the Confict over Nagorno-Karabakh,” Maresca underscored his ideas related to the resolution of the confict and proposed that the U.S.A. play an “important support role for a peacekeeping operation, and might have a few civilian advisers somewhere in its structure.” He also noted that the U.S.A. should take the role of a “major mediator, encourager and facilitator of a solution” while maintaining impartiality. The appointment of a Special U.S. Envoy with access to the higher decision-making echelons in Washington, Moscow, and the regional capitals, was proposed to be benefcial to all sides. Maresca’s vision, however, was not accepted (Maresca 1996, 497). During the beginning of the energy projects in the region, one of the possible routes was via the territory of Armenia. The U.S.A. called this route a “peace pipeline.” However, the acceptance of this route was not possible due Uploaded by S. M. Safi
328 Esmira Jafarova to Azerbaijan’s rejection. In 1997, the U.S.A., as one of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs, participated in the formulation of the three proposals (known as the package solution, step-by-step solution, or common state solution)6 that envisaged different solutions to the confict. None of these proposals were, however, accepted by either conficting party. Direct Meetings Following the failure of the OSCE Minsk Group proposals, the U.S.A. engaged in fostering direct meetings and negotiations between the parties. One of the landmark events in this regard became the meeting in Key West, Florida, in 2001 between the late President of Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev, and Robert Kocharyan through the facilitation of President George W. Bush. However, despite the expectations, the meeting failed to produce any tangible result in terms of confict resolution. After the failure of three OSCE Minsk Group proposals and the meeting in Key West, the U.S.A., as one of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs, facilitated more direct talks between the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia. The “Prague process,” launched in 2004, envisaged direct and regular contacts between the foreign ministers of the conficting parties. Regular direct talks between the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia with the facilitation of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs led to drafting of the so-called “basic principles” for further negotiation during the presidential meeting in Kazan in 2005 (“Nagorno-Karabakh: Risking War” 2007, 2). These “basic principles” were later refned and presented as the “Madrid Principles” that contained a roadmap to the peaceful resolution of the confict. The principles called for the withdrawal of Armenian forces from the occupied districts adjacent to the Nagorno-Karabakh region (with special modalities for the Lachin and Kelbajar districts); opening of transport and other communications; and resumption of trade relations, while establishing an interim international security arrangement for the Nagorno-Karabakh region until a vote on its status could take place (“Nagorno-Karabakh: Risking War” 2007; “Armenia and Azerbaijan: A Season of Risks” 2013). However, disagreements still remained, including over the modalities of a “referendum” or “population vote” for defning the future legal status of the region (“Nagorno-Karabakh: Risking War” 2007, 5).7 In July 2009, the U.S.A., along with the other Minsk Group Co-Chairs, having met on the margins of the G-8 Summit in L’Aquila, issued a joint statement expressing support to the previously agreed formulas for the resolution of the confict (“Statement by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair Countries” 2009). Turkey–Armenia Protocols and U.S. Disengagement In 2009, the U.S.A. initiated the process of Turkey–Armenia rapprochement in circumvention of the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict. Turkey had closed Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Role of the United States in the Confict 329 its borders with Armenia in 1993 in retaliation for Armenia’s occupation of Azerbaijani territories. The U.S.A. wanted Ankara to ratify protocols on normalizing Turkish–Armenian relations by detaching this issue from the progress toward a solution of the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict. Supporting Turkish–Armenian normalization without due consideration to Azerbaijan’s concerns over its territorial integrity caused resentment and estrangement in Azerbaijan. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said: There is a common understanding in the region that there should be a frst step by Armenia to start the liberation of the occupied territories… If the two issues are disconnected, then probably Armenia will freeze negotiations with Azerbaijan (over Nagorno Karabakh). (Champion, Walker, and Fidler 2010) Turkey–Armenia rapprochement did not happen, however; the U.S.’s attempt to achieve normalization between the two while remaining deaf to Azerbaijan’s predicament in fact showed that even the U.S.’s business and economic interest in Azerbaijan did not deliver the stronger support by that country to Azerbaijan’s position in the confict. Moreover, the U.S.A. did not welcome Azerbaijan’s stance on the Turkish– Armenian protocols. Instead of exerting at least some pressure on Armenia to return Azerbaijan’s occupied territories, the U.S.A. opted for shifting the blame onto Azerbaijan and, in April 2010, President Ilham Aliyev was not invited to the Nuclear Summit in Washington D.C., whereas the President of Armenia, Serj Sarkissian, participated in the event (Socor 2010). Relations between the two countries were not at their best following these developments. However, the visit of U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to Azerbaijan in July 2010, was a signifcant move to mend the frayed relations between the U.S.A. and Azerbaijan (“Ilham Aliyev Received U.S. State Secretary Hillary Clinton” 2010). As was noted before, the U.S.A. mostly self-limited its role to that of being one of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs. The only time the U.S.A. acted as a sole mediator between the parties was the Key West meeting of April 2001, which, as noted above, was unsuccessful. Against all odds, voices also began to be heard in U.S. political thought about attaching more priority to Azerbaijan, given its increasing role as a staunch U.S. ally in the region. In this regard, calls for increased U.S. attention to the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict were also made. Stephen Blank noted that: The Karabakh problem, which the Armenian lobby has successfully exploited in the US Congress, prevents the U.S. from gaining the full value of Azerbaijan's pro-western stance. Because of this Karabakh negatively affects coalition effectiveness in Iraq and further afeld…. As long as it remains unresolved, the Karabakh problem perpetuates the South Uploaded by S. M. Safi
330 Esmira Jafarova Caucasus' stratus as a major center for organized crime, drug traffcking, and corruption. It directly undermines reform, regional trade, and economic and social development across the South Caucasus, rendering the region a fragile partner in the war against terrorism. A frm U.S. stance on the Karabakh issue will send a clear message to both Iran and Russia that their freedom to foment trouble in the South Caucasus is at an end. (Starr 2004) Nevertheless, such epiphanies did not result in a stronger U.S. role in the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict or more support to Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. After the failure of the Turkish–Armenian protocols, the U.S.A. pursued a policy of disengagement from the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict, which continued throughout the Obama Administration, the foreign policy focus of which lay in dealing with other priority issues such as Afghanistan, Iraq, the Middle East peace process, the Iran nuclear deal, etc. Despite initial expectations, prioritization of confict resolution between Armenia and Azerbaijan did not happen during the Obama administration. Quite the contrary: the U.S. Congress’ direct aid to the Nagorno-Karabakh region, while keeping Section 907 against Azerbaijan in force, also became another source of estrangement for Azerbaijan (Ambrosio 2011, 17). Some scholars also concur that the U.S.A. had little to no interest in the region, nor did it have any policy for dealing with the security challenges therein. An evaluation of potential security challenges in the region performed in 2013 described the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict as a “thirdtier” confict and therefore dealing with it did not constitute a priority for the U.S.A. This position implied that, should a renewed confict erupt in Nagorno-Karabakh, this would have had only a modicum of effect on U.S. interests. This approach to the confict remained unchanged throughout 2014 and 2015 (Blank 2015, 100). This lack of interest, in fact, indicated that the most important issue for Azerbaijan—its territorial integrity—had little strategic value for the U.S.A. The perception that the U.S.A. should not assume a higher profle in confict resolution in the Caucasus and Central Asia, thereby leaving the leading role to Russia in this regard, dominated strategic thinking among those U.S. offcials shaping the country’s policy toward Eurasia (Blank 2015, 100). This conscious disengagement from the pressing issues in the South Caucasus once again demonstrated that the Obama Administration pursued a “selective commitment” to this or other regions based on its priorities. The war in Afghanistan and a “reset” policy with Russia in the aftermath of the 2008 August War also certainly contributed to this policy. Fatigue with foreign interventions, fnancial concerns, and tardy recovery from the effects of the global fnancial crisis were among the many factors that further consolidated estrangement from Eurasian affairs. As a result of this disinterest in the security predicament of the South Caucasus, the U.S.A. accentuated its role as merely one of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Role of the United States in the Confict 331 with the latter entity facing frequent criticism from Azerbaijan for doing an ineffective job (Blank 2015, 104). More than once, Azerbaijan attempted to broach the issue with the United Nations in an effort to push the Minsk Group toward doing a better job than simply maintaining the status quo. In April 2016, in the aftermath of the Four-day War, the U.S. position was also rather standard, merely sticking to the pre-existing clichés of the negotiation process under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk Group. At his press conference on the occasion of the completion of his duties as an interim U.S. Co-Chair of the Minsk Group, Richard Hoagland outlined the principles for confict resolution adhered to by the U.S.A., which basically were the same “basic principles” negotiated within the Minsk Group (Asbarez 2017). Although his comments were at some point portrayed by the Armenian side as supportive of Azerbaijan (Sanamyan 2017), this once again testifed to the common knowledge that the U.S.A. did not consider any role for itself in confict resolution other than that of one of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs. Misperception of the strategic importance of the South Caucasus region, as well as misrepresentation of the potential explosiveness of the lingering conficts therein, including frst and foremost the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict, proved to be a fatal miscalculation. The four-day April War in 2016 and the 44-day Karabakh War in 2020 became the violent coda to the decades-long, lingering confict. This passive approach to the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict continued during the Trump Administration, which mostly pursued a policy of U.S. retrenchment around the world, with the Middle East possibly being the only example where the Trump Administration sought to focus more. However, despite the clear U.S. low profle regarding the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict, the former’s position was also solid in regard to the non-recognition of the illegal regime in the Nagorno-Karabakh region. Assurances in this regard were again delivered in 2020 after the adoption of a resolution by the Minnesota State Senate on the “recognition” of the illegal regime created in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan. The U.S. State Department said in its statement that: US policy has not changed. The United States does not recognize Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent and sovereign state. As a co-chair country of the OSCE Minsk Group, the United States remains strongly committed to helping the sides achieve a lasting peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict that is based on Helsinki Final Act principles of non-use or threat of force, territorial integrity, and equal rights and self-determination of peoples, and will remain fully engaged in the efforts of the Minsk Group to achieve this goal. (Zeynalova 2020) Some authors have suggested that the U.S. disengagement from actively dealing with the issues of the region is related to the fact that the “U.S.A. has Uploaded by S. M. Safi
332 Esmira Jafarova important security and economic interests in the South Caucasus; however, none of them is vital.” While also acknowledging that the “United States has important interests in the South Caucasus… success will depend on careful balancing of U.S. interests and resources… [a] great deal of patience, and acceptance that change will be evolutionary rather than revolutionary” (Rumer, Sokolsky, and Stronski 2017). Realizing the perils of continued U.S. disengagement from the security affairs of this strategically important region, pundits and practitioners in the feld increasingly started to advocate for a more hands-on approach by the U.S.A. As the former Ambassador to Azerbaijan, Robert Cekuta, noted: …Acting to address the protracted confict in Nagorno-Karabakh would promote peace and stability in the Greater Caspian Region, i.e., in Central Asia as well as in the South Caucasus. It would be in the national interest of the United States as set out in the Trump Administration’s own strategy statements... (Cekuta 2020) Another U.S. expert on the region, Stephen Blank, underscored that the U.S.A. has to realize the importance of resolving the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict, since the next violence in the region could threaten important European energy infrastructure and regional security. He therefore argued that “Washington must renounce its policy of moralistic disengagement and come to grip with realities” (Blank 2014). It is clear that there was also an acknowledgement in the scholarly community that “the U.S.A. remains diplomatically disengaged from the region, weakening its position and limiting its ability to make real headway in dealing with this ongoing confict” (Breedlove 2020). 44-day-Karabakh War and the U.S.A. The 44-day Karabakh War between Armenia and Azerbaijan that lasted 44 days from September 27 to November 10, 2020, changed the entrenched realities on the ground. The inability of the international community under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk Group to facilitate a fnal resolution to the confict through peace negotiations had led to the next outbreak of military hostilities. One could assert that this war happened owing to the unconstructive position and denialism, across the entire duration of the peace process, of the leadership of Armenia who fouted four UN Security Council resolutions (822, 853, 974, and 884) calling for the de-occupation of Azerbaijani territories. Armenia’s unconstructive position on the confict was further exacerbated after Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan came to power following the change of government in 2018. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Role of the United States in the Confict 333 Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan embraced an ever-stronger militaristic rhetoric. At a rally in occupied Khankendi he declared that “Karabakh is Armenia and period” (Jafarova 2020a), initiated the revival of a dangerous miatsum (unifcation) ideology (Kucera 2019) in regard to the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan as well as the organization of so-called “parliamentary and presidential elections” in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan; and visited the historic Azerbaijani city of Shusha in May 2020 to conduct a so-called “inauguration” ceremony for the illegal regime established therein. These actions, doubtlessly also inspired by Armenian (now former) Defense Minister David Tonoyan’s vow in early 2019 to wage “new wars for new territories” (Abrahamyan 2019), became more dangerous with the attack against the Tovuz district of Azerbaijan in July 2020, the increase of illegal settlements in Azerbaijan’s occupied territories, and the rejection of the Madrid Principles that demanded the return of the occupied territories to Azerbaijan—principles that had been endorsed by both parties and the Co-Chairs (World Today News 2020). The U.S. position of disengagement from the confict continued during the 44-dayKarabakh War. In addition to the U.S. disengagement from the South Caucasus, the war itself also coincided with the presidential race in the U.S.A. as well as the country’s struggle to curb and deal with the consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic that had plagued the world since late 2019. This distracted the U.S.A. even more from international affairs including, obviously, what was happening between Armenia and Azerbaijan. On September 27, 2020, the U.S. State Department “expressed alarm at reports of large-scale military action along the Line of Contact and condemned in the strongest terms this escalation of violence.” In response to the outbreak of violence, many members of Congress issued statements. On October 1, the U.S.A., alongside Russia and France, made a trilateral statement that urged the “immediate cessation of hostilities between relevant military forces” and called on the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan “to commit without delay to resuming substantive negotiations, in good faith and without preconditions” (Welt and Bowen 2021, 17). Subsequent statements made by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs on the ongoing war were along similar lines. On October 23, 2020, after a long hiatus, the U.S.A. stepped up once again to initiate a direct meeting between the warring parties in search of a ceasefre. The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan met in Washington with mediation by U.S. Secretary of State Michael Pompeo. By then, there had already been a meeting in Moscow that agreed on a humanitarian ceasefre, but that was immediately violated by Armenia, which attacked Ganja with deadly missiles (Jafarova 2020b). On October 18, 2020, another ceasefre was agreed—and also violated immediately. At the end of the meeting in Washington, a trilateral joint statement was issued, which stated that the “United States facilitated intensive negotiations … to move Armenia and Azerbaijan closer to a peaceful resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict.” President Trump also congratulated the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
334 Esmira Jafarova conficting parties on the U.S.-brokered ceasefre (Welt and Bowen 2021, 17). However, this ceasefre also did not last as the parties went into a full-scale confict in the aftermath. The signing of an agreement on November 10, 2020, with the mediation of the Russian Federation, fnally ended the military hostilities. The agreement envisaged the full de-occupation of Azerbaijani territories and outlined the contours of peaceful co-existence in the South Caucasus. In response to the November agreement, Secretary of State Pompeo noted that “ending the recent fghting is only a frst step toward achieving a peaceful negotiated settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh confict.” His statement also said that the U.S.A. plans to extend $5 million to the affected population in the aftermath of the war (Welt and Bowen 2021, 18). Overall, the position expressed and the messages delivered by the Trump Administration in regard to the military hostilities during the 44-day Karabakh War were again more or less along the classical position maintained by the U.S.A. throughout the entire duration of the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict. The statement made by the then presidential candidate Joe Biden regarding the military hostilities was also rather blunt in indicating the U.S.’s passivity during the war: Inexplicably, the Trump Administration has been largely passive, and disengaged, throughout this recent period of escalation. Since the outbreak of hostilities on September 27, neither President Trump not Secretary of State Pompeo has placed a single phone call to the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan, even as the region goes up in fames. Rather than delegating the diplomacy to Moscow, the administration must get more involved, at the highest levels, by working with our European partners to de-escalate the fghting and return the two sides to negotiations. (“Nagorno-Karabakh—Statement by Vice President Joe Biden” 2020) Now that the war is over, the region’s countries are anticipating new realities that will enable them to turn the dark pages of their shared history and move forward. The November 10 Agreement contained nine important provisions and, besides ending the hostilities, envisaged the de-occupation of all remaining territories of Azerbaijan (Aghdam, Lachin, and Kelbajar) and the deployment of a peacekeeping contingent from the Russian Federation, in parallel with the Armenian armed forces’ withdrawal (Article 4) and the opening of all economic and transport communications in the region (Article 9). The Joint Peacekeeping Monitoring Center that was established by the agreement involves equal numbers of military servicemen from Russia and Turkey, which started monitoring operations using drones on January 30, 2021. For the frst time since the dissolution of the U.S.S.R., NATO member Turkey assumed a greater role in the management of the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict, with boots on the ground, that many Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Role of the United States in the Confict 335 envisage having a stabilizing and balancing effect on the overall security architecture of the South Caucasus. The parties have already met, in January and February 2021 in Moscow, to initiate the opening of all transport (railways and roads through the Zangezur corridor) and economic communications in the region, and work is in progress in this regard. Azerbaijan has vowed to rebuild from scratch all of the liberated lands and cooperate with companies from friendly countries for this purpose. In his recent meeting with the Minister of Economy of Azerbaijan, Mikayil Jabbarov, in January 2021, the U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan, Earle Litzenberger, said that the U.S. companies were also ready to participate in the restoration of the liberated territories of Azerbaijan (APA News Agency 2021). However, the vortex of lobby politics that resulted in the adoption of the infamous Section 907 against Azerbaijan immediately waded in to blame the Ambassador for taking sides; a statement released by the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) stated that the Ambassador should explain “whether he is in fact pushing U.S. investments in areas of Artsakh seized by Azerbaijan” (Asbarez 2021). It seems that U.S. policy and its efforts may, even in the post-confict rehabilitation period, once again fall victim to its own lobby politics. We will simply have to wait and see. In conclusion, the U.S.A. did not have a strong political role in the fnal resolution of the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict and suffced itself with a self-restricted role as one of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs. This also explained the U.S. stance during the 44-day Karabakh War. The U.S. approach toward and position on the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict could be therefore be summarized in the following way: (1) support to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of both Armenia and Azerbaijan, but emphasis on resolving the confict by the parties themselves via dialog and negotiations; (2) U.S. role mostly within the OSCE Minsk Group format; (3) a balance between the interests of an important economic partner, Azerbaijan, and lobby politics that skewed in Armenia’s favor; and (4) a geopolitical determinant, deference to the leading role of regional powers in the resolution of the confict. The combined effect of all the above factors was to deliver a low-key and often inconsistent U.S. policy toward the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict that, having been left unattended for about three decades, erupted into and found a resolution through new bloodshed. Conclusion This chapter has tried to highlight the U.S. role in the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict. In order to do so, the chapter frst examined the early U.S. engagement with the region, its role in confict resolution after the First Karabakh War, and its position during the 44-day Karabakh War. Although economic (energy) and geopolitical determinants widely shaped the U.S. attitude to the South Caucasus and the region’s signifcance for the U.S.A. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
336 Esmira Jafarova leaped after the 9/11 tragedy, the U.S.A. still opted to maintain a low profle when it came to dealing with the most intractable confict in the region, that between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Despite the region’s growing importance, the U.S.’s policy toward confict resolution was mostly inconsistent and often left the initiative for confict resolution to third parties. Regardless of Azerbaijan’s growing signifcance as a strategic and energy partner, the U.S.A. was, nevertheless, careful to avoid actions that might be interpreted as openly favoring Azerbaijan. The U.S.A. mostly confned its own role to being one of the Minsk Group Co-chairs; however, its impartiality was often compromised by the lobbying efforts of the Armenian diaspora in the U.S.A. The overall U.S. approach to the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict was primarily shaped by the dictates of high politics that entailed the avoidance of antagonizing Russia and of domestic variables that affected U.S. policy in this regard. This resulted in the conscious U.S disengagement from confict resolution that lasted, more or less, for the entire duration of the Armenia–Azerbaijan confict. A similar position was also demonstrated during the 44-day Karabakh War that, through military means, effectively ended the decades-long, protracted confict. The agreement signed on November 10, 2021, consolidated the leading roles of the regional powers, Russia, and this time also Turkey, in the management of the confict. The U.S.A., alongside France and Russia as the other two Minsk Group Co-Chairs, kept on the back burner the political processes that could have ended the war. The U.S.A. largely maintained its previous role and position in this regard. However, there is still hope that, in the decisive post-confict rehabilitation period, the U.S.A. will fnd a proper niche for itself in terms of contributing to the establishment of lasting peace and cooperation in the South Caucasus. Notes 1 More on the First Karabakh War will be discussed in the next section. 2 The Freedom Support Act was adopted on 24 October, 1992 and aimed at extending various fnancial and other sorts of assistance to post-Soviet states to help with their transitions to a market economy, support a free market and democracy. 3 Azerbaijan authorized overfight rights, allowed intelligence support and use of its bases. With the start of air operations in Afghanistan on 06 October, 2001, President Aliyev supported coalition actions in a phone conversation with Secretary Powell on 09 October, and with President Bush on 30 October, 2001. In November 2002 Azerbaijan deployed 30 troops in support of the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan. 4 Ambassador M. Bryza was a former U.S. co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group. After long controversies in the Senate which were conditioned by the attempts of Armenian lobby-backed senators, such as Robert Menendez of New Jersey and Barbara Boxer of California to block his candidature, in 2010 he was appointed Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Role of the United States in the Confict 337 by President Obama as the U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan and was confrmed by the White House as a “recess appointment.” However, in January 2012 M. Bryza had to leave his position because the Senate refused to confrm his nomination under the pressures of Armenian lobby groups. 5 For example, the U.S. Department of State, in its human rights report on Armenia for the year 2006, states: “Armenia continues to occupy the Azerbaijani territory of Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding Azerbaijani territories.” The similar report on Azerbaijan also emphasizes this fact: “Armenian forces controlled most of Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as large portions of adjacent Azerbaijani territory” and “Armenia continues to occupy the Azerbaijani territory of Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding Azerbaijani territories” (“2006 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices” 2006). Relevant statements and resolutions adopted on state and federal levels also contain recognition of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. 6 In 1997, the co-chairs initiated famous three proposals—the so-called “package” variant, “step-by-step” or “phased,” and “common state” proposals— that envisaged a negotiated solution to the confict. The “package” approach aimed at achieving a solution for the cessation of hostilities and the withdrawal of its armed forces by Armenia and an agreement on the fnal status of the Nagorno-Karabakh region in one stage. The “phased” solution implied the cessation of hostilities and withdrawal of armed forces by Armenia in the frst place, to be followed by negotiations on the status of the Nagorno-Karabakh region. The third, and most contentious, “common state” proposal promoted the idea of the Nagorno-Karabakh region becoming a state-territorial formation in the form of a republic constituting a common state with Azerbaijan within its internationally recognized borders. All three proposals failed to build a base for a negotiated solution, owing to the parties’ different security considerations and preferences for one or other model of confict resolution (Broers 2005). 7 The parties’ opinions, however, differed widely on constituencies, modalities, and the scope of the potential vote on the region’s status, with Azerbaijan expressing reservations that: (1) IDPs from Nagorno-Karabakh should have equally participated in the vote and, therefore, should previously be returned to the occupied areas; and (2) according to Article 3 of the Azerbaijani Constitution, any vote that could result in the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh should be a nationwide referendum. Azerbaijan was nevertheless ready to give the Nagorno-Karabakh region the highest degree of autonomy within its internationally recognized borders. The Madrid Principles underwent another revision as, on the basis of these principles, the co-chairs, in 2009–2012, proposed six additional elements: • creating an interim status for Nagorno-Karabakh that provides guarantees for security and self-governance; • returning the territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaijani control; • building a corridor linking Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh; • determining the fnal legal status of Nagorno-Karabakh through a legally binding expression of will; • upholding the right of all internally displaced persons (IDPs) and refugees to return to their former places of residence; and • granting the parties international security guarantees that would include a peacekeeping operation (“Digging out of Deadlock in Nagorno-Karabakh” 2019). Uploaded by S. M. Safi
338 Esmira Jafarova References Abrahamyan, Eduard. 2019. “Rationalizing the Tonoyan Doctrine: Armenia’s Active Deterrence Strategy.” Jamestown Eurasia Daily Monitor, May 2. https://jamestown. org/program/rationalizing-the-tonoyan-doctrine-armenias-active-deterrence -strategy/. Ambrosio, Thomas. 2011. “Unfreezing the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict? ­Evaluating Peacemaking Efforts under the Obama Administration.” Ethnopolitics 10 (1): ­93–114. https://doi.org/10.1080/17449057.2011.549731. APA News Agency. 2021. “Ambassador: US Companies Are Ready to Take Part in Restoration of Azerbaijan’s Liberated Territories,” January 27. https://apa.az/en/ azerbaijan_energy_and_industry/Ambassador-US-companies-are-ready-to-take -part-in-restoration-of-Azerbaijans-liberated-territories-341258. “Armenia.” In 2006 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices. U.S. Department of State. Accessed March 14, 2021. https://2009-2017.state.gov/j/drl/rls/­ hrrpt/2006/78799.htm. “Armenia and Azerbaijan: A Season of Risks.” 2013. International Crisis Group, September 26. https://www.crisisgroup.org/europe-central-asia/caucasus/armenia/ armenia-and-azerbaijan-season-risks. Asbarez. 2017. “US Co-Chair Outlines Basic Principles on Karabakh Resolution,” August 24. https://asbarez.com/165756/us-co-chair-outlines-basic-principles-on -karabakh-resolution/. Asbarez. 2021. “U.S. Ambassador to Baku Congratulates Azerbaijan for ­‘Restoring Territorial Integrity’,” January 29. https://asbarez.com/200194/u-s-ambassador-to-baku-congratulates-azerbaijan-for-restoring-territorial-integrity/. “Azerbaijan.” In 2006 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices. U.S. D ­ epartment of State. Accessed March 14, 2021. https://2009-2017.state.gov/j/drl/rls/­ h rrpt/ ­2006/78801.htm Blank, Stephen. 2014. “Washington Misses the Point on Nagorno-Karabakh.” The Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, June 18. https://www.cacianalyst.org/publications/analytical-articles/item/12998-washington-misses-the-point-on-nagornokarabakh.html. Blank, Stephen. 2015. “US Policy, Azerbaijan, and the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict.” Mediterranean Quarterly 26 (2): 99–114. https://doi.org/10.1215/10474552-2914539. Breedlove, Philip. 2020. “Opinion: The U.S. Can’t Afford to Ignore the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict.” NPR, October 24. https://www.npr.org/2020/10/24/927219056/ opinion-the-u-s-cant-afford-to-ignore-the-nagorno-karabakh-conflict. Broers, Laurence. 2005. “Key Texts and Agreements: Accord Nagorny Karabakh.” Conciliation Resources Accord: An International Review of Peace Initiatives (17): 72–84. Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs. 2008. “The United States and the Conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.” U.S. Department of State. https://2001-2009.state. gov/p/eur/rls/fs/103560.htm. Cekuta, Robert. 2020. “Time for More Active U.S. Engagement on Nagorno-­ Karabakh.” Caspian Policy Center, May 4. https://www.caspianpolicy.org/timefor-more-active-u-s-engagement-on-nagorno-karabakh/. Champion, Marc, Marcus Walker, and Stephen Fidler. 2010. “Turkey-Armenia Pact Hits Snags.” Wall Street Journal, January 28. https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB100 01424052748703410004575029360850565870. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Role of the United States in the Confict 339 Cornell, Svante. 2005. “US Engagement in the Caucasus: Changing Gears.” Helsinki Monitor 16 (2): 111–19. https://doi.org/10.1163/1571814054088738. “Digging out of Deadlock in Nagorno-Karabakh.” 2019. 255. International Crisis Group. https://www.crisisgroup.org/europe-central-asia/caucasus/nagorno -karabakh-confict/255-digging-out-deadlock-nagorno-karabakh. Goble, Paul A. 1992. “Coping with the Nagorno-Karabakh Crisis.” Fletcher Forum of World Affairs 16: 19. “Ilham Aliyev Received U.S. State Secretary Hillary Clinton.” 2010. Offcial Web-Site of the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, July 4. https://en.president.az/articles/348. Jafarova, Esmira. 2015. Confict Resolution in South Caucasus: Challenges to International Efforts. Lanham: Lexington Books. Jafarova, Esmira. 2020a. “What Is Happening with the ‘Peace’ in the ArmeniaAzerbaijan Confict?” Columbia Journal of International Affairs, April 5. https:// jia.sipa.columbia.edu/online-articles/what-happening-%E2%80%9Cpeace %E2%80%9D-armenia-azerbaijan-confict. Jafarova, Esmira. 2020b. “Humanitarian Ceasefre and Civilian Lives in Armenia-Azerbaijan Confict: What Is at Stake?” World Geostrategic Insights, October 21. https://wgi.world/humanitarian-ceasefre-and-civilian-lives-inarmenia-azerbaijan-confict-what-is-at-stake/. Kasim, Kamer. 2012. “American Policy toward the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict and Implications for Its Resolution.” Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 32 (2): 230–44. https://doi.org/10.1080/13602004.2012.694667. Kucera, Joshua. 2019. “Pashinyan Calls for Unifcation between Armenia and Karabakh.” Eurasianet, August 6. https://eurasianet.org/pashinyan-calls-forunifcation-between-armenia-and-karabakh. Maresca, John J. 1996. “Lost Opportunities in Negotiating the Confict over Nagorno Karabakh.” International Negotiation 1 (3): 471–99. https://doi.org/10.1163/ 157180696X00188. Minsk Group. n.d. “Who We Are.” Organization for Security and Co-Operation in Europe. Accessed March 14, 2021. https://www.osce.org/minsk-group/ 108306. “Nagorno-Karabakh: Risking War.” 2007. International Crisis Group, 187. https://www.crisisgroup.org/europe-central-asia/caucasus/nagorno-karabakhazerbaijan/nagorno-karabakh-risking-war. “Nagorno-Karabakh - Statement by Vice President Joe Biden.” 2020. Joe Biden for President: Offcial Campaign Website, 2020. https://joebiden.com/2020/10/13/ nagorno-karabakh-statement-by-vice-president-joe-biden/. Nation, R. Craig. 2007. Russia, the United States, and the Caucasus. Electronic resource. U.S. and Russia, Regional Security Issues and Interests. Carlisle, PA: Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College. https://publications. armywarcollege.edu/pubs/1862.pdf. Naumkin, Vitaly. 2020. “Will the Fire of the Armenian-Azerbaijani Confict Spread to the Middle East?” Valdai Discussion Club, October 8. https://valdaiclub.com/a/ highlights/will-the-fre-of-the-armenian-azerbaijani-confict/. Nichol, Jim. 2010. “Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia: Security Issues and Implications for U.S. Interests.” Report for Congress RL30679. Congressional Research Service, March 11. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/ metadc503577/m1/1/high_res_d/RL30679_2010Mar11.pdf. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
340 Esmira Jafarova Sanamyan, Emil. 2017. “Armenia: Hint of Territorial Concessions to Azerbaijan Sparks Controversy.” Eurasianet, September 19. https://eurasianet.org/armenia-hint-of -territorial-concessions-to-azerbaijan-sparks-controversy. “Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act (Public Law 102-511).” 1992. https://www. legal-tools.org/doc/892c51/pdf/. Socor, Vladimir. 2010. “Is the United States Losing Azerbaijan?: Part One.” Jamestown Eurasia Daily Monitor, April 22. https://jamestown.org/program/ is-the-united-states-losing-azerbaijan-part-one/. Starr, S. Frederick. 2004. Resolving Karabakh: Strategic Options for the U.S. Government. Washington, DC: Central Asia–Caucasus Institute. “Statement by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair Countries.” 2009. Organization for Security and Co-Operation in Europe, July 10. https://www.osce.org/mg/51152. “Statement on Signing the FREEDOM Support Act.” 1992. Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents 28 (44). http://ezproxy.cul.columbia.edu/login?url=http:// search.proquest.com/docview/195174776?accountid=10226. Rumer, Eugene, Richard Sokolsky, and Paul Stronski. 2017. “U.S. Policy toward the South Caucasus: Take Three.” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, May 31. https://carnegieendowment.org/2017/05/31/u.s.-policy-toward-south-caucasustake-three-pub-70122. Welt, Cory, and Andrew S. Bowen. 2021. “Azerbaijan and Armenia: The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict.” Report Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress R46651. Congressional Research Service, January 7. https://crsreports. congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R46651. World Today News. 2020. “Armenian MFA Denies Discussion of Step-by-Step Settlement of Karabakh Confict,” April 23. https://www.world-today-news. com/armenian-mfa-denies-discussion-of-step-by-step-settlement-of-karabakhconfict/. Zeynalova, Leman. 2020. “State Dept.: US Policy on Nagorno-Karabakh Confict Hasn’t Changed.” Trend News Agency, May 11. https://en.trend.az/azerbaijan/ karabakh/3237779.html. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
15 Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict Orhan Gafarli1 Introduction The Caucasus policy followed by Russia has traditionally been examined in academic studies within the scope of a nineteenth-century defnition of ‘backyard’ geopolitical security. From that period forward, the southern borders of Tsarist Russia were determined by the 1805 Kurekchay Agreement, as signed with the Karabakh Khanate and the 1828 Turkmenchay Agreement reached with Iran (Yavuz & Huseynov, 2020, s. 104). Such borders comprised the regional defnition of ‘Transcaucasia’ (beyond the Caucasus) as the door and border of the Russian Empire to the south (Elibegova, 2009, s. 69). Tsarist Russia made the South Caucasus an important military region to maintain balance against the Ottoman and Iranian empires and to realize its expansionist ambitions (Kuznetsov, 2012, стр. 173–174). Tsarist Russia turned the Caucasus into a refuge for groups escaping from a confict steeped in clashes over cultural roots in Iran and the Ottoman Empire and the project of Christian evangelism, which had multiple geographical, ethnic, and religious considerations. Since the nineteenth century, the migration of Armenian and Kurdish ethnocultural groups from Iran and the Ottoman Empire, as encouraged by Saint Petersburg, caused cultural shifts in the region (Aliyev, 1987, стр. 60). The expansion of the Russian Empire into the region, on the one hand, threatened Iran and, on the other hand, enabled the opening of a new front outside the Balkans and the Black Sea in wars against the Ottoman Empire. Russia’s settlement in the ‘Transcaucasia’ region, that is, beyond the Caucasus mountains, in the context of its classical military geopolitical strategy, eliminated threats at its southern borders (Ismailov & Papava, 2006, 11). But the wars between the indigenous peoples and Saint Petersburg in the North Caucasus geographical region have yet to cease. The domination established over the South Caucasus helped cut geographical connections between the North Caucasus and the Ottoman Empire. In the nineteenth century, the Imam Shamil operation involving Chechen and Dagestan peoples in the North Caucasus (Hamburg, Sanders, & Tucker, 2004, 60) and the continuation of the negotiated exile of Circassians to the Ottoman Empire bolstered Saint Petersburg’s political domination in the region. DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-20 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
342 Orhan Gafarli Since the nineteenth century, the domination by the Russian Empire in the South Caucasus; the establishment of the administrative governance of Guberniya such as Baku, Yerevan, Tbilisi, and Elizabethpol (Gancha) (Ismailov & Papava, 2006, 22–23); and its design on the region’s cultural character were achieved through population exchanges. The Russian Empire, beyond its domination of the Caucasus, was able to establish a naval base with the aim of turning the Caspian Sea between this region and Central Asia into a Russian maritime post. By annexing this region, Tsarist Russia controlled the door to the Middle East for the Ottoman and Iranian empires. Having settled in the region, from such a geopolitical historical perspective, Tsarist Russia gained strategic superiority in its foreign policy against its southern neighbors, the Ottomans and Iran, by securing the South Caucasus region for its own interests in creating a safe corridor to access warm seas for its trading and economic powers. Tsarist Russia’s imperial policy shared traits with the perspectives of the rival Ottoman and Persian empires, which Russia defned as the ‘other’ and which acknowledged Russia’s status as protector of the Christian communities. Tsarist Russia considered its protection of the Eastern (Orthodox) Christian peoples in the east as legitimate, in congruence with Eastern Roman imperial ideology that gave Russia its identity. Likewise, fulflling Tsarist Russia’s dream of becoming history’s third Rome meant taking on the geographical and ideological heritage of the Byzantine Empire. Such identity and ideological ownership motivated the Russian Empire’s eastward expansionist policies, enabling it to shape the South Caucasus in its view. The expansionist objectives were: (1) defend the Christian minority, (2) conduct population settlement and deportations, (3) control roads to the Middle East. However, in the nineteenth century Tsarist Russia struggled with the domestic cost of wars of geographic expansion, on the one hand, and was facing demands from domestic socialist movements for equality and social justice on the other. In 1917, the messianic Orthodox policies of Tsarist Russia ended with the February and October revolutions. As a result of the collapse of the Russian Empire, independent and democratic states such as Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Armenia in the South Caucasus were formed on May 27–28, 1918, but problems arose when drawing the national borders between these countries. Likewise, the migration engineering policy of Tsarist Russia in the South Caucasus up to the early twentieth century had turned the region into a minefeld between the Muslim and Christian communities. This situation led to brief border wars between Azerbaijan and Armenia as well as between Georgia and Armenia. The Ottoman Empire, Germany, and Britain attempted to ward off the Georgia–Armenia War in 1919 and the Azerbaijan–Armenia War a year later. Subsequently, under the infuence of Soviet Russia, the coming to power of Bolshevik governments in Azerbaijan and Armenia in 1920 and Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict 343 the establishment of Soviet Socialist Republics drew the respective national borders (Jamil, 2011). Tsarist Russia and Soviet Russia shared a messianic foreign policy ideology. Messianism among the Soviets was fed by Marxist ideology and aimed to bring the October Revolution to the east, in order to save the working class. Before bringing the revolution to the peoples living in the Caucasus, Iran, Central Asia, and Turkey, that is to the south of Russia, and to the east of Europe, it was necessary to lay the foundations for the process leading to the socialist revolution by supporting the bourgeois revolution as emphasized by Lenin. For realizing these plans, after the Bolsheviks took power in Baku, Azerbaijan was where the Turkish Communist and Justice parties affliated with Iran were established. Likewise, the aim of the Congress of the Peoples of the East, held in Baku on September 1–17, 1920, was to introduce Iran and Turkey to the principles of Soviet Russia’s October Revolution (Suzdaltsev, 2020, s. 57–58). Moscow’s support for the War of Independence led by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and his allies was followed by developments such as the addressing of the Ankara Grand National Assembly, which was established in Turkey in 1920. It should be noted that the anti-British discourse expressed by Atatürk, who was leader of the Ankara Grand National Assembly during this period, refected that of Soviet Russia, both geopolitically and ideologically (Hirst, 2013, s. 214–215). Settled in the South Caucasus since 1920, Soviet Russia determined the boundaries of the region with the Moscow and Kars Treaties, as signed with the Grand National Assembly of Turkey in 1921 (Topal, 2018, s. 323). The expansionist policies of Russia, constructed over territorial space in Byzantine lands with the Orthodox Christian identity in the geopolitical mind, led to the emergence and sealing of social representations such as the ‘Transcaucasia,’ ‘backyard,’ and ‘near abroad’ doctrines in the foreign policy (Hale, 2003, s. 193–194). The Soviet Union’s Periphery Policy and the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict Socio-ethnic conficts between the peoples deepened in the Soviet Union, which began to dissolve with the socio-economic foundations of ‘Glasnost’ and ‘Perestroika’ reforms, as initiated by Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985. Especially at the periphery of Soviet Russia, in regions such as Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Nagorno-Karabakh in the South Caucasus, socio-ethnic discriminatory movements damaged the spirit of friendship and unity between the peoples. By 1987, the tension between Azerbaijanis and Armenians in Armenia (in its region) and then the forced migration of Azerbaijanis to Azerbaijan, and the Sumgait, Baku, and Gancha incidents that took place on February 27, 1988, manifested itself by triggering the discriminatory and independence movement of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh (Waal, 2005, s. 40–41). The tensions had always been there, since the Soviet era Uploaded by S. M. Safi
344 Orhan Gafarli began seven decades earlier but now rapidly shifting sentiments in the region brought the dormant tensions quickly to the fore. It should also be taken into account that the nationalist and ethnic movements, which hastened the collapse of the Soviet Union, embodied cultural and class dimensions. Although Soviet Union ideology was predicated on erasing class distinctions and resolving class contradictions, the formation of new Soviet elites as a class had progressively widened economic and cultural gaps for the more than 70 years spanning the Soviet era. The paradox had never been treated: the insensitivity of the central elite hegemony to the peripheries within the union countries and the rampant frequency of inequalities set the formula for the invigorated nationalist wave. The fact that the Soviet Union was governed from Moscow and had received information about the developments in Karabakh from the administrations of Armenia and Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republics, which were members of the union, prevented a timely proportional response to the potential existential problems of the USSR. The autonomy status granted to Nagorno-Karabakh by the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic in 1923 was ratifed 13 years later in the new Constitution of the Soviet Union, which stipulated the autonomy of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Administration (Nagorno Karabakhskaya Avtonomnaya Oblast (NKAO)) in this region. Khankendi (Stenapakert) was the capital city of Nagorno-Karabakh, with an area of about 44,000 square meters. The majority of the population of Nagorno-Karabakh, that is 80%, comprised ethnic Armenians. Likewise, during this period, Armenians were settled not only in the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan but also in Baku and other regions (Ponomarov, 2010, стр. 208). On February 20, 1988, the Armenian nationalist movement demanded the People’s Assembly accept a declaration for the separation of NKAO from the Soviet Union administration and Azerbaijan (SSR) and its unifcation with Armenia (SSR) (Barsegov, 2008, p. 665). While the Armenian Soviet administration viewed this request positively, the Headquarters of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union rejected the demands of the NKAO and the Armenian SSR. There appears to have been several reasons for this. First, this request by NKAO surprised Moscow because the central government already has set precedent on border or land changes. Examples include the addition of territory to North Ossetia in 1944, the transfer of the Crimean region from Soviet Russia to the Ukrainian SSR in 1954, and the Kalmyk Region becoming an autonomous oblast in 1957 (Markedonov, 2018, s. 129–130). Thus, changes were always initiated by the Central Committee of the Soviet Union or its leaders. The acceptance of such a declaration by the people’s assembly of the NKAO in 1988 and its presentation to Moscow was a novelty. The Soviet Union’s desire to preserve the status quo by remaining indecisive in the face of this request originated from the concern that similar ideas would spread to other regions. This concern was shown not to be unfounded by the emergence Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict 345 of the desire of the Socialist Autonomous region of Abkhazia to leave Georgia (SSR) in 1989 (Markedonov, 2018, s. 131). Moscow’s status quo attitude did not solve the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, but, at the same time, it should be emphasized that the reason the Nagorno-Karabakh confict was seen as a problem between Azerbaijan and Armenia, not between Baku and Khankendi alone, was that Yerevan had actively supported the confict since 1988 and its attitude towards the unifcation of these lands with Armenia (SSR). Likewise, the main purpose of the separatist movement among Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh was not to be independent but to realize the ‘Miatsum’2 ideal for Armenia (SSR) (Miarka, 2019, s. 43–44). It would be wrong to ignore the open support for Nagorno-Karabakh’s desire to unite with Armenia by Yerevan and to regard the Nagorno-Karabakh issue as an Azerbaijani internal confict. Moscow could not ignore the calls from the Armenian SSR and the autonomous region of Nagorno-Karabakh to the central administration of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and other institutions for unifcation. Another important issue was that Nagorno-Karabakh was seen as part of the solution for the current problem. The reason why Azerbaijan and Russia did not see the Armenian Enclave as a side in this confict was that the Armenian SSR had a leading role. Soon after, Gorbachev addressed the Karabakh issue by calling Yerevan and sending his advisor K. Brutents, who was an ethnic Armenian, to Khankendi. The Karabakh issue was discussed at a Politburo session in Moscow. “We got information about the position of both leaders. Azerbaijani leader Kamran Bagirov [1982–1988] insisted on Moscow’s guarantees regarding the unchanging status of Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenian leader Karen Demirchyan suggested examining the decision” (Gorbachev, 1996, s. 333–340). At the meetings of the Supreme Councils of Azerbaijan, Armenia, and the Soviet Union, it was understood that the request of the NKAO Regional People’s Assembly and the arguments of Baku and Yerevan on this issue should be evaluated by Moscow, as Gorbachev recalls (Gorbachev, 1996, s. 335). While the protests for the unifcation of Karabakh continued, Demirchyan, then president of the Armenian SSR, stated that the borders would not change due to Moscow’s desire to preserve the status quo, and that if they did it would harm the friendship between the peoples. Meanwhile, at the Politburo on February 29, 1988, Gorbachev reiterated that the status quo with regard to Karabakh was correct and he emphasized that the demonstrations in Armenia were peaceful (Waal, 2005, s. 49). On the same date, Gorbachev published a call to the peoples of Azerbaijan and Armenia, urging peace be sustained. At the same time, Gorbachev met with advisor Georgiy Shakhnazarov, Silva Kaputikyan, and Armenian intellectual Zori Balayan. By examining this meeting using different sources, in his book entitled Black Garden, Thomas de Waal writes that Balayan and Kaputikyan pressured Gorbachev to change his position by tapping into Russian reservations about the fate of the geopolitical map, as viewed through the threats of pan-Turkist and Uploaded by S. M. Safi
346 Orhan Gafarli pan-Turanian theses. which originated in Turkey. In addition, Kaputikyan’s relationship with Gorbachev’s wife, Raisa Gorbacheva, is also noted. Shakhnazarov also stressed the need to raise the status of the NKAO rather than allow it to merge with Armenia (Waal, 2005, s. 96). Although Shakhnazarov was a Karabakh Armenian, his position as an intellectual was more oriented toward his party than other considerations. Shakhnazarov’s proposal was taken seriously in Moscow and on May 28, 1988, work started on a new constitution for the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region within the borders of Azerbaijan. As Waal emphasized, the new president of Nagorno-Karabakh, Khenrikh Pogasyan, had already formed the new constitution in his mind. The region would have almost the same status as the countries in the union (Waal, 2005, s. 96). The status conferred upon Nagorno-Karabakh within the borders of Azerbaijan suggested that Khankendi would continue to have political contact with Moscow and would be supported economically by it. Gorbachev and his entourage believed that the Azerbaijani–Armenian confict could be ended by identifying mutual economic benefts. The Karabakh Committee, formed by Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh, however, disrupted Moscow’s plans and set out to free the region from Azerbaijan’s control. The political and nationalist discourse articulated by the Karabakh Committee in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh also excluded those Armenian politicians and intellectuals who tolerated Azerbaijan. Opposing this committee would expose Armenians to the risk of being lynched. The Moscow central committee, trying to prevent the process from spiraling out of control, appointed Arkadiy Volskiy to Nagorno-Karabakh for a tenure of six months (Waal, 2005, s. 102–103). However, these efforts by Moscow to solve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem were fruitless. Between 1988 and 1990, conficts continued to erupt between both communities. On January 12, 1989, a meeting of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR was held, chaired by Gorbachev. In a report of this meeting, it was accepted that “in order to prevent further deterioration of ethnic relations and to stabilize the situation in this region, it was deemed appropriate to temporarily introduce a special form of government by the Presidency of the Supreme Soviet in accordance with the Constitution of the USSR.” It was also underlined that the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region should maintain its status as such within the Azerbaijan SSR (Barsegov, 2008, pp. 670–71). Nevertheless, by the 1990s, it became more diffcult for the Soviet Union to maintain status quo in the Nagorno-Karabakh region. The replacement by Abdurrahman Vezirov (1988–90) due to the poor health of the Azerbaijan Central Committee Chairman Bagirov set off a competition between political groups in Baku that emboldened them to act aggressively. Despite the fact that the Azerbaijan People’s Front, which was established in 1988, comprised social democratic and nationalist groups, nationalists managed to control the political agenda The Soviet Union attempted to provide support regarding the Karabakh issue Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict 347 in order to prevent the Popular Front from coming to power in Azerbaijan and to keep the central administration in Baku alive. While the USSR offered this support, it should not have ignored Armenia. Although Moscow tried to maintain the delicate balance between Baku and Yerevan, it was not successful. In 1989–1990, the Azerbaijan People’s Front strengthened, as it organized massive protests and strikes against the central administration in Baku. These actions, led by Abulfaz Elcibey, produced anti-Armenian rhetoric that resonated in the country, despite Moscow’s efforts to maintain relations with the current leadership of the Azerbaijan SSR and prevent the leaders of the Popular Front Movement from gaining political power in Baku. The USSR Central Committee intervened to stop the People’s Front’s protests. On January 20, 1990, additional Soviet troops entered Baku to stop the protests, which accelerated the division between the Central Committee of the Soviet Union and the Azerbaijani political elite. Ayaz Mutellibov (1990–92), who was in power in the Azerbaijan SSR at the time, saw relations with Moscow as signifcant and tried to keep communication lines open. Between April 30 and May 15, 1991, Mutellibov and Boris Yeltsin carried out the ‘Ring’ military operation (Операция Кольцо) to ensure Moscow’s support for the administration in Baku. The Russian SFSR stood by Azerbaijan and tried to oppose Armenian nationalists in Karabakh (Nebolsina, 2019, s. 156). In 1988–1991, the status quo policy of the Soviet Union and later the Russian SFSR regarding Karabakh was sustained, although the new Russian Federation moved to try to resolve the confict seriously within its frst year of existence. Boris Yeltsin (1990–1999), together with the head of Kazakhstan SSR, Nursultan Nazarbayev (1991–2019), attempted to mediate and establish conditions for normalization. Yeltsin and Nazarbayev visited Baku and then Khankendi and Yerivan. On September 23, 1991, a joint declaration was made in the city of Zheleznovodsk in the North Caucasus with representatives from Armenia, the Nagorno-Karabakh Armenian enclave, and Azerbaijan participating (Gasanova, 2018, s. 217). Parallel to these meetings, after the independence of Armenia and Azerbaijan on September 21 and October 18, 1991, respectively, the confict in Karabakh erupted into a full-scale war. Russia tried to step up mediation: “The parties have requested to establish a ceasefre in order to create the necessary conditions for the resolution of the confict before January 1, 1992, to stop all unconstitutional actions of Azerbaijan and Armenia against Nagorno-Karabakh, to recognize the powers of legitimate authorities, and to withdraw all armed formations from the confict zone” (Gasımlı, 2010, s. 198–99). The parties agreed to a peacekeeping group comprising representatives of Russia and Kazakhstan in the confict zone. This group was expected to start on October 1, 1999. However, these attempts failed and the process collapsed after the observers in the Karabakh region died in a helicopter crash. Azerbaijan and Armenia accused each other of shooting down the helicopter. The local Uploaded by S. M. Safi
348 Orhan Gafarli Armenian-led Nagorno-Karabakh earlier declared its independence on September 2, 1991 (Melik-Shakhnazarov, 2018, s. 142). With the failure of the Russian SRSC’s peace talks in 1991 and the declaration of the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the agenda changed for Moscow. The First Nagorno-Karabakh War With the establishment of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) through the Belovezhskaya Accord by the Russian Federation, Belarus, and Ukraine, a new form of regional cooperation emerged. Russia’s aim was to ease the pain of the Soviet Union’s collapse but also to assure some form of presence in territory that it once controlled. Azerbaijan and Armenia joined this union in hopes of attracting Moscow to their respective position. However, attempts by the Armenian administration in Nagorno-Karabakh to join the new union were rejected. The Russian Federation did not abandon its status quo policy. Given the possibility of similar problems arising in other states in the CIS, none of them had the intention of aligning with Armenia or the Armenian administration in Nagorno-Karabakh. In 1992, peace and ceasefre negotiations on the Nagorno-Karabakh confict were occurring beyond the USSR or regional level by involving the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) (Zourabian, 2006, s. 254). On March 24, 1992, the CSCE3 convened in Helsinki with Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Germany, Italy, France, the US, Turkey, the Czech, and Slovak Federal Republic, Sweden, and Russia attending, thereby making the Karabakh negotiation process an international endeavor. During the 1992–1994 Karabakh War, relations deteriorated between Azerbaijan and Russia. Russia’s 366th motorized infantry regiment, which was stationed in Khojaly, supported the Karabakh Armenian separatist forces. That support resulted in the Khojaly massacre of Azerbaijanis on February 25, 1992 (Goltz, 1998, 125). Ayaz Müttelibov fell from power after the Khojaly massacre and was replaced by Abulfez Elchibey. The pro-Russian groups lost the power they had in Azerbaijani domestic politics. As a result of domestic politics in Azerbaijan, Russia implicitly supported Armenia in Karabakh. In 1993, the failure of the Elchibey government to manage the confict and political pressures at home and the temporary appointment of Heydar Aliyev as the head of the parliament did not prevent Azerbaijan losing territory, but it did ensure a ceasefre. Within two years, Azerbaijan had lost seven regions in and around Nagorno-Karabakh: Kalbajar, Lachin, Fuzili, Aghdam, Jabrayil, Gubadli, and Zengilan. By supporting the Armenian administration in Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia also had managed to create a security buffer encircling these seven regions. Finally, a ceasefre was signed by the defense ministers of Azerbaijan, Armenia, and the Armenian government in Nagorno-Karabakh under Russia’s mediation in Bishkek on May 12, 1994. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict 349 The Russian Federation’s Mediation Policy: From the First Karabakh War to the Second It should be emphasized that Russia supported bringing the Karabakh confict that emerged between Azerbaijan and Armenia in 1992 to the attention of the OSCE. As stated by the Russian representative of the OSCE Minsk Group, Vladimir Kazimorov, the reason why Russian Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev favored seeking a solution to the Karabakh problem through the OSCE was that he did not believe that the Minsk Group would be closely interested in this problem or would try to solve it. This issue would ultimately be left to Russia, but the fnancial support needed to solve this problem could also be obtained from the OSCE (Kazimirov, 2009, s. 36). However, the strategy Kozyrev planned would not work as he had intended. In particular, the US policy of expansion into the region within the framework of Clinton’s foreign policy doctrine would begin to take shape. Azerbaijan’s rich energy resources in the Caspian Sea and its possibility of becoming a transit corridor between Asia and Europe in the South Caucasus heightened US interest in this region and made it necessary to ensure stability for the sake of investments by transnational energy companies (Zarifan, 2015, s. 4–5). Azerbaijan decided to develop closer economic cooperation with the West. On September 7, 1992, the Azerbaijani government signed an agreement with British Petroleum (BP) and Statoil concerning the possible development of the Guneshli, Chirag, and Shah Deniz oil felds. On October 1, 1992, similar agreements were signed with Pennzoil and Ramco Oil Services (Ipek, 2009, 231). In June 1993, additional agreements were planned to be signed at a general meeting with oil and gas multinational company representatives. It is no coincidence that with the establishment of the TRASECA intergovernmental commission in 1993, which includes the former Soviet as well as EU countries, a platform was created for building upon transportation, trade, and energy relations between Asia and Europe (Gafarli, 2021). Communication and transportation between Central Asia and Europe through the South Caucasus and projects to help preserve stability and peace in the region were discussed while bypassing the Russian Federation. It had become necessary to establish a ceasefre in Nagorno-Karabakh to facilitate the exploitation of the natural gas and oil resources in Azerbaijan and their sales abroad. After Abulfaz Elchibey4 (1992–93), who was in power for a year, left his post in 1993, and chair of the parliament, Heydar Aliyev5 (1993–2003), was elected president, it became a priority for Azerbaijan to mend relations with Russia and to invite Western companies to invest in energy resources. Meanwhile, the fact that Russia facilitated a ceasefre between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 1994 and that it was the only country that could assist in the negotiations carried out within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group showed that Moscow was poised as a primary Uploaded by S. M. Safi
350 Orhan Gafarli infuential power in the region. Contrary to Kozyrev’s expectations, the US and European countries were seeking to expand their infuence in the region and drive Russia from the project. Kazyrov had premised his expectations on the pledges for a non-expansionist policy in the region that the US had articulated to the Kremlin. After the ceasefre was achieved with the signatures of the defense ministries of Azerbaijan, Armenia, and the administration in Nagorno-Karabakh in 1994, the sustainability of Russia’s infuence in the South Caucasus in the eyes of the Western countries was seen as dangerous. Therefore, the OSCE Minsk Group and Turkey, as expressed by Kazimirov, were expected to play a larger role in this process. The US was concerned that in the short term the Russian peacekeeping force could be deployed in Nagorno-Karabakh as part of its policy of expanding into the South Caucasus. Likewise, immediately after the ceasefre between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 1994, both countries cooperated with NATO, abiding by the framework of The Partnership for Peace (PfP) program. As a result of this program, NATO and OSCE activity in the South Caucasus expanded. Also, it should be noted that Russia was uncomfortable with US involvement in the region and the sense of humiliation regarding Moscow’s role in setting the ceasefre. Moscow’s request to representatives of the confict to reinforce their commitments to the ceasefre every three months stemmed from the need to remind regularly that this process had been achieved through Russian mediation (Kazimirov, 2009). Moreover, Kazimirov, in an interview with a Moscow newspaper, criticized the Minsk Group, following the instructions of Russian Foreign Minister Andrey Kozyrev (Kazimirov, 2009, s. 219). What is interesting is that in the same year Kozyrev described the role of the OSCE in his article in Foreign Affairs, stating, “The OSCE should have the central role in transforming the Post Confrontational system of Euro Atlantic cooperation into a truly stable, democratic regime” (Kozyrev, 1994, 65). However, Kozyrev also notes an important problem from the Russian point of view. As for NATO, the ‘PfP’ proposal achieved the aim of bringing Russia closer to the alliance for the time being. But, this program was not intended to stimulate NATO-centrism among the alliance’s policymakers or NATO-mania among candidates [impatiently waiting] for membership. Both were seeking proof that the Russian government was allegedly changing its foreign policy to suit its nationalist opposition. (Kozyrev, 1994, 65) Reading between the lines, Kozyrev wanted to signal that Russia closely monitored the activities of the West in the region and regarded NATO’s activities in its sphere of infuence negatively As Kozyrev emphasized, the internationalization of the Karabakh confict and the activation of economic, cultural, and military relations Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict 351 between the US and European countries in 1994–1996 in order to reduce the infuence of Russia in the South Caucasus motivated nationalist changes in Russian foreign policy. In 1996, Kozyrev was removed from his post and was replaced by Yevgeniy Primakov, the head of the Russian Foreign Intelligence Bureau. Primakov had previously been nominated as a member of the Soviet Union Politburo and became President of the Oriental Studies and World Economy and International Relations Institutes at the Russian Academy of Sciences. His appointment signaled the end of the liberal era in Russian politics and the beginning of one in which more national interests were pursued. Likewise, the appointment of Primakov as minister of foreign affairs of Russia showed how Kozyrev prescient was two years prior. After Primakov’s appointment, the most important action to be taken by Azerbaijan was to remove his name from the list of criminals involved in the ‘Black January incidents of January 20, 1990. Primakov was convicted of ordering the entry of the Alliance Army into the Azerbaijan SSR, which resulted in the deaths of hundreds of people. Heydar Aliyev’s removal of Primakov provided an opportunity to normalize relations between Moscow and Baku (Kazimirov, 2009). Similarly, in 1994–1996, Russia had struggled to maintain the balance between Azerbaijan and Armenia. It was expected that Azerbaijan would rapidly open up to the world energy market after the ceasefre and would achieve economical/political stability. Azerbaijan was also expected to strengthen its relations with the US and European countries and deepen the ties of friendship and brotherhood with Turkey to refect a cordial bilateral relationship. Primakov sought to articulate his concern about the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, the region’s most important problem, by visiting the South Caucasus. In order to maintain Russia’s preservation of infuence in the region, it was seen as essential to visit Baku, Khankendi, and Yerevan. In 1996, Russia sought to sustain its position by exchanging prisoners in Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh, and Armenia. We still do not know exactly whether or not Primakov had come from his role as head of Russian foreign intelligence with a clear picture of the region, or if it was a gesture of gratitude for Heydar Aliyev’s decision to expunge Primakov’s charges for the 1990 incident. The transportation of Azerbaijani prisoners from Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia to Baku on May 8, 1996, on Heydar Aliyev’s birthday, was a turning point in Russia’s regional policy. After meetings with Aliyev and the foreign minister at that time, Hasan Hasanov, Primakov deemed it appropriate that the statement be made after the prisoner exchange be presented bilaterally by Aliyev and Petrosyan. It was thanks to Russia that Yerevan was not regarded as a party in the dispute fve years later, despite the pressure exerted by the administrative head of Nagorno-Karabakh, Robert Kocaryan (Kazimirov, 2009). Primakov’s acceptance of Aliyev’s request was the most prominent diplomatic victory Baku had achieved after the First Karabakh War. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
352 Orhan Gafarli If we examine relations between Azerbaijan and Russia by comparing the periods of Kozyrev and Primakov, we can see the shift in favor of Baku. In 1992–1994, coinciding with the period of Russian Foreign Minister Kozyrev, chaos prevailed in Azerbaijani domestic politics and relations with Moscow were severely strained. A few months after the ceasefre between Azerbaijan and Armenia in 1994, the First Chechen War erupted in the North Caucasus, where Russia faced a separatist movement. With the coming to power of Primakov in 1996, the ongoing Chechen War coincided with the shift of Russia’s attitude towards Azerbaijan. Likewise, there was support, due in part to a transit line from Turkey to Chechnya through Azerbaijan and Georgia. At the same time, while Russia was contending with the Chechen issue, it also was paradoxical for Russia to pursue a policy associated with the opposite intentions against Azerbaijan and Armenia. Thus, from Kazyrov to Primakov, we can surmise that the change in Russia’s Karabakh policy is linked to the internal dynamics of Russia and the events in the North Caucasus. In addition, the fact that Primakov and Aliyev both were former Soviet era leaders provided opportunities for mutual understanding. It is necessary to consider both factors and compare and evaluate them. Russia’s Role in Mediation between Armenia and Azerbaijan within the Context of the OSCE ‘Minsk Group’ In 1996, at the Lisbon summit of the OSCE, a declaration to ensure the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan was accepted (Milanova, 2003, s. 11). Along with the four resolutions adopted by the UN Security Council concerning the Karabakh confict, Azerbaijan’s diplomatic hand was strengthened in international public opinion. In the same year, Azerbaijan also registered a diplomatic victory with the aid of Russia, the most important supporter of Armenia, as a result of which the administration in Nagorno-Karabakh was no longer considered a party to the confict. In 1997, based on the principles of the OSCE Lisbon summit, a peace plan was proposed concerning the gradual return of Azerbaijani lands, excluding Nagorno-Karabakh and the Lachin corridor, within the framework of the ‘step-by-step’ peace plan (Ziyadov, 2010, s. 114–115). This peace plan would later be announced in 2009 as the Madrid Principles by the OSCE. Along with the diplomatic negotiations conducted within the context of the OSCE serious changes were occurring in Armenia’s domestic policy. In 1998, Robert Kocaryan, who was elected as Armenian president, took a pro-Russian line, focused on eliminating the problems in political relations between Moscow and Yerevan and developing military cooperation, knowing that Russia was the reason why the administration in Nagorno-Karabakh had been excluded from the talks. In the same year, the Minsk Group proposed a ‘common state’ model to Azerbaijan and Armenia for solving the confict (Ismailzade, 2011, s. 3). According to this scenario, Nagorno-Karabakh would become a state with equal status Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict 353 within the Azerbaijan Republic (Pokalova, 2015, s. 75), thereby meaning that Azerbaijan would maintain its integrity by uniting with Nagorno-Karabakh as a federation. Likewise, as a similar model, the ‘state within the state’ model had been proposed earlier (in 1989) by recommending that the status of Nagorno-Karabakh be amended with a new constitution. Of course, then, it was envisaged that Khankendi was to be given almost the same degree of communication and representation status as Baku by the central government of the Soviet Union. Following the terrorist attack in the Armenian parliament on October 27, 1999, negotiations between Baku and Yerevan were halted. After Kocaryan came to power in Armenia, he precipitated the “Karabakhization” of Armenian internal policy (Ziyadov, 2010, s. 116). Bilateral talks on priority issues discussed between Petrosyan and Aliyev were omitted from the agenda. Moreover, Kocharyan’s efforts to secure Moscow’s continued participation in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace talks did not yield satisfactory results. There were similar changes in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Russia. In 1998, Igor Ivanov was appointed as the new foreign minister while Primakov continued to serve as prime minister. At the end of 1999, Yeltsin left offce due to health reasons and was replaced by Vladimir Putin, the prime minister. During this period, Russia also faced the Second Chechen War and naturally turned its attention to the North Caucasus. Thus, Russia was unable to devote suffcient time to problems in the South Caucasus. However, the emphasis on the CIS in the Russian Foreign Policy Concept adopted in 2000 showed that Moscow eventually would return to the geopolitics of the South Caucasus. This foreign policy concept was interpreted as: “If we touch on the difference in Russian foreign policy from the previous period, we can say that realism is in frst place,” as stated by then Foreign Minister Ivanov (Ivanov, 2002, s. 121). Subsequently, Ivanov defned realism as follows: “Evaluating own possibilities, determining clear goals and realistic view of the international situation” (Ivanov, 2002, s. 121). Kozyrev tried to present the new Russian foreign policy in the context of the interests of his own state, rather than in the context of the idealist or international community interest of the time. Within the CIS framework, Moscow aimed not only to develop economic and political integration relations but also to establish military alliances (Ivanov, 2002, s. 129). Similarly, Ivanov referred to a more realistic foreign policy in relations with the former Soviet countries as required by the interests of the state. As seen from Ivanov’s assessments, Russia aimed to focus on a more realistic policy and, predictably, on the protection of geopolitical interests in the region. To achieve all this, the priority for Russia was to end the war in the North Caucasus. Likewise, when we look at the reasons why the Second Chechen War lasted so long, the preparation and training of Chechen troops in the Pankisi region of Georgia and the treatment of wounded Chechen soldiers in Azerbaijan were important issues that disturbed Russia. Ending the civil Uploaded by S. M. Safi
354 Orhan Gafarli war in the North Caucasus was possible with the support of Georgia and Azerbaijan by exerting tighter border controls. As noted earlier, Tsarist Russia also considered it geopolitically important to dominate the South Caucasus in order to suppress the uprisings that broke out under the leadership of Imam Shamil in the North Caucasus. Between 1998 and 2000, a solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh confict and the withdrawal of Armenian forces from the seven regions around it were on the agenda of the Western states interested in integrating the South Caucasus into the Trans-Atlantic region. Azerbaijan agreed with Western energy companies on the construction of the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan oil pipeline, known as the ‘contract of the century,’ and operations of the mines (Aras, 2006, s. 41–42). Furthermore, in 2001, when the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia met under the auspices of the Minsk Group in Key West, Florida, the ‘land swap’ scenario prepared in Paris was proposed for resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh confict (Huseynov, 2010, s. 15). Meanwhile, Armenia could not turn the military victory it achieved in the South Caucasus to its advantage at the diplomatic table. Azerbaijan’s energy transportation to Europe through Georgia and Turkey, investments in the transportation sector, and its role in the realization of international projects such as TRACECA (the international transport program involving the European Union and 12 member states of the Eastern European, Caucasian, and Central Asian region) were drawing the West’s attention. These projects brought Azerbaijan closer to the political elites in the Western capitals of Paris, Berlin, London, and Washington. On the other hand, political instability in Armenia and the civil war in Russia involving the North Caucasus continued with little momentum for reconciliation. The plan, as orchestrated by American diplomat Paul Goble, was compatible with the ‘step-by-step’ peace plan proposed previously within the OSCE framework. However, it also suggested a territorial change. The frst stage of the plan was to gradually resolve the problem by revising and remapping the Lachin–Kalbajar corridor connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia and the corridor connecting Azerbaijan to Nakhichevan (Huseynov, 2010, s. 10–11). Such a corridor change, that is, the opening up of land transportation between Azerbaijan and the Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic and similar transportation security between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, suggested the potential for achieving geopolitical trust in the short and medium term. Predictably, this plan prepared in the West and the opening up of land transportation between Turkey and the region mainly would disturb Russia. Such a land exchange would lead to a change in borders, as drawn by the Moscow Treaty signed by the Soviet Union and Turkey in 1921. The change in the geopolitical composition of the South Caucasus, which had lasted for nearly nine decades, would adversely affect Russia’s regional policy interests. Although this agreement might appear positive for Azerbaijan in terms of its relations with Turkey and the West, it also engendered a threat to Heydar Aliyev’s power regarding Karabakh’s future in the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict 355 medium and long term and in the absence of a clear timetable for the evacuation of the seven Azerbaijani regions occupied by Armenia. Due to this agreement, the Aliyev administration was accused of treason by the rising voices of the Azerbaijani political opposition. Thus, Baku refused to sign this agreement, so as not to upset Russia, on the one hand, and to refute the accusations of the Popular Front in Azerbaijan on the other. Russia’s View of the 2001 Key West Summit and the ‘Land Swap’ Peace Plan The failure of the Key West summit in 2001 did not mean that the roles in the Karabakh confict for France and the US, member states of the Minsk Group, had diminished. Over time, France stood as Europe’s representative in the region within the Minsk Group. But, Putin, who came to power in Russia in 2000, reverted to policies for ending the Chechen Civil War, accelerating the integration processes with the CIS countries, and stopping NATO’s expansion into the region. On October 7, 2002, Russia endeavored to maintain its military presence in the region by establishing the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) with seven former Soviet countries. According to the Foreign Policy Security Concept adopted by Russia, the region was defned as ‘near abroad’ and its strategic importance was highlighted (Weinstein, 2007, s. 167–168). As emphasized in the Foreign Policy Concept of the Russian Federation in 2000, 2008, and 2013, Russia aimed to develop its relations with the countries in the region both bilaterally and within the framework of the CIS. Since the 2000s, major steps have been taken to improve relations between Russia and Armenia. The roles that Putin and Kocaryan played in the rapprochement of the two countries were momentous. While Armenia provided security within the framework of the CSTO, it was also trying to establish bilateral military cooperation with Russia. After 2000, the presence of the Russian army in Armenia made Yerevan the only ally of Moscow in the region. While Azerbaijan was scaling down military and security relations with Russia, Armenia was trying to boost the Russian presence within its borders. The South Caucasus was being propelled towards the emergence of geopolitical polarization. In the 2000s, economic, political, and military relations were established between Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey; cooperation between Russia, Armenia, and Iran was the most important counterpoint to this. After George W. Bush became US president in 2001, the wave of Color Revolutions broke out in the former Soviet region. One of the frst countries to catch this wave was Georgia in 2003. Mikhail Saakashvili, who came to power after the Color Revolution, quickly oriented his country towards the West. Following the death of Heydar Aliyevin 2003, his son Ilham Aliyev took power in Azerbaijan. Furthermore, in 2002, after Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the leader of the Justice and Development Party, came to Uploaded by S. M. Safi
356 Orhan Gafarli power in Turkey as prime minister, Western-oriented policies expanded in the region. It was clear that further development of the relationship between Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Georgia would unsettle Russia. In light of these developments, the shifting of the European Union’s relations with the countries of the region to a new level within the framework of the Eastern Partnership (2009) led to Russia’s infuence in the South Caucasus being diminished. In parallel with these geopolitical developments, the Madrid Principles began to take shape with clearer proposals in terms of timing and solution, but not that much different from the ‘step-by-step’ and ‘package’ plans prepared within the framework of the Minsk Group in 2007. The Madrid Plan emerged as a result of two-year diplomatic negotiations that had commenced in 2005, mostly led by France, a member of the OSCE Minsk Group (Gasımlı, 2010, s. 216). Prior to the meeting of the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia to be held in Paris, information about the content of the Madrid Principles was announced in the Armenian press without revealing the source. According to the Madrid Principles, Armenia would evacuate fve regions around Nagorno-Karabakh that it occupied, and the Lachin and Kalbajar corridor would be placed under the control of the UN peacekeeping force. The status of Khankendi was to be negotiated in the next phase. It was envisaged that Azerbaijanis would return to the regions to be eventually evacuated by Armenia. At frst glance, the Madrid Principles were perceived as a reasonable plan for resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh confict. However, this plan included many points problematic for both Armenia and Azerbaijan. Armenia expressed its unease about the lack of defnition of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh. Nor did Armenia want to evacuate the regions that were designated as security buffer circles before the status of Nagorno-Karabakh was determined. Azerbaijan, on the other hand, had a clear stance on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh. Baku emphasized that the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh could not be discussed in any alternatives. These negotiations between Azerbaijan and Armenia, which had lasted for almost ten years within the framework of Madrid Principles, were led mostly by the US and France, and occasionally by Russia, trying to urge the parties to approach a solution. But, Russia was not disposed towards a solution to the Karabakh confict in the form of a Western-led peace plan and, as discussed in the next section, it would propose its own plan similar to the Madrid Principles. Russia Returns to the South Caucasus in 2008 The war between Russia and Georgia, which started on August 8, 2008, signaled that Moscow had changed its approach to its South Caucasus policy, following another important regional development, which was the diplomatic process between Turkey and Armenia in the previous year. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict 357 Turkey began negotiations with Serzh Sargsyan during his term as the prime minister of Armenia and when Sargsyan became president (2008–2018), negotiations between Armenia and Turkey expanded. Turkey and Russia were working to increase their infuence in the South Caucasus in various directions: Russia, with its initiatives post-2008, and Turkey, with the Zurich Protocols signed to open the border with Armenia in 2009. Meanwhile, the Zurich Protocols led to deteriorating relations between Azerbaijan and Turkey (Shiriyev, 2016, 10). Azerbaijan objected to the reopening of the Turkish–Armenian border, a closure which had opened the door to the occupation of Kalbajar in 1993. As a result of pressure from Azerbaijan, Ankara abandoned this plan. Although Russia expressed a favorable view of the opening of the Turkish–Armenian border, it is likely that Moscow and Baku were negotiating behind the scenes to establish their own accord, which aggravated Azerbaijan’s unease about its relations with both countries and potential conficts and contradictions. The opening of the Turkish–Armenian border for Azerbaijan could risk the Nagorno-Karabakh confict spinning out of Azerbaijan’s control and Armenia fnally emerging from its regional isolation Likewise, Aliyev envisioned that Azerbaijan’s strategy of isolating Armenia regarding the Nagorno-Karabakh issue required Turkey’s support. To reiterate, the Russian–Georgian War in 2008 and attempts to open the Armenian–Turkish border in 2009 presented a fresh tactical convergence for Azerbaijan and Russia. In addition, Azerbaijan’s objection to the project calling for natural gas from Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan to be transported to Europe via NABUCCO pleased Russia. According to Wikileaks documents, Aliyev expressed his unease to Turkey’s energy minister Taner Yildiz about the implications of the NABUCCO natural gas pipeline (Düven, 2010). As a result, Turkey renounced its open border policy with Armenia, the crisis between Ankara and Baku ended, and the pre-existing geopolitical dialog in bilateral relations was reestablished. As of 2008, with Russia’s increased presence in the South Caucasus after the war with Georgia, Aliyev moved on the Karabakh problem in order to improve his international image as peacemaker (Hirose, 2014, s. 13). Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (2008–2012) and later Putin, who was elected president in 2012, initiated numerous meetings with the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Sochi. As seen in the Wikileaks documents concerning Aliyev’s meetings with foreign diplomats, Medvedev hoped to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh confict just before the end of his presidency. Aliyev expressed that Medvedev was willing to solve the problem, but Putin had his own plan regarding this issue so hence mixed signals that prevented continuity in the ongoing diplomatic process (Hurriyet, 2010). Under Medvedev’s leadership, the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia held “10 tête-à-tête meetings over 18 months” (Freizer, 2014, s. 111). According to Waal, the parties did not agree on many items at the fnal meeting. Azerbaijan did not support the Russian peacekeeping plan and objected to many Uploaded by S. M. Safi
358 Orhan Gafarli details. For example, Azerbaijan had objections even about the width of the corridor passing through Lachin and Kalbajar, which connect Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia. Meanwhile, Armenia emphasized that it would not evacuate the occupied areas without a guarantee about Nagorno-Karabakh’s status (de Waal, 2011). The solution scenario, referred to as the Kazan Principles, agreed upon by the presidents of Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Russia during Medvedev’s tenure in 2011 and proposed by Lavrov, ultimately failed (Shiriyev, 2017, 61). It would be accurate to regard the 2011 Kazan peace articles as a mere reworking of the Madrid Principles. But, the important point to be noted here is that these negotiations, carried out under the auspices of Russia, started with the Moscow Declaration between Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Russia in 2008. It was noteworthy that Russia sought to solve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem under its own leadership and nearly accomplished it on its own, outside the sphere of the Minsk Group. But, Russia explained that it still took into account the basic principles of the OSCE Minsk Group, after every declaration and meeting were accepted in tripartite form. After Putin returned to the presidency in 2012, the Karabakh issue remained a priority for Russia, even as trilateral relations between Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Georgia continued to develop. In 2012, the foreign ministers of Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Georgia met in the city of Trabzon, which played a symbolic role in 1918 when these countries were on the path to gaining independence, to sign a declaration of cooperation, which extended to economic, political, and military dimensions.6 Since 1994, Azerbaijan has tried to avoid political polarization in the region. This balanced foreign policy strategy, which started under the premiership of Heydar Aliyev, has continued during his son’s tenure. Ilham Aliyev has always sought to maintain cordial relations with Russia by focusing on the economic dimensions of their relationship. The war between Georgia and Russia in 2008 reinforced the conviction that political polarization would threaten the territorial integrity and sovereignty of all three states in the region. In particular, Azerbaijan had no desire to endure what Georgia had experienced in the bitter war with Russia. Thus, in avoiding a climate of polarization, Azerbaijan has attached great importance to its relationships with Europe and the US Afro purposes of a tactical balance in its relationship with Russia. The failure of the Zurich Protocols between Turkey and Armenia in 2009 ensured ongoing pressure by Azerbaijan in the confict by maintaining its economic and political blockade on Yerevan. However, the pressure solidifed Armenia’s ties to Russia, which enabled Moscow to reclaim a hegemonic position in the region. The fact that the Azerbaijani government pursued this intricate balance and supported Armenia’s dependence upon Russia facilitated a rapprochement between Moscow and Baku. The belief among the Aliyev government as well as the Azerbaijani political elite for this posturing stems from acknowledging the near-impossibility of Armenians abandoning Karabakh on their own accord. If Armenia was not going to cede voluntarily the Azerbaijani territories it had occupied, then Azerbaijan’s position concluded Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict 359 that Armenia would be dependent on Russia and a solution to the problem only could be possible with pressure coming from Moscow. When Ilham Aliyev came to power in 2003, Azerbaijan’s military budget was only $175 million. By 2013, it had risen to $3.7 billion. Azerbaijan had purchased weapons from Israel, South Korea, Turkey, and Russia to fortify its arsenal. In 2013, Russia sold $1 billion worth of weapons to Azerbaijan. In 2011–2016, Azerbaijan bought $5 billion worth of weapons from Israel, including an air defense system. Azerbaijan was also currying cooperation with Russia to balance its foreign military trade. As Aliyev cited in 2018, the arms trade volume between Azerbaijan and Russia was worth close to $5 billion (Chernenko, 2019). The Azerbaijani army had strengthened its branches with anti-tank missiles, the S-300 air defense system, attack helicopters, and an unmanned air defense system (Suleymanov, 2013). By 2018, additional foreign trade relations between Azerbaijan and Russia reached a value of $2.5 billion (Ria Novosti, 2019). Russia’s intention regarding the development of military cooperation in its relations with Armenia has not changed during the same period. In the National Security Strategic Document accepted by Armenia in 2007, it was envisaged that the military cooperation with Russia would be deepened and diversifed. In 2010, based on the 1995 military agreement between Russia with Armenia, the presence of the military bases in Gyumri was extended until 2044. The provision of Russia’s interests in Article 3 of this agreement was expanded with assurances about sustaining Armenia’s security (Abrahamyan, 2015). In 2014, Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Armenia worked on their relations in a new framework of integration and cooperation by establishing the Eurasian Economic Union. The economic and military strengthening of Azerbaijan, as well as the development of its military and commercial relations with Russia, were watched with concern by Armenia. Russia’s sale of weapons to Armenia—viewed as its strategic military ally in the region—and Azerbaijan’s changing the balance in the region for its own beneft worried Yerevan, which objected to Moscow for allowing such a balance to be manifested. In 2016, Russia eased Armenian concerns with a loan of $200 million so that Yerevan could bolster its military arsenal (Abrahamyan, 2018). Although Russia attempted to achieve balance in its policy toward Azerbaijan and Armenia, the arming of both countries and the sharpened warlike rhetoric expressed by their respective leaders led to the Four-Day Karabakh War (April 1–4) in 2016. Subsequently, Yerevan purchased individual night vision and thermal imaging devices, motion sensors, laser reconnaissance devices, and unmanned aerial vehicles from Russia, in preparing for a new round of combat. 2016’s Renewed Kazan Principles and the Lavrov Plan The negotiations between Azerbaijan and Armenia in the 2008–2016 period were carried out according to the Madrid Principles. But, the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
360 Orhan Gafarli two opposing sides could not agree on several issues including a referendum in Nagorno-Karabakh, the evacuation of the seven Azerbaijani districts occupied by Armenia, and peacekeeping operations. The failure of the peace proposals submitted by both Washington and Paris at meetings in Washington in 2013, in Sochi on August 10, 2014, in Paris on October 27, 2014, and in Sweden on December 19, 2015 made apparent that a new war would be fought. The Four-Day War in 2016, as mentioned above, showed how frozen conficts in the region could rapidly heat up into fullscale hostilities. Subsequently, Azerbaijan regained some strategic points in Karabakh, showing its encouragement and determination regarding how decisions taken by the UN Security Council could be carried out, in the event that the problem was not solved. Russia was aware that whenever a new Karabakh War would break out, it would have to respond to Armenia’s demand for support, and that the balance it established between Azerbaijan and Armenia would be disrupted. After the Four-Day War, Putin proposed a revised version of the Kazan model to Aliyev and Sargsyan in Moscow on July 22, 2016. According to this new model, Armenia would evacuate the seven regions of Azerbaijan it occupied and Russian peacekeeping forces would be positioned along the Lachin–Kalbajar corridor in Nagorno-Karabakh. Supposedly then, the social and economic situation between Azerbaijan and Armenia in the Karabakh region would improve and the refugees could return to their homes. The status of Nagorno-Karabakh was to be frozen at least for the near foreseeable period. To accomplish this plan, Armenia would have to act and Azerbaijan would have to approve the presence of the Russian peacekeeping force. But, the opposing parties blamed each other for its failure, which made nearly certain that another war would eventually be fought. In 2018, Armenia’s change in government was unexpected within the Russian view. Armenia’s transition to a parliamentary system and Pashinyan’s coming to power as a result of the Color Revolution provided a historic chance for Aliyev in the race between Baku and Yerevan to bring Moscow onto its side. Although the Pashinyan government conveyed that security-based cooperation with Russia would not change, there was a distinct cooling of relations between the two countries. In 2020, Pashinyan published Armenia’s new national security policy document without changing any of the previous provisions (Khalatyan, 2020). Azerbaijan, sensing an opening, took initiatives to contribute to regional security and cooperation between Iran and Russia by developing the north–south transportation route project in order to expand the economic dimension of its relations with Russia (Gafarli, 2021). After the Russo-Turkish crisis in Syria in 2016 triggered by Turkey’s shooting down of a Russian plane, bilateral relations between Turkey and Russia were restored and developed through strategic energy projects such as the Turkish Movement and Akkuyu Nuclear stations and Ankara’s purchase of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict 361 the Russian S-400 air defense system. This rapprochement between Turkey and Russia, as well as a mutual solution-oriented attitude expressed by both parties on bilateral and regional issues, favored Azerbaijan. Viewing the administration in Armenia as Western oriented or as the second Saakashvili form (echoing a Georgia) or the Maidan case in Ukraine could translate to the possibility that Russia would not be so supportive of Armenia in any new Karabakh War. Thus, Azerbaijan was able to encircle Armenia politically in the South Caucasus in addition to the ongoing economic blockade. The 44-day Second Karabakh War that broke out in October 2020 arose from a deconstructive approach Armenia had taken to attempt resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh problem, along with its refusal to accept the Madrid Principles or the Lavrov plan of 2016, the distance in discussions between the Armenian and Russian political administrations, and the harassing use of armed fre by the NKAO in the occupied territory. The Second Karabakh War, as argued for by the Azerbaijani side, was aimed at self-defense against the harassment of shooting as well as to reclaim the occupied territories. Considering the geopolitical conjuncture, the Second Karabakh War for Armenia could have resulted in either a complete defeat or a Blitzkrieg-like strategic victory. With a diplomatic ‘Blitzkrieg’ move, Armenia could have imposed the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh upon the international community, similar to the case in Kosovo, and could have eliminated many political elements dependent on Russia. But, this war did not go as Armenia had envisioned. Amidst the 2020 events of contentious US elections, the COVID-19 pandemic, Russia’s decision not to interfere in Azerbaijan’s internal affairs and the international community’s inability to implement the active UN Security Council resolutions paved the way for Baku to achieve a decisive military victory. On November 9, 2020, a ceasefre was signed with Russia as mediator. Armenia evacuated the territories it occupied, as demanded by Azerbaijan. Russian peacekeepers ensured the security of Nagorno-Karabakh as well as the Kalbajar and Lachin corridors. With the fve-year ceasefre declaration, Armenia also agreed to Azerbaijan’s opening a corridor with Nakhichevan. At the same time, Turkey’s ceasefre monitoring group arrived in Karabakh. Conclusion If one looks at the role of Russia in the Second Karabakh War as well as in the confict between Azerbaijan and Armenia in general since 1992, Russia has re-established its military presence in the region by restoring its preferred geopolitical balance in the South Caucasus region and safeguarding its national security in its ‘backyard’ or ‘near abroad.’ Russia has sent approximately 2,000 peacekeepers to Nagorno-Karabakh, in addition to the 2,000 soldiers already at the 102nd military base in Gyumri, Armenia, thereby reaching a total of 4,000. By doubling its military presence in the South Caucasus, Russia has achieved a ceasefre in its position as the main Uploaded by S. M. Safi
362 Orhan Gafarli power in this sensitive confict and demonstrated that it is the only power able to implement a solution, at least for the time being. Russia also has shown continuity in its policy by adopting a status quo attitude in resolving the border dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan and has succeeded in making both sides dependent on Russia. After the Second Karabakh War, Russia has demonstrated that it is the only global actor that can achieve peace in the South Caucasus and that there is always the possibility of another war in the event of a geopolitical vacuum. In the period ahead, Azerbaijan and Armenia are obliged to maintain good relations with Moscow in order to avoid the painful experience endured by Ukraine and Georgia. But, despite the growth of Russia’s strength in the South Caucasus, for the frst time in almost 100 years, the Kremlin also has recognized Turkey’s military presence in the region. There are disadvantages for Russia in accepting Turkey’s position but nevertheless Russia maintains its status as the only country that has managed to allay at least some Armenian fears about a real or imagined Turkish threat. In summary, Armenia is aware that the guarantor of its security and sovereignty for the foreseeable period will be Russia, not a Western ally. The status quo in the region after the Second Karabakh War and the absence of any solution in terms of the long-term status of Nagorno-Karabakh will ensure the continuity of Russia’s military presence in this region. The deployment of Russian peacekeeping troops will be renewed every fve years, unless either or both Azerbaijan and Armenia object to such a move. The initiatives of the OSCE Minsk Group mediators will also have to be renewed. Although Azerbaijan has won the Second Karabakh War, it still has not achieved a durable peace capable of putting its mind or security interests at ease. Notes 1 Post-Doc Researcher at the Research Center for International Political and Economic Relations (IPER) at Ankara University (Turkey), ORCID Num: 0000-0002-8890-2038 2 The ideal is of a great and united Armenia again. 3 Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe (CSCE) changed its name to Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) in 1995. https://www.osce.org/secretariat/52527#:~:text=At%20last%20month’s%20 Budapest%20Summit,operation%20in%20Europe%20(OSCE). 4 Leader of the Azerbaijan National Front Movement. 5 Heydar Aliyev was deputy chairman (1964-67) and chairman (1967-69) of the regional KGB, secretary (1969-87) of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan, member of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, and frst deputy Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers of the USSR (1983-87). In 1991-1993, Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic and Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Soviet (Milli Mejlis) of the Republic of Azerbaijan. 6 ‘‘The Trabzon Declaration by the ministers of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Georgia, and the Republic of Turkey,’’ Ministry of Foreign Affairs Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Russia’s Role in the Karabakh Confict 363 of the Republic of Turkey, June 8, 2012. http://www.mfa.gov.tr/trabzon--declaration-of-the-ministers-of-foreign-affairs-of-the-republic-of-azerbaijan_-georgiaand-the-republic-of-turkey_-08-june2012_-trabzon.en.mfa Bibliography Abrahamyan, Eduard. 2015. “Gyumri murders threaten to disrupt Armenia’s relations with Russia.” The Central Asia-Caucasus ANALYST. February 18. https:// www.cacianalyst.org/publications/analytical-articles/item/13142-gyumri-murders-threaten-to-disrupt-armenias-relations-with-russia.html. Abrahamyan, Eduard. 2018. “Russian loan allows Armenia to upgrade military capabilities.” The Central Asia-Caucasus ANALYST. January 8. https://www.cacianalyst.org/publications/analytical-articles/item/13491-russian-loan-allows-armenia-to-upgrade-military-capabilities.html. Aliyev, I. 1987. “O proniknovenii na territoriyu Azerbaydzhana iranoyazychnykh plemen v kontse II – nachale I tysyacheletiya do n. e.” Izvestiya Akademii nauk Azerbaydzhanskoy SSR. Seriya istorii, flosofi i prava (2): 57–68. Aras, O. N. 2006. “Asrın Anlaşması’ve Azerbaycan Ekonomisine Etkisi.” Akademik Araştırmalar Dergisi (30): 41–59. Barsegov, Y. G. 2008. Nagornyy Karabakh v mezhdunarodnom prave i mirovoy politike. Vol. 1. Moscow: Krug. Chernenko, Yelena. 2019. “Vlasti Azerbaydzhana anonsirovali novuyu oruzheynuyu sdelku s Rossiyey.” Kommersant. March 12. https://www.kommersant. ru/doc/4179985?query=%D0%9C%D0%B8%D0%BD%D0%B8%D1%81%D1% 8 2 % D1% 8 0 % 2 0 % D 0 % B 8 % D 0 % B D % D 0 % B E % D1% 81% D1% 8 2 % D1% 8 0 % D 0 % B 0 % D 0 % B D % D 0 % B D % D1% 8B % D1% 85 % 2 0 % D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BB%20%20%D0%90%D0%B7%D0%B5%D1%80%D0% B1%D0%B0%D0%B9%D0%B4%D0%B6%D0%B0%D0%BD%D0%B0. Düven, Alpaslan. 2010. “Aliyev’den Türkiye hakkında şok sözler.” Milliyet. November 29. https://www.milliyet.com.tr/dunya/aliyevden-turkiye-hakkinda-soksozler-1319835. de Waal, Thomas. 2011. “Can the ‘Medvedev Moment’ be saved for Karabakh.” Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. July 28. https://www.rferl.org/a/medvedev_ moment_saved_nagorno_karabakh_kazan/24279692.html. Elibegova, A. G. 2009. “Strategicheskaya rol’ osi Moskva - Yerevan - Tegeran v formirovanii geopoliticheskoy kartiny Zakavkaz’ya.” Vestnik Rossiyskogo universiteta druzhby narodov. Seriya: Politologiya (2): 89–93. Freizer, S. 2014. “Twenty years after the Nagorny Karabakh ceasefre: an opportunity to move towards more inclusive confict resolution.” Caucasus Survey 1 (2): 109–122. Gafarli, Orhan. 2021. “The Karabakh Ceasefre and regional economics.” The Central Asia-Caucasus ANALYST. January 28. https://www.cacianalyst.org/ publications/analytical-articles/item/13659-the-karabakh-ceasefre-and-regional-economic-projects.html. Gasanova, A. A. K. 2018. “Rol’ Rossii v uregulirovanii konfikta v Nagornom Karabakhe.” Postsovetskiye issledovaniya 1 (217–220). Gasımlı, M. Ch. 2010. “Agresiya Armenii protiv Azerbaydjana. Diplomaticheskie usiliya po resheniyu armyano-azerbaybaydjanskogo nagorno karabakhskogo konfikta.” Ot Mayendorfa do Astanı içinde, yazan G. M. Alekseeva, 189–244. Moskova: Yanusc. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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16 Israel’s Foreign Policy toward the Karabakh Confict1 Michael B. Bishku Introduction: Israel’s Interests in the South Caucasus Region – Expanding Ties in the Post-Cold War World and “Periphery 2.0” Writing in October 2020 during the Second Karabakh War, Zev Chafets, an advisor to the late-Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin (1977–1983), noted that there was a brawl over the Karabakh issue between Israeli Armenians, who had earlier protested the sale of weapons to Azerbaijan at the Knesset, and Israeli Azeri Jews on the road between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem (Breiner, 2020). However, he continues that despite this episode, “most people here [in Israel] have never heard of … [the place] and have no interests in who wins control of the long-disputed territory” (Chafets, 2020). While the Israeli government has developed a close relationship with Azerbaijan since the end of the Cold War, its position on Karabakh has been somewhat inconsistent or muted. On March 14, 2008 in a vote in the United Nations General Assembly on Resolution GA/10693 reaffrming the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and demanding the withdrawal of all Armenian forces, which was passed 39 to 7, with 100 abstentions, Israel was in the last group. The United States, France and Russia voted against, in support of Armenia, while Georgia and a number of Arab and Muslim states, including Turkey voted for the resolution; Iran was absent (United Nations, Press Release, 2008). However, on a visit to Baku in June 2009 Israel’s President Shimon Peres (2007–2014) affrmed Israel’s support for the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan (Murinson, 2009). Ephraim Sneh, who was involved in the beginning of the relations between Israel and Azerbaijan, writing in Al-Monitor in 2016, claims that the Israeli government has remained silent in international forums regarding the confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan as it does not want to raise the issue of occupation and draw parallels with the West Bank (Sneh, 2016). Chafets, mentioned above, who is sympathetic to the Armenians, points out the “fact that Israel gets more than oil from Azerbaijan.” He continues: The country shares a border with Iran, Israel’s arch enemy. At the very least that makes Baku an important source for intelligence gathering. DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-21 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Israel’s Foreign Policy 367 There are also reports that it is a potential launching pad for the Israeli air force. That makes Azerbaijan a rare and valuable asset, one that Israel is not going to abandon. Armenia has no such realpolitik value to Israel. (Chafets, 2020) Also, Armenia’s connections with Iran, with which it has a very small border, are regarded with suspicion by Israel (and the United States); indeed, in May 2002, the U.S. State Department warned that at least one Armenian company, Lizin, based in Karabakh, was suspected of collaborating with Iran on nuclear projects (Çağaptay and Murinson, 2005). Furthermore, in January 2010, WikiLeaks reveals that U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John D. Negroponte threatened Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan (2008–2018) with a cutoff of American assistance and export restrictions unless his country behaved and agreed to allow U.S. inspectors to visit unannounced following the alleged transfer of arms to Iran (IRAN: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, 2010). At the same time, Azerbaijan is very important geopolitically for the United States as the export of its energy resources reduces the dependency on Russia of countries in southern Europe (Silberstein, 2020). During much of the latter part of the Cold War era, as a result of the 1967 and 1973 Arab-Israeli Wars, Israel had no formal relations with most of the Communist world and the majority of countries in Africa. The collapse of Communist rule in eastern Europe and the breakup of the Soviet Union at the end of the Cold War as well as the Oslo Accords with the Palestine Liberation Organization shortly after afforded Israel the opportunity of re-establishing relations with countries that had severed ties, or never had them, and developing relations with newly independent states. During the late 1950s, Israel established what Yoel Guzansky refers to as “Periphery 1.0,” informal arrangements to enhance security, intelligence-sharing and economic relations with Turkey, Iran and Ethiopia, neighboring regional states with political infuence, enabling Israel to outfank its adversarial Arab immediate neighbors. “Periphery 1.0” deteriorated as Emperor Haile Selassie and Shah Muhammad Reza Pahlavi were overthrown during the 1970s, but Egypt signed a peace treaty with Israel, while Jordan no longer engaged in confict (Guzansky, 2014, pp. 101–104). With the end of the Cold War, two trilateral relationships developed during the 1990s – one composed of Russia, Iran and Armenia and the other of Turkey, Azerbaijan and Israel; the former developed as Armenia is dependent upon Russia for military and economic assistance and upon Iran for political support and as one of two outlets for that landlocked country, while the other included three “garrison states” – countries “whose political and territorial integrity is threatened by internal ethno-national confict or secessionist movements” (Murinson, 2010, p. 4) and developed with American support. “Periphery Uploaded by S. M. Safi
368 Michael B. Bishku 2.0” is “more of an ad hoc set of partnerships” and connected solely to Israel rather than all the cooperating partners, though it has a similar underlying rationale; it includes Greece, Cyprus, Azerbaijan and – at least until Sudan agreed to normalize relations with Israel in October 2020 – South Sudan. Following the Mavi Marmara incident in 2010 as relations between Israel and Turkey deteriorated ties between Israel and both Greece and Cyprus improved, while Israel-Azerbaijani relations continued to thrive (Guzansky, 2014 pp. 104–110). Since 1994, one of the main goals of Azerbaijani foreign policy has been to recover Karabakh and other territories lost to Armenia. Gallia Lindenstraus, a senior research fellow at Tel Aviv University’s Institute for National Security Studies, writing in 2015, pointed out that Azerbaijan did not rule out a return to war if negotiations failed to resolve the dispute and that it was “preparing for such a confict, in part through its relations with Israel” (Lindenstraus, 2015, pp. 70–71). Also, Azerbaijan has regarded the Jewish groups and the Israeli lobby as an effective counterweight to the Armenian lobby to promote its interests in Washington (Ismayilov, 2013, pp. 70–71). Israel’s Relations with Armenia: Consistent Refusal to Accept Armenian Claims of “Genocide” Israel established goodwill with Armenia even before that country achieved its independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. Following a massive earthquake in November 1988, the Israelis sent a rescue team and set up a military hospital in addition to fying hundreds of Armenian amputees to Israel for fttings of prosthetic limbs (Sachar, 1999, p. 334). Israel and Armenia established diplomatic relations in April 1992. Israel sought to economize regarding foreign missions and for over two decades following Armenia’s independence preferred to have its ambassador in Georgia handle affairs with Armenia until a separate position was established at the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem in 2017. As for Armenia, until it established an embassy in Tel Aviv in September 2020, it preferred to set up embassies frst in countries with populations of the Armenian diaspora; it had its ambassador to France handle affairs with Israel until a separate position was established at the Foreign Ministry in Yerevan in March 2018, while in the Middle East embassies were set up in Egypt, Iran and Syria in 1992, Lebanon in 1994 and Iraq in 2000 (Armenia, MFA, 2001, “Bilateral Relations”).2 Relations between Israel and Armenia under Presidents Levon Ter-Petrosyan (1991–1998) and Robert Kocharyan (1998–2008) were rather ordinary, but the Armenians were irritated by Israel’s reluctance to recognize their tragedy during World War I as a genocide. The most important reason this was the case was that Israel did not want to offend Turkey; such has continued to be the situation even when political relations with Turkey have been chilly as both countries value their economic ties. Nevertheless, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Israel’s Foreign Policy 369 there have been Israeli academics and politicians who have been agitating for recognition. In March 2000, at an academic conference in Philadelphia, 126 Holocaust scholars, including Israeli professors Yehuda Bauer and Israel Charny signed a document affrming the “incontestable fact” of the Armenian tragedy as a “genocide” and urging the Western democratic governments to offcially recognize such (Auron, 2003, Appendix D, pp. 311–314). A month later, in a speech at the Armenian Memorial Day (April 24) gathering in Jerusalem, Israel’s Minister of Education Yossi Sarid related that he read as a child Austrian Jewish writer Franz Werfel’s novel The Forty Days of Musa Dagh (published in 1933), based on a 53-day siege of Armenians who resisted relocation in 1915, while using the word “genocide” (Auron, 2003, Appendix A, pp. 297–299). However, this pronouncement went beyond his country’s offcial policy. Indeed, a year later, on the eve of an offcial visit to Turkey, Israel’s then-Foreign Minister Shimon Peres asserted in an interview in the English-language Turkish Daily News that it was up to academics not governments to have a historical or philosophical position regarding the issue of the treatment of the Armenians under Ottoman rule and admitting that “It was a tragedy what the Armenian went through, but not a genocide” (Auron, 2003, p. 124). In 2003, Rivka Cohen, Israel’s Ambassador to Georgia (2001– 2005), serving as her country’s envoy to Armenia made a distinction between the Jewish Holocaust and the Armenian “tragedy” at a press conference in Yerevan; the former, Cohen stated, was “a unique phenomenon, since it had always been planned and aimed to destroy a whole nation” (Fisk, 2005, p. 326). Armenia sent a note of protest to the Israeli government contending that while “‘crimes against humanity’ might have different characteristics, the statement by Cohen had the appearance of either rejecting or belittling the Armenian “‘genocide.’” Israel responded that it had never tried to deny or diminish the reality of events … or the great suffering undergone by the Armenian people. [However,] investigation of this sensitive subject must be approached through public discussion and dialogue between historians based, of course, on documents and facts. (Armenia, MFA, 2001, “Bilateral Relations with Israel”) This issue would arise again in bilateral Israeli-Armenian relations and in local politics in Israel. Both Presidents Ter-Petrosyan and Kocharyan and their respective foreign ministers Vahan Papazian (1993–1996) and Vartan Oskanian (1998–2008) made working visits to Israel. In December 1994, Papzian signed a bilateral agreement on cooperation in the felds of culture, science and education, while Ter-Petrosyan visited the Jewish state (with Papazian) in November 1995 to attend the funeral of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. In October 1998, Oskanian signed an agreement in the feld of healthcare, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
370 Michael B. Bishku while in January 2000, Kocharyan did the same with one on reciprocal protection of investments (Rosen, 2006). President Serzh Sargsyan (2008–2018) visited Israel in May 2005, when he was minister of defense; his delegation included Garegin II, the Armenian Catholicos (patriarch), who referred to the visit as “the beginning of a new era in relations between the Jews and Armenians” and Ara Abrahamian, head of the World Congress of Armenians, who commented that “The relations between our countries are obviously at [an] unsatisfactory level and there is a necessity to develop them” (Rosen, 2006). In November 2005, Israel’s Chief Rabbi Yonah Metzger, visited the Armenian Memorial for the “genocide” in Yerevan and stated “It is impossible to recollect what happened with the Armenians in Turkey without shedding tears.” He was accompanied by a member of the Knesset (parliament) Yuri Stern, who used the word “genocide” in his comments. The Israeli embassy in Azerbaijan immediately announced that the Israeli position remained unchanged and that the comments of the Rabbi and member of the Knesset “have an informal character” (Rosen, 2006). Sargsyan never visited Israel when he was president, but other bilateral agreements were signed during his tenure: One in the feld of agriculture in May 2012, one on mutual assistance in customs matters in November 2014, and two in July 2017 that were signed by Israel’s Minister of Regional Cooperation Tzachi Hanegbi; those dealt with (1) the abolition of visa requirements for those holding diplomatic passports and (2) double taxation and prevention of fscal evasion on income taxes. However, there were no visits to Israel of Armenian senior government offcials from Sargsyan’s trip in 2005 and one by Armenia’s Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian (2008–2018) in March 2015.3 At the same time, the diamond trade between Israel and Armenia disappeared as Israel’s diamond magnate Uzbekistan-born Lev Leviev shut down his cutting factory in Nor Hachn, located 60 kilometers north of Yerevan, in 2007 (Danielyan, 2009). On March 6, 2015, Armenia’s Foreign Minister Nalbandian, who had previously served as his country’s ambassador to Israel from 2000–2008, on a working visit to Jerusalem to attend a performance of that city’s Symphony Orchestra to commemorate the centenary of what Armenians referred to as the “genocide,” and to lobby for Israel’s offcial recognition of such, said, “Few nations have as many similarities as Armenians and Jews do … having endured genocides and been scattered around the world, we are proud of restoring our statehoods in the 20th century” (Danielyan, 2015). Nalbandian held talks with Israel’s President Reuven Rivlin, who had called for Israeli recognition of the Armenian tragedy as a “genocide” when he was Speaker of the Knesset in 2012. According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, the Foreign Minister and President emphasized the need to “invigorate political dialogue” between their countries and that the Armenian and Israeli people shared a “common responsibility to prevent crimes against humanity” (Danielyan, 2015). Nalbandian’s visit to Israel was followed up in July 2017 by one by Israel’s Minister of Regional Cooperation Hanegbi, a key fgure Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Israel’s Foreign Policy 371 in the Likud Party of Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu (2009– 2021), who stated that his goal was to make relations “mutually benefcial in many felds” (Avdaliani, 2017). In November 2017, Nalbandian made an offcial visit to Israel. He met with Netanyahu, who held the prime minister and foreign minister portfolios, as well as Minister of Regional Cooperation Hanegbi, Minister of Jerusalem Affairs Ze’ev Elkin, Chairman of the Knesset Yuli Edelstein, and Vice Chairwoman of the Knesset Tali Ploskov, who was Chair of the Armenia-Israel Parliamentary Friendship Group. Matters discussed included bilateral trade and economic ties and possible joint ventures in information technology, science, education, tourism and agriculture. Nalbandian also visited the Armenian Patriarch (Armenia, MFA, “Nalbandian’s Meeting with Netanyahu,” 2017). In an interview with Israel’s Public Broadcasting Corporation, Nalbandian was asked if he would describe his visit as “rare.” He turned the question around and stated that it “is very rare to receive an Israeli foreign minister in Armenia” – indeed, none have visited that country as yet – and noted that every Armenian foreign minister had paid visits to Israel. Nalbandian asserted that majority public opinion in Israel favored recognition of the Armenian tragedy as a “genocide” and pointed out that Chairman Edelstein told him that it was important for the Knesset to do so. When Nalbandian was asked when a resident Armenian ambassador would be appointed to Israel, he stated that his country’s position was that they would do so once Israel agreed to reciprocate. He pointed out that especially given Turkey’s and Azerbaijan’s blockade that friendly relations with Iran (and Georgia) were very important for Armenia and that such ties with the former was not an obstacle to having cordial bilateral relations with Israel; Nalbandian also denied the contention of the interviewer that Karabakh was regarded as being Azerbaijani territory by the international community (Armenia, MFA, “Interview of Nalbandian,” 2019). In February 2018, the Israeli Knesset rejected in a preliminary vote such a bill introduced by Yair Lapid, of the centrist Yesh Atid Party (“Israeli Knesset Rejects Bill,” 2018) and once again in June 2018, Tamar Zandberg, of the left-wing Meretz Party, was forced to withdraw legislation after the governing coalition and Foreign Ministry demanded that the word “genocide” was replaced with “tragedy” (Lis, 2018). In August 2018, Alexander Ben-Zvi, Deputy Director General and Director of the Eurasia Department of Israel’s Foreign Ministry met with Armenia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Zohrab Mnatsakanyan, who had assumed offce a few months earlier and had previously been Armenia’s Ambassador to the United Nations, in Yerevan, where they discussed possibilities of cooperation in areas of culture, science and education as well as the Syrian Civil War and mutual support for continued negotiations regarding the Karabakh confict the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk process chaired by France, Russia and the United States (Armenia, MFA, “Foreign Minister Received Deputy Uploaded by S. M. Safi
372 Michael B. Bishku Director General,” 2018). Relations had calmed down following an incident a year earlier (July 2017) in which members of an Israeli delegation from Aeronautics Defense Systems in Baku illegally carried out a live fre test on two drones at the behest of the Azerbaijani military that reportedly went off course and lightly wounded two Armenian soldiers. Israel’s Defense Ministry suspended the company’s export license (Gross, 2017). In March 2019, a delegation headed by Armenia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Grigor Hovhannisyan visited Israel for consultations on bilateral political and economic issues as well as developments in the Middle East and Caucasus regions. These talks included Armenia’s Ambassador to Israel, Armen Smbatyan, and Honorary Consul, Tsolag Momjian and on the Israeli side Minister of Jerusalem Affairs Elkin, Deputy Speaker of the Knesset Ploskov, and the Political Director of the Foreign Ministry, Alon Ushpiz. The Armenian delegation also visited Yad Vashem and participated in the opening ceremony of the annual Armenian-Israeli cultural festival as well as meeting with the Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem and representatives of the Armenian community in that city (Armenia, MFA, “Political Consultation between Foreign Ministries,” 2019). While diplomatic interactions with Israel have become more frequent under the government of Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan who came to offce in May 2018 following anti-government protests known as the “Velvet Revolution” that led to the resignation of President Sargsyan who was attempting to stay in power under a parliamentary system, the Armenian government also has begun expanding relations with Iran, especially in the economic sector. Pashinyan is interested in limiting his country’s almost total dependence on Russia for energy supplies, while Iran is concerned with circumventing U.S. sanctions; the latter is also interested in improving relations with Azerbaijan, which is probably part of the incentive for Armenia to expand ties with Israel. While rigid political axes developed following the end of the Cold War, diplomatic connections seemed to be getting to be more fuid before the Second Karabakh War. Israel’s Relations with Azerbaijan: A Connection in the Muslim World and a Means to Counter Iran in a Geostrategic Manner Israel and Azerbaijan established diplomatic relations in April 1992, the same month as Jerusalem did so with Armenia. At the time, Azerbaijan was in the midst of the First Karabakh War and just two months later, elected its frst non-Communist President Abulfaz Elchibey, who was a great admirer of Israel (and Turkey); as the leader of the Popular Front, he supported self-determination for Azeris living in northwestern Iran and called the Iranian governments “a regime based on fanaticism,” while Iranian newspapers referred to him as a “Zionist” (Pope, 1992, p. 13 and Sneider, 1992, p. 2). Given the importance of these relations, it is surprising that a resident Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Israel’s Foreign Policy 373 ambassador was not appointed for two years. Instead, a 24-year-old army veteran with no diplomatic experience (Benny Haddad) represented Israeli interests in Azerbaijan; while he was given the task of promoting Jewish immigration to Israel (Yaari, 1993, p. 28), there were unconfrmed reports that the Israelis were supplying Azerbaijan with arms, perhaps including stinger missiles (Hunter, 1992, pp. 12–13). Meanwhile, Israel opened an embassy in Azerbaijan in February 1993 (Aras, 1998, p. 73), but did not have a resident ambassador (Eliezer Yotvat) in Baku until March 1994. By that time, Haydar Aliyev (1993–2003) had replaced Elchibey as Azerbaijan’s president. Azerbaijan has yet to reciprocate with an embassy in Tel Aviv, though it does maintain an unoffcial channel of communications through the Israeli offces of Azerbaijan Airlines (AZAL) (Lindenstrauss, 2015, p. 70). As a member of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation since 1992, Azerbaijan has embassies in Algeria, Egypt, Iran, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Turkey, where it has two consulates.4 Israel has valued diplomatic relations with a number of new countries following the breakup of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War, especially Muslim-populated countries; indeed, Israel established embassies in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, while the former two countries have representation in Tel Aviv (Bishku, 2012, pp. 927–940 and Bishku, 2015, pp. 172–175). In March 1994, Bakcell, was established as a joint venture when the Israel’s government-owned telecommunications company Bezeq bought a share in Azerbaijan’s telephone system (Abilov, 2009, p. 155). The following year, an Israeli journalist noted that goods from his country from cell phones to beer and ice cream were ubiquitous in Azerbaijan (Bourtman, 2006, pp. 4–5). This initial investment and trade in consumer items was followed up with strategic ties that have remained somewhat secretive. In August 1995, it was reported in Iran’s Islamic Republic News Agency that the Israelis had sent a mission to Azerbaijan to train security agents, something the Azerbaijani government denied (Aras, 1998, p. 73). According to Jane’s Defence Weekly, in late 1996, Israel was a “major provider of battlefeld aviation, artillery, anti-tank, and anti-infantry weapons” (Çağaptay and Murinson, 2005). Given these reports and offcial denials, it is important to note that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, who succeeded his father in 2003, was quoted in a 2009 leaked U.S. diplomatic cable asserting that relations with Israel’s were “like an iceberg, nine tenths … below the surface” (Grove, 2012). And indeed, by that time, Israel and Azerbaijan had not signed any formal agreements. In August 1997, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made a brief stop in Baku to meet the elder Aliyev on the way back from a trip to Japan and South Korea. During the visit, the Israeli leader spoke of what Israel and Azerbaijan had in common and how he found “great hope” in that the two countries have relationships as Israel had “with Turkey, with Jordan, with Egypt, between the Jewish state and predominantly Muslim states” (Aras, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
374 Michael B. Bishku 1998, p. 74). Netanyahu and Aliyev discussed the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline project, completed in 2006 and through which Israel would receive a share of Azerbaijani oil – today approximately 40% of its imported crude (Guzansky, p. 108) – as well as cooperation on regional security threats (Bashirova and Sözen, 2017, p. 30). Between 1999 and 2014, there were 28 diplomatic visits between the two countries – none by the Aliyev’s, however, although Haydar Aliyev attended the funeral of Israel Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin’s in 1995 – that have also concerned matters outside of security among which include agriculture, economic development, medicine, transportation and tourism (Murinson, 2014, p.15). In fact, in September 2014, Moshe Ya’alon trip to Azerbaijan marked the frst by an Israeli Defense Minister to the region since the breakup of the Soviet Union (Murinson, 2014, p. 19). Yet security issues have gained the most attention of scholars and journalists as a large share of the two countries’ trade relations involves Israel purchasing oil, while Azerbaijan purchases weaponry and technical assistance connected with security. Indeed, Soner Çağaptay and Alexander Murinson point out that following Netanyahu’s visit, Israel not only cooperated closely with, but also provided training for, the Azerbaijani intelligence service and security for Azerbaijan’s president during foreign visits; they also state that, according to some reliable though unnamed sources, that Israel might have set up electronic listening stations along the Caspian Sea and on the Iranian border (Çağaptay and Murinson, 2005). As for cooperation with Turkey, in 2004, the Azerbaijani and Israeli press reported that an undisclosed weapons system was sent to Turkey to be assembled and delivered to Azerbaijan. Israeli, Turkish and Azerbaijani offcials denied the report (Bourtman, 2006, p. 3). Writing in 2006, in an article entitled “Israel and Azerbaijan’s Furtive Embrace,” Ilya Bourtman stated that Iran and Israel were playing “a catand-mouse game” in Azerbaijan; he asserted that they both had “vast espionage networks” in the country (Bourtman, 2006, p. 7). Also, Iran has attempted unsuccessfully to attack Israeli diplomats or Jewish sites in Azerbaijan. For example, in May 2008, Azerbaijan, on a tip from Israel’s Mossad, foiled a joint Iranian-Lebanese Hezbollah plot to target the Israeli embassy and Jewish sites in Baku in retaliation for the car bombing in Damascus a few months earlier of Imad Mughniyah, responsible for a number of terrorist attacks since the 1980s (Rotella, 2009), and in January 2012, Azerbaijan broke up an Iranian plot to assassinate Michael Lotem, the Israeli ambassador to that country (Lomsadze, 2012). A month later, Iran accused Azerbaijan of assisting Israeli agents in the assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists (Ismayilov, 2013, p. 74). In addition to intelligence sharing, Israel and Azerbaijan expanded economic cooperation. In the autumn of 2011, in its frst venture abroad, the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan (SOCAR) bought a 5% share in Med Ashdod, Israel’s only economically viable oil feld (Abbasov, 2012). Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Israel’s Foreign Policy 375 In February 2012, the two countries solidifed their strategic partnership with Azerbaijan’s ratifcation of the purchase of U.S.$1.6 billion worth – the largest in that South Caucasus country’s history – of Israeli armaments. It included a Barak-8 surface-to-air missile system, 75 missiles, an EL/M-2080 Green Pine air search radar system, Gabriel-5 ship-to-ship missiles, fve Heron drones, and 5 Searcher drones (Ismayilov, 2013, p. 72). Previously, in 2010, Israel had upgraded Azerbaijan’s Russian T-72 tanks, built in the 1970s (Göksel, 2015, p. 669) and according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) Azerbaijan already had in its possession Israeli drones, anti-tank missiles, rocket launchers and howitzer and mortar systems (Ismayilov, 2013, pp. 72–73). Stratfor, the geopolitical intelligence platform, which emphasized that it was important that the news of the $1.6 billion deal became known when Israel’s President Shimon Peres was holding talks on regional security issues with Georgia’s Foreign Minister Grigol Vashadze, had the following to say about the agreement: It is diffcult to believe that the United States and Israel are not coordinating their activities in the Caucasus. The sale to Azerbaijan affects Iran, and Israel is not likely to undercut Washington’s positions vis-àvis Tehran. Nor is Israel likely to go against U.S. policy in Moscow’s regard, and the Georgian talks and arms sale to Azerbaijan also affect Russia. It can be assumed that the U.S. has approved the initiatives. (“Azerbaijan’s Arms Deal,” 2012) According to Iran’s Fars News Agency, Azerbaijan was warned not to allow its “territories to be used by Israel for terrorist attacks” (“Azerbaijan’s Arms Deal,” 2012). In March 2012, Israelis and Azerbaijanis organized a joint venture to produce drones (“Odd, but Useful Allies,” 2012) and the following year, another one to manufacture unmanned military vehicles in Baku (Shaffer, 2013). From 2012 to 2015, Azerbaijan reportedly bought some $4 billion more of Israeli armaments (Lindenstrauss, 2015, p. 70). While Azerbaijan had been one of eight Muslim countries that strongly opposed Israel’s military campaign in 2006 Lebanon War (Ismayilov, 2013, p.74), it did not publicly criticize Israel in the 2014 Gaza War and did not suspend fights of AZAL to Tel Aviv during that confict even though American carriers did so temporarily (Bashirova and Sözen, 2017, p. 31). Azerbaijan is able to lobby for its interests with the assistance pro-Israeli American politicians and Jewish and Christian religious leaders and activists. While Azerbaijan has no embassy in Israel, it publicizes its close ties with the Jewish state through its diplomatic mission in Washington, D.C. For example, in March 2017, Azerbaijan’s Ambassador to the United States Elin Suleymanov spoke at the annual meeting of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), while a celebration of the 70th anniversary of Israel’s independence in Washington, D.C. in April 2018 attended Uploaded by S. M. Safi
376 Michael B. Bishku by American politicians and members of Jewish-American groups also emphasized that country’s friendship with Azerbaijan (Tibon, 2018). Such activities and its purchases of Israeli weapons, which amounted to more than U.S.$5 billion worth by 2016, have beneftted Azerbaijan politically in both Israel and the United States (Tharoor, 2015). According to SIPRI, from 2015 to 2020, Israel became the top supplier of arms to Azerbaijan with sales of more than $740 million (“Israel Under Diplomatic Fire,” 2020), supplying some 60% of Azerbaijan’s arms imports (Edwards, 2020). In December 2016, Netanyahu visited Azerbaijan on a stopover on the way to Kazakhstan and signed four cooperation agreements, one of which called for the creation of a joint economic commission, but none dealt with military cooperation or arms sales (Shiriev, 2016). Israeli equipment, especially Harop suicide drones and Spike anti-tank missiles, had proven benefcial in a four-day war against Armenia in April of that year when Azerbaijan was able to regain a small amount of territory it had lost to Armenia in First Karabakh War (Avdaliani, 2017). The effectiveness of Israeli weaponry in that confict subsequently encouraged Kazakhstan to sign an agreement with Israel to jointly manufacture drones (Shiriev, 2016). A little over four years later, Azerbaijan would have greater success in the Second Karabakh War. The Azerbaijanis would also employ Bayraktar drones manufactured in Turkey as well as Israeli-manufactured Harop drones and cluster bombs. Just before the war began, in late September 2020, at least four Ilyushin Il-76 operated by the Azerbaijani cargo airline Silk Way, which provides service for Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry, few between Israel’s Uvda military airbase in the Negev and Baku, while other aircraft in the Silk Way feet were fying back and forth between the Azerbaijani capital and either Ankara or Istanbul (Melman, 2020). Armenia withdrew its ambassador from Israel in early October 2020, just two weeks after opening its embassy in Tel Aviv. Israel’s President Reuven Rivlin spoke with his Armenian counterpart Armen Sargsyan and “expressed his sorrow at the outbreak of the violence … and the loss of life on both sides,” while adding that Israel would be willing to send Armenia humanitarian aid and expressing the hope that the Armenian ambassador would return “soon” (“Israel Under Diplomatic Fire,” 2020). Armenia’s President Pashinyan scoffed at the offer of Israeli humanitarian aid and warned that while Israel and Turkey were both supporting Azerbaijan that sometime later Turkey would turn against Israel (Edwards, 2020). Conclusion: Pragmatism Rules Yaakov Amidror, a former Israeli National Security Advisor remarked following the second Karabakh War that Israel “does not have any interest or idea who should control” that disputed territory, but that geopolitical concerns of Israel and Azerbaijan will continue to draw them together in friendly relations (Lobel, 2020).5 Indeed, those two countries have developed a strategic Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Israel’s Foreign Policy 377 partnership over almost the last three decades that has endured while the Jewish state’s relations with Armenia have been quite mundane and especially in recent years somewhat problematic at times. While Armenia has gotten Lebanon and Syria to recognize offcially the tragedy of World War I as a “genocide,” it has had no success with other Middle Eastern countries including Israel much to Yerevan’s dismay. Armenia is very dependent on Russia economically and militarily and needs Iran for political support, trade and as an overland outlet. It also relies on political and economic assistance from its Diaspora, especially in Western Europe and North America. Azerbaijan has a better economy and much more fexibility in foreign affairs. It is a member of the Non-Aligned Movement and has good relations with both Turkey and Israel. Azerbaijan has been able to build up its military posture through cooperation with those latter two countries, while Israel and Jewish groups have facilitated relations with the United States. Notes 1 Portions of this chapter have appeared in the Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies under the title “Israel and Armenia: So Near Experientially, But So Far Away Geopolitically,” Vol. 44, No. 2 (Winter 2021). 2 Armenia now has embassies in Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates as well. Egypt, Iran, Syria, Lebanon and Iraq have embassies in Armenia along with Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. 3 Murinson (2014), p. 24 states that in June 2014, Anna Azari, the head of the Central Europe department of the Israel’s Foreign Ministry visited Yerevan for diplomatic consultations, while asserting that despite Armenia’s irritation, Israel would continue to sell arms to Azerbaijan. This visit is not mentioned in Avdaliani (2017), who claims that no Israeli senior government offcial visited Armenia from 2012 (no specifc name is mentioned) until July 2017. 4 All of those countries, except Lebanon, in addition to Kuwait, Libya, Palestine and Sudan have embassies in Baku. 5 Amidror was Israel’s National Security Advisor from 2011–2013. References Abbasov, Shahin (May 8, 2012). “Azerbaijan: SOCAR to Use Israeli Oil Field as Proving Ground.” Eurasianet. https://eurasianet.org/azerbaijan-socar-to-use-israelioil-feld-as-proving-ground Abilov, Shamkhal (2009). “Azerbaijan-Israel Relations: A Non-Diplomatic, but Strategic Partnership.” International Strategic Research Organization (Ankara-based Think Tank), Vol. 4, No. 8, pp. 138–156. http://www.acarindex.com/ dosyalar/makale/acarindex-1423910554.pdf Aras, Bülent (January 1998). “Post-Cold War Realities: Israel’s Strategy in Azerbaijan and Central Asia.” Middle East Policy, Vol. 5, No. 4, pp. 68–81. Armenia. Ministry of Foreign Affairs. (2021). “Bilateral Relations.” https://www. mfa.am/en/bilateral-relations/ ———. (2021). “Bilateral Relations with Israel.” https://www.mfa.am/en/bilateralrelations/il Uploaded by S. M. Safi
378 Michael B. Bishku ———. (November 7, 2017). “Eduard Nalbandian’s Meeting with Benjamin Netanyahu.” https://www.mfa.am/en/press-releases/2017/11/07/fm-netanyahu/7661 ———. (August 21, 2018). “Foreign Minister of Armenia Received Deputy Director General and Director of Eurasia Department of Foreign Ministry of Israel.” https://www.mfa.am/en/press-releases/2018/08/21/fm_israel_meeting/8445 ———. (November 10, 2019). “Interview of Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian with Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation.” https://www.mfa.am/en/ interviews-articles-and-comments/2017/11/10/fm-interview-public/7668 ———. (March 6, 2019). “Political Consultations between the Foreign Ministries of Armenia and Israel.” https://www.mfa.am/en/press-releases/2019/03/06/ arm_israel/9192 Auron, Yair (2003). The Banality of Denial: Israel and the Armenian Genocide (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers). Avdaliani, Emil (November 2, 2017). “Israel and the South Caucasus: Building a New Approach.” BESA Center Perspectives, Paper No. 632. https://besacenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/632-Israel-and-the-South-Caucasus-Avdaliani-fnal-1.pdf “Azerbaijan’s Arms Deal with Israel” (February 29, 2012). Stratfor. https://worldview.stratfor.com/article/azerbaijans-arms-deal-israel Bashirova, Aynor and Ahmet Sözen (Spring 2017). “The Role of Azerbaijan in Israel’s Alliance of the Periphery.” Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 21, No. 1, pp. 29–43. Bishku, Michael B. (Winter 2021). “Israel and Armenia: So Near Experientially, But So Far Away Geopolitically.” Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 44, No. 2 (Winter 2021), pp. 20–43. ———. (November 2012). “The Relations of the Central Asian Republics of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan with Israel.” Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 48, No. 6, pp. 927–940. ———. (Winter 2015). “Turkmenistan and the Middle East.” The Levantine Review, Vol. 4, No. 2, pp. 157–176. https://ejournals.bc.edu/index.php/levantine/article/ view/9159/8246 Bourtman, Ilya (Summer 2006). “Israel and Azerbaijan’s Furtive Embrace.” Middle East Quarterly, Vol. 13, No. 3. Html format. https://www.meforum.org/987/ israel-and-azerbaijans-furtive-embrace Breiner, Josh (October 17, 2020). “Brawl Breaks Out between Armenian and Azerbaijani Supporters on Jerusalem Highway.” Haaretz. https://www.haaretz. com/israel-news/.premium-brawl-breaks-out-between-armenian-and-azerbaijani-supporters-on-jerusalem-highway-1.9242253 Çağaptay, Soner and Alexander Murinson (March 30, 2005). “Good Relations between Azerbaijan and Israel: A Model for Other Muslim States in Eurasia.” Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Policy Watch, No. 982. https:// www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/good-relations-between-azerbaijan-and-israel-model-other-muslim-states-eurasia Chafets, Zev (October 22, 2020). “Israel Must Choose Better in Nagorno-Karabakh.” Bloomberg Opinion. https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-10-22/ israel-must-choose-better-in-nagorno-karabakh Danielyan, Emil (March 6, 2015). “Nalbandian Shuns Israeli FM on Jerusalem Trip.” Azatutyun (Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s Armenian Service). https:// www.azatutyun.am/a/26886103.html Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Israel’s Foreign Policy 379 ———. (December 2, 2009). “Yerevan Vows to Shore up Ailing Diamond Industry.” Azatutyun. https://www.azatutyun.am/a/1892581.html Edwards, Maxim (November 12, 2020). “Confict in Nagorno-Karabakh Raises Scrutiny of Israeli Arms Sales to Azerbaijan.” Global Voices. https://globalvoices. org/2020/11/12/confict-nagorno-karabakh-raises-scrutiny-israeli-arms-azerbaijan/ Fisk, Robert (2005). The Great War for Civilisation: The Conquest of the Middle East (New York: Alfred A. Knopf). Göksel, Oğuzhan (2015). “Beyond Countering Iran: A Political Economy of Azerbaijan-Israel Relations. Vol. 42, No. 4, pp. 655–675. Gross, Judah Ari (August 29, 2017). “Drone Sale to Azeris Halted as Maker Accused of Bombing Armenia in Demo.” Times of Israel. https://www.timesofsrael.com/ suicide-drone-sales-to-azeris-blocked-after-claim-it-hit-armenians-during-show/ Grove, Thomas (September 30, 2012). “Azerbaijan Eyes Aiding Israel against Iran.” Reuters. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-iran-israel-azerbaijan/ azerbaijan-eyes-aiding-israel-against-iran-idUSBRE88T05L20120930 Guzansky, Yoel (March 2014). “Israel’s Periphery Doctrine 2.0: The Mediterranean Plus.” Mediterranean Politics. Vol. 19, No. 1, pp. 99–116. Hunter, Jane (October 23, 1992). “Arms for Azerbaijan?” Middle East International, No. 436, pp. 12–13. “IRAN: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia Squeezed between Tehran and Washington” (December 11, 2010). Los Angeles Times. https://latimesblogs.latimes.com/babylonbeyond/2010/12/iran-azerbaijan-armenia-georgia-russia-intelligence-weapons-wikileaks.html Ismayilov, Elnur (2013). “Israel and Azerbaijan: The Evolution of a Strategic Partnership.” Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs. Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 69–76. “Israeli Knesset Rejects Bill Recognizing the Armenian Genocide” (February 14, 2018). Armenian Weekly (Watertown, MA). https://armenianweekly. com/2018/02/14/israeli-knesset-rejects-bill-recognizing-armenian-genocide/ “Israel under Diplomatic Fire for Arms to Azerbaijan” (October 5, 2020). Al-Monitor. https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/afp/2020/10/armenia-azerbaijan-conf lict -karabakh-arms-israel.html Lindenstrauss, Gallia (January 2015). “Israel-Azerbaijan: Despite the Constraints, a Strategic Relationship.” Strategic Assessment. Vol. 17, No.4, pp. 69–79. Lis, Jonathan (June 26, 2018). “Israeli Lawmaker Drops Bill Recognizing Armenian Genocide.” Haaretz. https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/. premium-israeli-mk-drops-bill-recognizing-armenian-genocide-1.6217267 Lobel, Oved (November 26, 2020). “War between Armenia and Azerbaijan Highlights Turkey-Israel Tensions.” The Strategist (Australian Strategic Policy Institute). https://w w w.aspistrategist.org.au/war-between-ar menia-and-azerbaijan -highlights-turkey-israel-tensions/ Lomsadze, Georgi (January 27, 2012). “Azerbaijan Said it Thwarted an Iranian Plot to Kill an Israeli Ambassador.” The Atlantic. https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/01/azerbaijan-says-it-thwarted-an-iranian-plot-to-kill-anisraeli-ambassador/252111/ Melman, Yossi (October 9, 2020). “Azerbaijan-Armenia Confict: How Israel and Turkey Became Strange Bedfellows.” Middle East Eye. https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/azerbaijan-armenia-confict-israel-turkey-strange-bedfellows Uploaded by S. M. Safi
380 Michael B. Bishku Murinson, Alexander (July 6, 2009). “Looking Eastward: Peres Proves Hit in Azerbaijan.” Jerusalem Post. https://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/LookingEastward-Peres-proves-a-hit-in-Azerbaijan ———. (October 2014). The Ties between Israel and Azerbaijan. The Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies (BESA), Mideast Security and Policy Studies, No. 110. http://www.besacenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/MSPS110-web.pdf ———. (2010). Turkey’s Entente with Israel and Azerbaijan (London: Routledge). “Odd, but Useful Allies” (January 21, 2012). The Economist. Pope, Hugh (June 12, 1992). “The Front Wins Through.” Middle East International, No. 427, p. 13. Rosen, Sami (January 21, 2006). “Armenia and Israel Throw Down a Gage to Iran and Turkey.” Hytert (Armenian Media Tracking Site in Turkey). https://hyetert. org/2006/01/22/armenia-and-israel-throw-down-a-gage-to-iran-and-turkey/ Rotella, Sebastian (May 30, 2009). “Alleged Hezbollah Plot in Azerbaijan.” Los Angeles Times. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2009-may-30-fg-shadow30-story.html Sachar, Howard M. (1999). Israel and Europe: An Appraisal in History (New York: Alfred A. Knopf). Shaffer, Brenda (April 16, 2013). “Azerbaijan’s Cooperation with Israel Goes Beyond Iran Tensions.” Washington Institute of Near East Policy, Policy Watch, No. 2067. https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/pdf/view/5317/en Shiriev, Zaur (December 15, 2016). “Azerbaijan: Netanyahu Visit Boosts Azerbaijan-Israel Ties.” Eurasianet. https://eurasianet.org/azerbaijan-netanyahu-visitboosts-azerbaijani-israel-ties Silberstein, Abe (October 13, 2020). “Why the Interests of Israel and the U.S. Are with Azerbaijan.”Ahval.https://ahvalnews.com/nagorno-karabakh/why-interests-israeland-us-are-azerbaijan Sneh, Ephraim (April 15, 2016). “Why Israel is Staying Silent on Azerbaijan-Armenia Confict.” Al-Monitor. https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/04/ israel-keeps-silent-ally-azerbaijan-confict-armenia.html Sneider, Daniel (November 30, 1992). “Azeri Leader Aims for Moderation.” Christian Science Monitor, p. 2. Tharoor, Ishaan (April 24, 2015). “Why Israel Does Not Recognize the Armenian ‘Genocide.’” Washington Post. Tibon, Amir (April 29, 2018). “How Pro-Israel Jews Became Azerbaijan’s Secret Weapon in Washington.” Haaretz. https://www.haaretz.com/us-news/.premium-how-proisrael-jews-became-azerbaijan-s-secret-weapon-in-washington-1.6033307 United Nations. Press Release (2008). “General Assembly Adopts Resolution Reaffrming Territorial Integrity of Azerbaijan, Demanding Withdrawal of All Armenian Forces.” https://www.un.org/press/en/2008/ga10693.doc.htm Yaari, Ehud (June 17, 1993). “A Luxury We Can’t Afford.” Jerusalem Report, p. 28. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
17 Iran’s Policies Toward the Karabakh Confict Mesiagha Mahammadi and Vasif Huseynov Introduction The Islamic Republic of Iran’s position in the Nagorno-Karabakh confict has been inextricably linked to its relations with Armenia and Azerbaijan since the collapse of the Soviet Union. In the Soviet era, Iran’s policies in the South Caucasus region sought to overcome the constraints of Soviet domination with hopes of establishing its own relations with the states in the area. But, the situation also was not entirely unfavorable for Iran. The stability along the country’s northern borders under the Soviet rule accommodated Tehran’s efforts to direct its attention to more pressing challenges along the eastern, southern and southwestern perimeters. The Soviet Union’s dissolution and the emergence of independent states in the South Caucasus opened up more comprehensive Iranian engagement in the region but Tehran also was uncertain at the outset about recognizing the independence of newly founded states. But, Iran fnally recognized the independence of the Armenian and Azerbaijani on December 25, 1991. Prior to formal recognition, Iran had already launched direct contacts with the new leaders of both countries through exploratory visits. For example, in 1990, Iran’s then President Akbar Hashimi Rafsanjani visited Baku to initiate bilateral negotiations. The outbreak of the violent territorial confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Karabakh region at that time challenged Iran’s policy choices. Although Tehran, at the beginning, opted not to engage in the confict, Iranian leaders eventually decided to focus on the confict, as it involved two substantial northern neighbors. Ethnic kinship and family ties between the Iranian Azerbaijanis and the people of the Republic of Azerbaijan along with acknowledging Azerbaijan’s relationships with Turkey and Israel have factored into Iran’s policies regarding the confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. As Kaleji (2020) explains, Iran’s policy framework opposes any ethnic geopolitical confguration that condones separatism, which plains why “Iran never recognized the independence of Karabakh, Abkhazia and South Ossetia in spite of good and close relations between Iran and Armenia and also Iran and the Russian Federation.” Kaleji adds that Iran’s approach DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-22 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
382 Mesiagha Mahammadi and Vasif Huseynov has been consistent as well with Chechnya, Dagestan in North Caucasus and in Iraqi Kurdistan. Iran’s objectives also have sought to prevent any expansion of the confict into its territories and to block the intervention of non-regional global powers in settling the confict. Tehran, seeking to ensure the US did not enter the confict directly along with NATO members and Israel in hopes of cultivating outside infuence in the South Caucasus, supported other multilateral frameworks for settling the confict, such as including only those neighboring states in the region either in arrangements of 3+2 (i.e., Russia, Turkey and Iran + Armenia and Azerbaijan) or 3+3 (i.e., Russia, Turkey and Iran + Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia). Tehran’s challenges have been complicated, often of its own doing. Some Iranian experts have interpreted Tehran’s position toward and views about the Karabakh confict as “never clearly and transparently declared” and “refected different and sometimes contradictory statements” (Gaffari, Veysinejad, and Taghipur, 2012, 99). For some Iranian analysts, this conundrum was likely the outcome of inconsistent, contradictory policies articulated by different Iranian governments about the Karabakh question. As explained later, other factors enter in this equation to elucidate why despite its intentions, Iran has failed to become an impactful player in resolving the confict. In summary, Iran has failed to leverage its unique status in the region to achieve a substantial diplomatic role. As Kaleji (2020) explains, [it is] only Iran among the three neighbors [Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia] of the region that has sustainable diplomatic relations with all three countries of the South Caucasus including Armenia and Georgia as the two Christian countries and Republic of Azerbaijan as the Muslim and Shia country. Daragahi (2020) extends the background about Tehran’s conundrum in fnding a space for cordial relations with Baku, noting that Iran’s second language is “effectively Azeri,” and its religious affnities reside more with “majority Shia Muslim Azerbaijan than with Orthodox Christian Armenia.” Daragahi adds that Azerbaijan has worried about Iran’s Shia ideology infltrating its borders while Iran worried about Azeri nationalism taking hold in its communities, a fear augmented by Iranian concerns about Baku’s willingness to cooperate with American and Israeli intelligence reconnaissance missions. Iran’s Azeris are perhaps the country’s most powerful minority group. Supreme Leader Khamenei has an Azeri father, while opposition fgure Mir-Hossein Mousavi, who has been under house arrest since 2011, is also of Azeri descent. Azeris dominate the major northern cities of Tabriz and Orumieh from a demographic perspective and have a strong commercial presence in Tehran. Daragahi neatly summarizes Iran’s fundamental conundrum, explaining that Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Iran’s Policies Toward the Karabakh Confict 383 though relations between Tehran and Baku have warmed up in recent years, Iran’s leaders remain far more comfortable with the weak, landlocked, and impoverished Armenia—allied by necessity with Russia— than they are with Azerbaijan—an oil-wealthy, well-connected autocracy that is a veritable United Arab Emirates on the Caspian Sea. After the First Karabakh War, Iran had several major unique factors but missed building upon them in terms of reconfguring its role in the South Caucasus. Ramezanzadeh (1996) explains the advantages Iran had at the time included possessing nearly half of global oil and gas resources. Likewise, he cites the dominance of the Arab language and character in the region (with the exception of Iran and Turkey) and Islam being the sole but key connecting feature between Iran and the regional countries. Iran’s geographical position on the region’s margin also matters, as it is bordered by the Mediterranean Sea, the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman. All its countries have access to the sea. Insofar as none is landlocked, in this regard they are not dependent on one another. (Ramezanzadeh, 1996) It appears that in 2021, Iran’s geopolitical capacity to leverage advantages has changed little, if at all. This chapter highlights how the 44-day war between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the fall of 2020 has opened a new chapter. The relevant time frame covers shake ups in Iran’s policies concerning the confict, ranging from supporting Azerbaijan in the early 1990s to declaring support for the status quo, which was set by the Russia-brokered ceasefre agreement in May 1994. The chapter sheds light also on the motivation and challenges of Iran’s attempts to play a mediating role between the two conficting states, during the First and Second Karabakh Wars. It concludes that, although Iran has managed, to a considerable degree, to prevent any adverse effect of the confict on its domestic stability, it has largely failed in its mediation efforts, to the detriment of Tehran’s regional ambitions. Factors that Affected Iran’s Position in the Karabakh Confict In the early years of the confict, Tehran believed it was a manageable territorial dispute that could be resolved through third-party mediation. Ramezanzadeh (1996) explains that Iran wanted a quick solution because it worried that any prolonged hostilities would embolden Russia to act independently without accounting for Iranian interests, especially as the post-Soviet military doctrine “unequivocally … considers its strategic borders in Central Asia to be contiguous to Iran and Afghanistan and, in the Caucasus, to Iran and Turkey.” Also, Iran was concerned about its capacities Uploaded by S. M. Safi
384 Mesiagha Mahammadi and Vasif Huseynov to house more refugees, given that it already had given sanctuary to millions from wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. After some 200,000 people who fed the fghting in the ethnic Azeri community of Nakhichevan toward Iranian borders, then Iranian President Hashimi Rafsanjani announced paradoxically that while Iran supported the refugees in their plight it was in the best mutual interests for displaced persons to return to Azerbaijani territory (Ramezanzadeh, 1996). Iran also was seeking balances that realistically seemed unfeasible of achieving, such as defending the rights of territorial integrity for both Armenia and Azerbaijan while hoping not to jeopardize its access to Europe and simultaneously contain Turkey’s presence in the region. The circumstances were poised to give Iran an opportunity to oppose Turkish and US policies in the region, and of the inconsistencies in Russian policies, [thereby making Iran] the only regional player which has both incentives and the opportunity to play a mediating role by taking a visibly impartial stand in the confict. (Ramezanzadeh, 1996) In May 1992, Iran’s efforts, orchestrated by then president Rafsanjani, resulted in a provisional peace agreement between the then acting president of Azerbaijan, Yagub Mammadov and Levon Ter-Petrossian, Armenia’s frst president of the independent republic. But, the conficting interests of external parties in a territorial issue affecting Iran’s border zone—the occupation of Shusha by Armenians which occurred just a day after the parties had concluded the agreement in Tehran—changed the confict for Tehran’s concerns. It would be another fve years before Iran’s mediation efforts in the region would fnd success, specifcally Tajikistan where the government reached a peace agreement with the Islamic Renaissance Party (IRPT). That succeeded, according to Kaleji (2020), because of Russia’s involvement. Mahmud Vaezi, then deputy foreign minister of Iran who had been a mediator in the negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, explains the shift in Tehran’s position: The Karabakh dispute, contrary to other similar disputes, is very complicated and its resolution requires management, patience and collective rationality. The dimensions of the dispute have expanded to such an extent that they have become intertwined with the interests of some international and regional great powers. Therefore, the will of the two countries is not enough to end the dispute. (Vaezi, 2008) Returning to the First Karabakh War, it was evident that both main parties were intransigent in their positions. Armenia’s military confdence was bolstered by its victory as the country pursued either annexation or formal recognition of a new independent state covering Nagorno-Karabakh, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Iran’s Policies Toward the Karabakh Confict 385 both options that Azerbaijan refused to entertain even as starting points in diplomatic negotiations. On the one hand, Iran, trying to reconcile its own conundrum aggravated by the immovable positions of Armenia and Azerbaijan, sought to prevent Western countries and corresponding transnational corporate interests from obtaining access to the Caspian Sea and to keep their regional ally Turkey at bay. The possibility of Western cultural, economic, political and ideological infuence growing in the South Caucasus in the post-Soviet period was perceived as an imminent threat in Tehran where major strategists were contemplating how to counter any such prospects (Mahammadi, 2017, 238–239). On the other hand, Iran sounded more cooperative toward Russia and was open to relations with Moscow on regional geopolitical issues, though Iranians were keen not to allow Russians to dominate the region and sideline Tehran in the process. Regarding the 1990s, Avdaliani (2021) explains that Iran did not see political capital arising from extending their relationship with Azerbaijan, which attempted to soothe the pains of its war with Armenia with sentiments of nationalism and patriotism that could eventually resonate with ethnic Azerbaijanis in Iran. Abulfaz Elchibey, then the president of Azerbaijan who promoted the ideal of a “Greater Azerbaijan,” “embraced pan-Turkic ideas and tried to reach out to ethnic kin in Iran” (Avdaliani, 2021). To counter this, Tehran sought to develop closer relations with Christian Armenia, a departure from previous stances taken by the Islamic Republic. This shift led to what became known as the Tehran-Moscow-Yerevan geopolitical axis (Dugin, 2000, 352). According to Iranian political analysts, this axis represented a defensive move as a balancing act against threats posed by the US-Israel-Turkey-Azerbaijan geopolitical axis. “By forming the Tehran-Moscow-Yerevan axis, Iran sought to reduce the role of Israel and US in the region” (Bozrgmehri and Tabatabai, 2017). Iran also saw opportunities among Armenian lobby groups in the Western countries to counter anti-Iran activities of the Jewish lobby. These developments in the 1990s shaped Iran–Armenia relations into a nuanced geostrategic partnership, which, at one time, Iranian offcials denied as existing. This would have inevitable consequences for Iran’s policies in the Karabakh confict. Tehran defended these relations as an asset to play an effective mediating role in resolving the confict. For example, a report, published by the Iranian government-affliated Irib News Agency on October 10, 2016, indicated that, in contrast to Russia and Turkey, Iran did not support either of the parties in the confict, and, therefore, was more suited to being a mediator to coordinate the resolution process. For another group of Iranian experts, Turkey and Russia, in their respective support for parties in the confict, were prioritizing their parochial interests, which threatened the region’s prospects for peace and security (Kouhi, Esfahani and Haqpanah, 2017). Uploaded by S. M. Safi
386 Mesiagha Mahammadi and Vasif Huseynov It is important to note that Iran’s approach to the geopolitics of the South Caucasus has been affected by forces of historical memory. This has been refected in the “17 cities of the Caucasus” thesis put forward by Iranian Supreme Leader Khamenei in the early years of the confict. The thesis contends that the South Caucasus cities over which Iran lost control under the Russia—Persia treaties of Gulistan of 1813 and Turkmenchay of 1828—currently are part of the sovereign territories of the regional republics. According to Khamenei, Yerevan, in parallel with Baku, is an old Iranian city, and this necessitates a balanced approach in relations with. An online report published by the Iranian Diplomacy Group on April 3, 2013, suggests some Iranians believe that the peoples of those 17 Caucasian cities are, in fact, willing to unite with Iran. Although the “17 cities of the Caucasus” thesis has lost its signifcance in Iranian politics over the last few years, it gained fresh momentum following the jubilant parade Azerbaijan held after the Second Karabakh War where Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan recited a poem that fguratively lamented the division of the historical Azerbaijani territories into two parts (North and South) under the Treaty of Turkmenchay of 1828. Iran’s relations with Armenia have been primarily affected by mutual ethnocultural ties and joint efforts to counter Turkey’s regional infuence, but there also are more factors that have been affecting Iran’s relations with Azerbaijan. Irrespective of the religious and cultural closeness between Iran and Azerbaijan and, probably because of, the existence of a sizable ethnic Azerbaijani minority in Iran, the relations between the two countries have been problematic. For example, Iranian political expert Ilaha Kulayi explains, Despite the existence of cultural and religious ties, Iran’s relations with Azerbaijan have never been friendly and at desired level. Political relations between the two countries have always been infuenced by the strategic relations of the Republic of Azerbaijan with the United States, Turkey and Israel, as well as the dispute over the legal status of the Caspian Sea. (Kulayi, 2010, 87) The negative factors are not limited to those Kulayi cited. The list can be expanded to encompass Iran’s refusal to downgrade its relations with Armenia despite the latter’s occupation of 20% of Azerbaijani territories, the well-established secular model of governance in the Republic of Azerbaijan, and the infuence of Azerbaijan on the process of ethnic self-awareness among Iranian Azerbaijanis. The ethnic-Azerbaijani minority dimension of bilateral relations has played an impactful role. Iran had to consider pro-Azerbaijani sentiments of this sizable minority in its policymaking concerning the Karabakh confict. On the other hand, Iranian leaders have Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Iran’s Policies Toward the Karabakh Confict 387 sought to prevent the confict from encouraging pro-Azerbaijani nationalist groups mobilizing within Iran and thereby unsettling the domestic politics. For many observers, the Karabakh confict has propelled a national-cultural movement among Iranian Azerbaijanis. Ethnic Azerbaijani activists, despite Iran’s reiteration of its recognition of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, have criticized Iran’s support for Azerbaijan as inadequate. Social unrest in the Azerbaijani provinces of Iran has been countered by Iranian security agencies, with activists arrested. The demands underlying this social mobilization have been reiterated by ethnic-Azerbaijani members of parliament, intellectuals, clergy and even military service personnel. As rightly noted by Brenda Shaffer, the Karabakh confict mobilized the Iranian Azerbaijanis (Shaffer, 2017, 119). This frightens Iranian leaders, who see the rise of nationalist (Turkic) self-awareness as a threat to Iran’s national security. According to Iranian expert Bahram Amir Ahmadian and colleagues, Today, Iran’s biggest fear is the idea of Turkism coming from the north of the Araz River… Therefore, one of the reasons for Iran’s rapprochement with Armenia is the fear of Turkism in the region. At the same time, Iran is concerned about the strengthening of the Republic of Azerbaijan. (Ahmadian, Rzazada, and Corf, 2016, 25) It is worth noting that not only Turkism but also Azerbaijanism, an ideology promoted under Heydar Aliyev’s presidency (1993–2003) in Azerbaijan, caused concerns and aggravated sentiments of inferiority among Iranian leaders. As mentioned above, the secular model internalized by post-Soviet Azerbaijani governments also has caused problems in Iran–Azerbaijan relations. For Iran, Azerbaijan could have become the second Shia state in the world following its separation from the Soviet Union. It seems this displeasure about Azerbaijan’s choice for secularism has been also offcially communicated by the Iranian side to Azerbaijani leaders, since President Heydar Aliyev clearly stated Azerbaijan’s position, in 2001, in his meeting with Hassan Ruhani, then Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council: We do and will continue to follow the path of secular statehood. We cannot go back. After the independence of Azerbaijan, it is enshrined in our Constitution that freedom of conscience in Azerbaijan is provided. Religion has been banned for 70 years [under the Soviet rule]. There were only 16 mosques in Azerbaijan. But now there are 236 mosques. That is, [if] anyone wants to worship, there are mosques everywhere. Nobody forbids anything. But our religion is separate from the state. We are going and will go this way. Having said that, I want you to know Uploaded by S. M. Safi
388 Mesiagha Mahammadi and Vasif Huseynov the real situation in Azerbaijan. Armenia is not a Muslim country [but] you are making friendship with them. We are Muslims and we love our religion, but we follow a secular path. We are establishing mutually benefcial relations with all countries of the world. Because it is very important for an independent, young state, for a state whose 20 percent of territories are under occupation (Azerbaijani newspaper Azərbaycan, July 21, 2001). During the same meeting, Iran reinforced its policy of exporting the Islamic revolution although not as strongly as it had previously communicated. Accordingly, Iran tried to elevate the position of the Islamic Party of Azerbaijan in the socio-political life of the country and provided it with ideological and fnancial assistance. This link with Iran and the party was confrmed by the decision of an Azerbaijani court in 1995. The leaders of the party were jailed, and the party was banned by decree of the Azerbaijani Supreme Court. Iran continued to work with various Shiite Islamist groups in Azerbaijan as well as with the banned Islamic party which continued to operate unoffcially despite the judicial decrees. Tehran reacted to the restrictive measures the Azerbaijani authorities took against the mobilization of Islamic groups in the Nardaran village, a settlement close to Baku and popular with the conservative and radical groups. Iranian experts and the media have repeatedly accused the Azerbaijani government of fghting Islam and Shiism. The policy of multiculturalism pursued at the offcial level during the presidency of President Ilham Aliyev was likewise assessed as an “attack on the Shiite identity” (Heshmati, 2015). Attempting to manipulate the Azerbaijani people’s emotions about the occupation of Karabakh and raise discontent among the people against Western-linked foreign policies toward Azerbaijan, pro-Iranian Islamist groups criticized the Azerbaijani government for entrusting the resolution of the confict to pro-Armenian Christian countries (i.e., co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group). In recent years, numerous events in Iran with Islamists from Azerbaijan participating accused the Azerbaijani government of not using the potential of the religious population and stressed that Karabakh can be liberated only with the “Shiite spirit.” As the Second Karabakh War was being waged, Iranian politician Mohammad Javad Jamali, former senior member of the Iranian parliament’s national security and foreign policy commission, told Al Jazeera that the Minsk Group failed in its primary goal of ending the confict, adding, “We believe those who foment the killings, especially the US and Israel, would like the fres of confict to remain afame.” Jamali added that only a United Nations organized effort could absorb and synthesize “the intricate geopolitical, historical and ethnic factors involved” to avoid causing more pain to the people who happen to live in one of the region’s most consequential strategic areas. To reiterate, the Minsk Group refused to acknowledge or support Iran’s frst attempt to Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Iran’s Policies Toward the Karabakh Confict 389 broker a ceasefre and peace agreement in 1992, an attitude that “may have resulted from an apprehension that any support for Iran’s initiatives would weaken Turkey’s position in the region” (Ramezanzadeh, 1996). Similar sentiments have been observed by Iranian experts as well. For example, Mortaza Ashraf and Moctaba Ashraf conclude that: The situation in the Karabakh region has played a dual role in the activities of Islamist movements in [Azerbaijan]: on the one hand, the Muslim nation of Azerbaijan understands that the Christian world, led by Russia, the United States and France, supports Armenia’s position [in the Karabakh confict]. This factor strengthens the position of Islamic movements with anti-American agendas in Azerbaijan. On the other hand, the relations of the Islamic Republic of Iran with Armenia and the criticism of these relations by the Azerbaijani society, especially its secular members, cause problems for the activities of the Shiite Islamist movements (Mortaza Ashraf and Moctaba Ashraf, 2015, 49). One factor impacting Iran’s position on the Karabakh issue has been friendly relations between Azerbaijan and Israel. This has always been “a favorite topic” in the criticism of Azerbaijan’s foreign policies among Iranian political-diplomatic circles, clerics, media and the expert community. For most Iranian observers, Israel seeks to get a foothold across the Iranian borders by building close relations with Azerbaijan. Iranians feared the use of the Azerbaijani territory as a transit zone to enter Iran, as they alleged in incidents in which an Israeli killed Iranian nuclear scientists along with the launch of Israeli unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) from the Azerbaijani territory for the purpose of entering Iranian airspace. These experiences also have justifed Iran’s closer political and economic relations with Armenia and its ambiguous policies on the Karabakh confict. There was a standard answer Iranian experts and politicians gave to the question of why Iran is cooperating with Karabakh-occupying Armenia, when asked by Azerbaijanis. The answer accordingly was: “And you are having close relations with Quds-occupying Israel.” Iran’s position on the Nagorno-Karabakh confict also has been affected by prolonged negotiations over the legal status of the Caspian Sea and the joint exploitation of Caspian hydrocarbon resources by Azerbaijan and transnational companies. After the signing of the “Treaty of the Century” in 1994, as it became widely known, Iranians expressed their dissatisfaction with Azerbaijan’s policy of cooperation with the West, demonstratively boosting relations with Armenia. Iran used the Armenian factor and the fact of occupation of Karabakh as a means of pressure to dissuade Azerbaijan’s position in negotiations on the status of the Caspian Sea and its stubborn insistence was one of the reasons for why the negotiations took so long. Only after the signing of the Convention on the Legal Status of the Caspian Sea in 2018, Iran lost this playing card to exert pressure on Azerbaijan. Hereafter, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
390 Mesiagha Mahammadi and Vasif Huseynov Iran went to sign agreements with Azerbaijan on joint activities along the Caspian Sea shoreline. Finally, the infuence of the Armenian community in Iran on Tehran’s policy toward the Nagorno-Karabakh confict should be noted. There are various fgures on the number of Iranian Armenians (between 70,000 and 200,000), but most of them (about 150,000) have left the country since the Islamic Revolution, and now their number is hardly more than 60,000. The Armenian community enjoys cultural, religious and political rights (including the allocation of two seats in the country’s parliament) and can take an active role in the socio-political affairs of the country (Talibli, 2016, 133–135). Although no concrete facts have been obtained about the direct impact of Iranian Armenians on the country’s policy on the Karabakh confict, no sentiment of dissatisfaction has ever been recorded among them in connection to the Karabakh policies of the Iranian government. Moreover, they face no obstacles to carry out information campaigns concerning the Nagorno-Karabakh confict (including books, articles, presentations, conferences, etc.). The Armenian community in Iran has some role, however, in the rapid development of the Iranian-Armenian relations. President Hassan Rouhani, during his visit to Yerevan in late 2016, called Iranian Armenians “a strong bridge between the two countries” and highlighted that the sides “must use this opportunity to deepen and strengthen relations.” In summary, Iran’s policies about the Nagorno-Karabakh confict have taken on multifaceted dimensions that can sway from agreement to contradiction rather easily. Second Karabakh War and Iran The 44-day war between Armenia and Azerbaijan brought swift changes to the geopolitics of the South Caucasus and, as such, opened a new chapter in Iran’s policies concerning the Karabakh confict. When hostilities broke out, Tehran called for a ceasefre in order to resolve the confict through peaceful means and once again declared its readiness to play a mediating role between the two sides. This statement was in line with Iran’s previous policies which favored the status quo since the First Karabakh War. Confdently reiterating its traditional position, Iran, seemingly, thought of the skirmishes as temporary without any potential to upend the local situation. As fghting swept over the entire Karabakh region and Azerbaijan advanced rapidly against the backdrop of Russia’s refusal to directly intervene, Tehran felt compelled to reconsider its approach, especially as the government observed the country’s Azerbaijani community. Iranian offcials, including Foreign Ministry spokesperson Said Xatibzada, government spokesperson Ali Rabii and Ali Akbar Vilayeti, the foreign policy advisor of Iran’s Supreme Leader. spoke of supporting the liberation of the occupied Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Iran’s Policies Toward the Karabakh Confict 391 Azerbaijani territories and respect for the territorial integrity of each side in addition to their traditional calls for peaceful resolution. Rabii told a news conference on September 29, 2020 that “they are watching the confict in the occupied territories of the Republic of Azerbaijan with attention and concern,” adding, the position of the Islamic Republic of Iran on the protection and offcial recognition of the territorial integrity of the Republic of Azerbaijan is very clear, and the Iranian government has repeatedly stressed this legal right in the framework of international law and UN resolutions. We also believe that there is a peaceful solution to the confict between the two neighboring countries—Azerbaijan and Armenia, and that Iran, Turkey and Russia can help these two neighbors in the implementation of UN resolutions. Despite the fact that he used the word “repeatedly,” the reference to the UN Security Council resolutions in this context could be considered a novelty in terms of Iran’s position. It is noteworthy that the solution to the problem within the framework of known resolutions was later refected in statements by other Iranian public fgures, diplomats and experts. This position was infuenced by new factors. Tehran had no interest in supporting the government of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who was considered a “man of the West” and who opened an embassy in Israel. It is no coincidence that in a telephone conversation with Pashinyan on September 30, 2020, Iranian President Rouhani stressed the need to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh confict “on the basis of international law and the principle of territorial integrity.” This neutrality, which favored the Azerbaijani side, was also necessitated by the mobilization of the Azerbaijani community in Iran. For example, +according to unoffcial reports, thousands of Iranian Azerbaijanis applied to Azerbaijan’s diplomatic representatives in Iran declaring readiness to join the Azerbaijani army in the Karabakh War. Almost every day in the course of the war, Iranian Azerbaijanis traveled to the border zone along the Aras River. watching the fght across the border, singing patriotic songs and applauding the successes of the Azerbaijani army. The videos from these gatherings went viral in Azerbaijani social media circles. This public support was also attested to by numerous pro-Azerbaijani demonstrations organized by Iranian Azerbaijanis. On October 1, 2020, there were such demonstrations in many cities (e.g., Tabriz, Ardabil and Zanjan) of Azerbaijani provinces in Iran and in Tehran. The participants chanted slogans such as “Karabakh is ours and will continue to be so!,” “Protection of Armenia is a crime!” as well as demanding the government to shut down the Nurduz checkpoint on the Armenia–Iran border. It is important to note that Iranian media (including the offcial news agency IRNA and the semi-offcial Fars information agency), in contrast to former Uploaded by S. M. Safi
392 Mesiagha Mahammadi and Vasif Huseynov such demonstrations which were rarely covered, did in fact report on these latest events. This media coverage can be also interpreted as the government’s permission for their organization. It is worth recalling that during the Tovuz clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan in July 2020, less than three months before the 44-day war, the attempts of South Azerbaijanis to carry out similar demonstrations were resolutely countered by Iranian security forces. Simultaneously with the mass demonstrations, the representatives (imams) of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in four predominantly Azerbaijani provinces of Iran (East Azerbaijan, West Azerbaijan, Ardabil and Zanjan) issued a joint statement expressing their full support for the Republic of Azerbaijan. “There is no doubt that Karabakh belongs to Azerbaijan, is occupied and must be returned to Azerbaijan,” the statement read. “The steps taken by the Azerbaijani government to return the occupied territory are completely legal and in accordance with Sharia law, thus trying to implement UN resolutions.” It also welcomed Azerbaijan’s military achievements, glorifed the martyrs and expressed hope that justice would soon prevail. On October 2, members of the Iranian parliament from the four above-mentioned provinces issued a joint statement indicating that “the Republic of Azerbaijan supports the Muslim people and the oppressed Shiites of Karabakh.” The statement referred to four UN Security Council resolutions on the confict and called on the country’s foreign ministry to use this framework and generate public awareness. Despite such statements of support, in the early days of hostilities, one of the most discussed topics in both Azerbaijan and Iran was the issue of transporting military cargo via the territories of Iran to Armenia. The dissemination of video and photos on social media networks and websites, as well as news about the alleged burning of cars traveling to Armenia by Iranian Azerbaijanis, intensifed Azeri passions. Despite the denials by the Iranian embassy in Azerbaijan, the foreign ministry and other offcial bodies of Iran, the discussions did not subside. In response, Iranian state television broadcast an investigative report on the issue, showing cargo being transported from the port of Anzali to the Nurduz customs checkpoint on the border with Armenia, and, as such, rejecting the allegations about the transportation of military cargo. At the same time, in order to prevent rumors, the deputy governor of East Azerbaijan in Iran stated that they had ordered the cars to be stopped at the Iranian border. On October 2, the Iranian Customs Committee issued a special statement stating that they did not allow the transportation of military cargo through the country. The Azerbaijani-Armenian War generated a wave of analyses and forecasts. In addition, the Institute for Strategic Studies under the Iranian Advisory Council organized a seminar on the events in Karabakh, and the Iran-Eurasia Institute organized a webinar. In general, the discussions focused on the infuence of external forces on the confict. Some saw it as an Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Iran’s Policies Toward the Karabakh Confict 393 “Israeli affair,” while some viewed it as a Turkish-Russian confrontation, and others as a Turkish-French (or European) confrontation. In general, the traditional geopolitical approach prevailed in the views of Iranian political circles and the expert community on the Karabakh confict. Iran was concerned about the growing infuence of outside forces in the region, including rival Turkey, the possible impact of the process on the country, as well as the possibility of radical jihadist groups entering the region through the confict. The latter issue gradually came to the fore in directing Iran’s approach to the war. Increasing international activity around the confict, especially in the context of Russia’s active role in the process, the Iranian leadership raised the matter of impact of the Azerbaijani-Armenian War on regional security and the emergence of takfri radical groups in the region. This position was clearly stated in a speech by Rouhani at a government meeting on October 7. Rouhani called Azerbaijan a “brother” and Armenia a “neighbor” and said they respected the rights of the Azerbaijani people. Nevertheless, he particularly emphasized three issues: (1) the targeting of missiles on Iranian territory; (2) the deployment of radical terrorist groups closer to the Iranian border “under various pretexts”; (3) the threat of war turning into a regional confict. Focusing on the issue of terrorists, Rouhani said that they would not allow them to approach the Iranian border. Following this speech, the number of articles in the Iranian media about the alleged involvement of mercenaries from Syria in the Karabakh War increased. It should be noted that this topic was also mentioned in Rouhani’s telephone conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin on October 10. Rouhani said that “the participation of terrorists in the Karabakh war is dangerous for Iran, Russia and the whole region,” adding. “the possible intervention of some third countries in the confict will prolong the crisis.” Later, an article with the headline “Iran’s clear message about the presence of terrorists in the Karabakh crisis” was published on the website of the offcial Irib News Agency on October 13. The article quoted Rouhani as saying that Iran has sent a clear message to its northern neighbors, and that the use of terrorists in the Karabakh War was a “reality impossible to be denied.” The article divides “terrorists recruited by Ankara into the war on the Azerbaijani side” into two groups: (1) extremist nationalist “wolves”; (2) Takfri-Salaf groups brought from Syria (Jabhat al-Nusra, Nureddin Zangi, Ahrar al-Sham, Faylaq al-Sham, Sultan Murad Brigade, etc.). Following the Iranian president’s speech, the media linked with the reformist political wing published articles against religious fgures who made statements in support of Azerbaijan. The Shargh newspaper, the most infuential media outlet in the reformist camp, on October 3, published an article headlined, “Neither Armenia nor Azerbaijan,” which condemned the clerics’ interference in foreign policy. Seeing the seriousness of the disputes, the governor of East Azerbaijan stated that the position of the imams Uploaded by S. M. Safi
394 Mesiagha Mahammadi and Vasif Huseynov corresponded to the offcial position. The governor of Ardabil also issued a statement supporting the imam of the province. Domestic political struggle had also an impact on Iran’s diplomatic initiatives in the Karabakh confict. In the early days of the war, Iran announced that it was preparing a different settlement plan for the confict. However, no further actions followed. The Iranian media criticized the foreign ministry, accusing it of inaction and failure to protect the country’s interests in the region. Later, Rouhani appointed Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi as special envoy on the issue, authorizing him to discuss Iran’s plan with stakeholders. Iran’s settlement plan, although never made public and not fully known, was believed to be based on three principles, according to leaked information to the media and statements by several Iranian offcials: 1 Ensure the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan (end occupation of territories of Azerbaijan). 2 Protect minority rights. 3 End hostilities and launch negotiations with the help of infuential countries in the region. In late October, Araghchi visited Baku, Moscow, Yerevan and Ankara to discuss the plan and on October 28, Aliyev received a delegation led by Abbas Araghchi. Congratulating the government on the Azerbaijani military’s victory, the Iranian offcial said he bowed to all the martyrs who sacrifced their lives on this path. In the following days, Araghchi met with representatives of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs as well as Pashinyan in Armenia, and with Erdogan in Turkey. Commenting on his deputy’s visit, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif confrmed that the purpose of the visit was to discuss Iran’s settlement proposal with the relevant stakeholders. “In this context, we tried to achieve these goals and hold consultations without trying to compete with other existing mechanisms such as the Minsk Group,” Zarif told the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) news agency on November 1. One of the important points of our country’s initiative is that it is not only seeking a temporary ceasefre but also a move towards resolving the conficts based on a framework that begins with the declaration of commitment of both sides to a set of principles and then it continues with measures, especially the withdrawal of the occupying forces from all the occupied territories Zarif said. Following the visit, Araghchi told reporters that Iran is “waiting for a response from the four countries in a short time to complete it [the initiative] in a way that is accepted by all and paves the way for resolving the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Iran’s Policies Toward the Karabakh Confict 395 crisis.” He admitted that the implementation of this initiative would not be an “easy” task. In the following days, Iran’s initiative lost momentum and disappeared. The details of the plan and the reaction of the four countries visited by Araghchi were not made public. In a televised speech on November 3, 2020, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said, “All the Azerbaijani territories occupied by Armenia must be liberated and returned to Azerbaijan,” Khamenei stressed. Second, seeking to strike some balance between the two sides, he voiced some concerns about the Armenian community of Karabakh, stating the security of those people must be ensured. Finally, he warned against mercenaries allegedly deployed in the war, vowing, “They should not come close to the Iranian border, and if they do, they will certainly be dealt with decisively.” Khamenei’s statement was welcomed by Azerbaijan’s Deputy Foreign Minister Khalaf Khalafov. In a telephone conversation with Iran’s ambassador to Baku, he expressed gratitude to these “important and fair” remarks which he said were based on “friendship and brotherhood” between the two neighboring countries. According to reports, in this conversation, Khalafov also thanked Iran for the proposed settlement and emphasized the importance of immediate implementation of the agreements reached in the course of Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi’s visit to Baku. This confrms that Azerbaijan had actually welcomed Iran’s initiative, which favored removing occupied forces from the affected Azerbaijani territories. But, Armenian leaders opposed the Iranian proposal. Iranian leaders worried about potential spillover of the fghting into their territory and it was evident in mid-October that the country’s military was put on heightened alert levels. High-ranking Iranian offcers visited the border region, as well as various units of the Iranian Army and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) were brought to the area. All this was widely covered by the Iranian media, along with a propaganda campaign. On October 24–25, the Iranian Army’s Land Forces, with the participation of the 164th Rapid Attack Brigade based in Piranshahr, as well as artillery and unmanned aerial vehicles, held a one-day military training on the country’s northwestern border to “demonstrate combat readiness and strength.” Iran was particularly concerned about escalation into a regional war, which could change the geopolitics of the South Caucasus and bring in Turkey, Iran’s historical rival, as a competitive regional player. For example, Mohammad Pakpour, Brigadier-General and Commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Ground Forces, declared support to the territorial integrity of the regional states and explained his opposition to any type of forceful occupation, adding, “any change to the regional border geopolitics is a red line for us.” Apparently, Iran feared that the next stage of the process (under the control of Turkey) would begin after Azerbaijan had fully regained control of its state borders. For example, popular Iranian politician Abdullah Ramazanzadeh issued a statement of caution: “Sultan Uploaded by S. M. Safi
396 Mesiagha Mahammadi and Vasif Huseynov Erdogan wants to draw us into another regional confict. We have to be careful!” Similar reactions were noted, following the Baku victory parade on December 10, when Erdogan’s poem “Arazı ayırdılar” was recited, which, in Azerbaijani, fguratively can be translated as, “They divided the territory of Azerbaijan along the Aras River.” This drew strong reactions from many Iranian offcials, politicians, clerics and the military. Iranian Foreign Minister Zarif said that Erdogan’s reading of the poem in Baku was “wrong” and that no one had “the right to talk about [Iranian] Azerbaijan.” The Turkish ambassador to Tehran was then summoned to the Iranian Foreign Ministry but after several days of heated discussions, the Iranian president fnally commented on the issue, saying he did not believe Erdogan was trying to touch Iran’s territorial integrity while reading the poem. Although discussions on the issue have become softer since the statement, concerns remain about Iran’s role and position in the South Caucasus after the Second Karabakh War. Nevertheless, the ceasefre deal signed by the leaders of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia on November 10 was welcomed by Iran. Iranian Foreign Ministry expressed hope that the agreement would create conditions for peace and security in the region. At the same time, the head of the Iranian presidential administration Mahmoud Vaezi said that Iran was pleased with the statement and expressed confdence that the confict would be resolved on the basis of international norms and the principle of territorial integrity. Addressing his nation on November 20, Aliyev touched upon Azerbaijani– Iranian relations, stating that Iran is a friendly nation and brother, and, for example, had agreed to close its airspace at our request and not permit Armenia to bring weapons via Iranian territory during the military operations. On December 9, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov paid his frst offcial visit to Iran after the war. During his meetings with Iranian leaders, it was noted that the liberation of Azerbaijani territories and the restoration of the border between the two countries created fresh opportunities for cooperation projects. In late January 2021, Azerbaijan was visited by Iranian Foreign Minister Zarif as part of his regional tour to fve countries (Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, Russia and Turkey), which was proposed by Azerbaijani and Turkish leaders to come together in a joint regional platform. The proposed six-party platform was reported to be the main focus of discussions during the visit. During the tour, on January 25, Zarif was received by Aliyev and the Iranian offcial congratulated his host on the victory while emphasizing the importance of regional cooperation in the six-party platform. In turn, Aliyev expressed his desire to see Iranian companies participate in the reconstruction of the liberated territories. Zarif, who left Baku for Moscow, arrived in the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic and its Julfa Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Iran’s Policies Toward the Karabakh Confict 397 railway station on January 30, after visiting Yerevan, Tbilisi and Ankara. The visit to this railway station was read as Iranian support to the unblocking of regional transportation and communication links, as Julfa station was situated on the Iranian–Armenian railway during the Soviet era. Kaleji (2020), citing reports in the published memoirs of regional fgures including Abulfaz Elchibey, Heydar Aliyev and Hashemi Rafsanjani, notes that during the hostilities surrounding the First Karabakh War, Iran provided “residents of Nakhchivan with gas, electricity and basic goods from early 1990s and hosted thousands of Azerbaijanis displaced by war.” If Iran is to realize any geoeconomic gains from its role in the South Caucasus, Azerbaijan will matter when it comes to transit routes in the “North–South economic corridor, stretching from the Indian Ocean to the Baltic ports” (Avdaliani, 2021), as will Russian efforts to rehabilitate its railway system, which “could turn Tehran into a major benefciary as it will allow the expansion of trade ties with the region and Russia.” It should be noted that Iran views the six-party platform as a kind of realization of its 3 + 3 proposal, which it once insisted on, but now was concerned about the new regional situation but also struggled about determining its place in the new order. But, for the frst time in the Second Karabakh War, Iran openly declared that Azerbaijan had the right to liberate the occupied territories. In particular, the statement of the country’s Supreme Leader in support of the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan resonated among the parties to the confict and the general public of Iran. Conclusion The collapse of the Soviet Union gave Iran an opening to revive its historical links with the countries of the South Caucasus and establish some infuence over the region. One major test for Iran’s ambitions occurred at the outset of the post-Soviet period, as sparked by the outbreak of the First Armenia– Azerbaijan War. Tehran initially viewed the confict as a minor territorial dispute between two states which had peacefully coexisted for centuries under Russian control. This analysis soon proved to be unrealistic. Iran’s attempts to mediate between the sides were not successful and eventually it was Russia who succeeded to push both countries to a durable ceasefre in mid-1994. The analysis here has focused on the aftermath of the First Karabakh War of the early 1990s, the factors that infuenced the policies of the Iranian governments toward the confict and, fnally, Iran’s corresponding policies during and after the Second Karabakh War. But, the Iranian governments pursued ambiguous policies regarding the Karabakh confict, which was partly why Tehran could not play an impactful role in the resolution process. Thus, Tehran, up to the Second Karabakh War, refused to take a clear position, instead preferring to limit itself to declaring support to international efforts to peacefully resolve the confict. In parallel, Tehran, in fact, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
398 Mesiagha Mahammadi and Vasif Huseynov looked to be more interested in prolonging the status quo established by the 1990s ceasefre agreement. This is borne out by considerations of Iran’s South Caucasus foreign policy as viewed by the three Iranian presidential administrations coinciding with the span of time between the First and Second Karabakh Wars. The Khatami administration viewed the South Caucasus as a civilizational-cultural arena within the framework of the “Dialogue among Civilizations” theory, while during Ahmadinejad’s presidency, the policy context was elevated to strengthen Iran’s ability to counter the presence of Western interests in the region with a “Look East” strategy (Azizi and Hamidfar, 2021). Meanwhile, the Rouhani administration, emphasizing the desire for stability and security for all of the region’s nations, has focused on a diplomatic-political approach. None of the three presidential administrations succeeded because they failed to account fully for US infuence upon South Caucasus allies while taking extra cautions not to trigger Russia’s willingness to take on a more active “near abroad” role (Azizi and Hamidfar, 2021). This situation did change somewhat on a delayed response after the launch of the Second Karabakh War on September 27, 2020. Again, in a way similar to the beginning of the hostilities in the early 1990s, Tehran believed the fghting would be temporary without potential to usurp the regional situation. As initial skirmishes expanded to full-scale war between the sides, Iran was alarmed by the implications affecting the geopolitics of the South Caucasus and eventually Iran’s national security.1 The change in Iranian perspective, according to Avdaliani (2021), acknowledged that Iran viewed continuing its Armenian support could trigger Azerbaijan, now militarily stronger than in the First Karabakh War, to strengthen its alliance with Turkey. This then would have negative impacts for keeping open transportation routes to Russia open and compromise Iran’s place in the Caspian Basin. Nevertheless, Avdaliani adds that poor relations with Azerbaijan would more likely lead to the negative outcomes that have worried Iran, even if they seem, for the moment, to be remote possibilities. In addition, one must consider the backdrop of Azerbaijan’s successes on the battlefeld, Russia’s refusal to directly intervene in the fghting, and, not less importantly, the mobilization of the Iranian Azerbaijanis demanding the Iranian government to support Azerbaijan. Tehran, for the frst time in the post-Soviet period, called for the restoration of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, and, as such, the withdrawal of Armenian forces from the Karabakh region. This support was reiterated by top offcials of the Iranian government in various platforms and highly appreciated by the Azerbaijani side. But, even as Rouhani tried to strike a balance with Iran’s neighbors and achieve some degree of cordiality in diplomatic communications, its efforts with the Karabakh crisis barely moved the needle. Walking the “tightrope” to maintain status quo, various Iranian offcials failed to specify the defnition of “occupied areas” in calling for the end of the Armenian occupation of the contested territories (Gulf International Forum, 2020). Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Iran’s Policies Toward the Karabakh Confict 399 Iran also welcomed the Russia-brokered trilateral ceasefre accord signed on November 10, 2020. The Iranian leaders expressed interest in the six-country (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia + Turkey, Iran and Russia) regional cooperation platform proposed by the Azerbaijani and Turkish leaders after the war. Iranian Foreign Minister Zarif, visiting the countries proposed to take part in this platform in early 2021, communicated Iran’s support. Ending his visit by visiting the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic of Azerbaijan and the Julfa railway station at the Azerbaijan–Iranian border, Zarif likewise reiterated Iran’s support to the unblocking of regional transportation and communication links which was one of the major developments brought about by the 44-day war. The question remains as to what actions Iran will take to back up its statements embracing post-war realities in the region as it seeks to play a more active role in formulating a new regional confguration. To summarize, “Iran’s approach toward the Karabakh issue was on the one hand, subject to the broader concepts in Iranian foreign policy and on the other hand, impacted by the nature of Iran’s relations with the great powers”. Tehran has yet to fgure out how to counter the presence and impact of Azerbaijan and Turkey, given that its insistence on the status quo previously had ended in strengthening Armenia’s hands (Basar, 2020). As much as Tehran tried to rely on its passive formulation of the principle for territorial integrity in the hopes that both Azerbaijan and Turkey would, respectively, acknowledge that access to Nakhchivan or to Asian consumer and business markets required passing through Iranian territory, the Iranian leaders failed to (or refused to) consider the full manifestations of an Azerbaijani victory in Karabakh or the Azeri resolve to make amends for its defeat in the First Karabakh War (Basar, 2020). Note 1 Friday Prayer leaders serving as representatives of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in four predominantly Turkic-populated provinces—West Azerbaijan, East Azerbaijan, Ardebil and Zanjan—publicly voiced support in a joint statement for Azeri efforts to end the “occupation” of Nagorno-Karabakh. They described the Republic of Azerbaijan as a “[Shia] household country” and its actions to “recapture” the disputed territory “completely lawful and religiously legitimate.” This unprecedented stance was later echoed by Ali Akbar Velayati, current international affairs advisor to Khamenei, who pointed out four UN Security Council resolutions (passed from April to November 1993) calling for withdrawal of Armenian forces from occupied Azeri lands and the fate of “around 7 cities in south Azerbaijan occupied by Armenia.” See Gulf International Forum. https://gulff.org/ iran-and-the-nagorno-karabakh-confict-preserving-the-status-quo/. Bibliography Ahmadian, B. Amir, Habib Rzazada and Ahmad Corf. 2016. ‫ناریا ط باور لی لح ت‬ ‫[ ”یع فادت ییارگ ع قاو ی رظ ن ب وچ راچ زا ه داف ت سا اب نات س نم را ”و‬The Analysis of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
400 Mesiagha Mahammadi and Vasif Huseynov Iran – Armenia Relations from the Perspective of Defensive Realism]. Central Eurasia Studies 9(1), 19–41. Ashraf, Mortaza and Moctaba Ashraf. 2015. “‫نایعی ش تیعض و لی لح ت و ی س ررب‬ ‫[ ”ناجیاب رذآ ”ی روه مج رد‬Analysis of the Situation of the Shiites in the Republic of Azerbaijan]. Regional Studies Journal 15, 39–65. Avdaliani, Emil. 2021. Iran in the South Caucasus: Adjustment and Evolution. RUSI. https://rusi.org/explore-our-research/publications/commentary/iran-south -caucasus-adjustment-and-evolution Basar, Umut. 2020. Analysis —Is Iran One of the Losers of the Karabakh War? Anadolu Agency. https://www.aa.com.tr/en/analysis/analysis-is-iran-one-of-the-losers-ofthe-karabakh-war/2056842 Bozrgmehri, Majid and Seyyid Mehdi Tabatabai. 2017. ‫ت سای س ی قی ب ط ت ی س ررب‬ ‫ ات ی وروش ریهامج داح تا ی شاپ ورف زا ی ب ونج زاقف ق رد هی ک رت و ناریا ”یج راخ‬2015” [Comparative Analysis of the Foreign Policy of Iran and Turkey towards the South Caucasus. From the Collapse of the USSR to 2015]. Foreign Policy Quarterly Journal 31(2), 109–150. Daragahi, Borzou, 2020. Nagorno-Karabakh: An Unexpected Confict that Tests and Perplexes Iran. Atlantic Council. https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ iransource/nagorno-karabakh-an-unexpected-confict-that-tests-and-perplexes-iran/ Dugin, Aleksandr. 2000. Основы геополитики. Геополитическое будущее России. [Foundations of Geopolitics: Russia’s Geopolitical Future]. Moscow: Arktogeya Center. Gaffari, Omid, Omidali Veysinejad, Mahammad Taghipur. 2012. “‫و غاب ه رق ۀ ش قانم‬ ‫ج ی لم تی نما رب نآ ری ثات‬.‫ا‬.‫[ ”ناریا‬Karabakh Confict and its Implications for Iran’s National Security]. Amniat Pajouhi: A Quarterly Scientifc Journal 11(39), 91–112. Gulf International Forum. 2020. Iran and the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict: Preserving the Status Quo. https://gulff.org/iran-and-the-nagorno-karabakh-confict -preserving-the-status-quo/ Heshmati, Borhan 2015. ‫ی نی د ت سای س ی نابم ؛م سي لارچ لاک ي ت ل وم ات م سيئ تآ زا‬ ‫[ ناجیاب رذآ“ ”ی روه مج رب م کاح‬From Ateism to Multiculturalism: Foundations of Azerbaijan’s Ruling Religious Policy]. Azer Aran Quarterly Journal 42–43, 27–41. Kaleji, Vali 2020. Eight Principles of Iran’s Foreign Policy towards the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict. Valdai Discussion Club. https://valdaiclub.com/a/ highlights/eight-principles-of-iran-s-foreign-policy/ Kouhi Esfahani, Marziyeh and Jafar Haqpanah, 2017. ‫ ونروگان ۀ ش قانم‬-‫و غاب ه رق‬ ‫یا ه قط نم تی نما‬: ‫[ ناریا هاگیاج و ش قن‬The Nagorno-Karabakh Confict and Regional Security: Iran’s Role and Position]. – Vali Kouzegar Kaleji. ‫زاقف ق یاه ی روه مج و ناریا‬ ‫[ ی ب ونج‬Iran and the South Caucasus Republics], 229–242. Tehran: IRAS. Kulayi, İlaha. 2010. “ ‫ی ب ونج زاقف ق کی تی ل پ وئ ژ و ناریا ی مال سا ی روه مج‬.” [Iran Islamic Republic and its Foreign Policy towards the South Caucasus]. Geopolitics Quarterly Journal 6(1), 75–111. Mahammadi, Mesiagha, 2017. “Azərbaycan – İran münasibətləri.” [Azerbaijan – Iran Relations]. In Azərbaycan Respublikasının Xarici Siyasətinin Əsas İstiqamətləri (1991–2016) [Major Directions of Azerbaijan’s Foreign Policy (1991–2016)], edited by Fahrad Mammadov, Cavid Veliyev and Aqshin Mammadov, 225–252. Baku: Poliart. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Iran’s Policies Toward the Karabakh Confict 401 Motamedi, Maziar. 2020. “Iran’s Delicate Balancing Act in the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict.” Al Jazeera. October 5. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/10/5/irannk Ramezanzadeh, Abdollah. 1996. Iran’s Role as Mediator in the Nagorno-Karabakh Crisis, https://poli.vub.ac.be/publi/ContBorders/eng/ch0701.htm Shaffer, Brenda. 2017. “The Islamic Republic of Iran’s Policy toward the Nagorno-Karabakh Confict.” In The International Politics of the ArmenianAzerbaijani Confict, edited by Svante E. Cornell, 107–124. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Talibli, Subhan. 2016. İran İslam Respublikasının Qafqaz Siyasətində Dağlıq Qarabağ Problemi (1991–2005-ci illər) [The Karabakh Problem in Caucasus Policies of the Iran Islamic Republic]. Baku: “Elm və təhsil” Publishing House. Vaezi, Mahmoud. 2008. “Karabakh’s Crisis: Iran’s Mediation and the Aftermath”. ISR Journals, December 14. http://www.isrjournals.com/en/essay/811-karabakhs-crisis-irans-mediation-and-the-aftermath.html Uploaded by S. M. Safi
18 The Arab States and the Karabakh War Brendon J. Cannon Introduction The purpose of this chapter is to situate the national interests of Arab Middle East states within the context of the 2020 Azerbaijan-Armenia confict in Nagorno-Karabakh. To date, the connections, actions and interests of Arab states with the Caucasus region remain an understudied feld in international politics. This is because connections between the two geographically distinct regions have been tenuous until recently. With the resumption in confict in 2020, certain Arab states showed a keen interest in the confict, at times attempting to affect outcomes. This chapter, therefore, flls a critical gap in the literature on the confict as well as the literature on the international relations of Arab states. Providing an analysis of the interests and activities of extra-regional state in conficts is important given their potential to infuence outcomes in favor of one belligerent or another. In turn, cataloging the role of external states, in this case Arab Middle East states, in extra-regional conficts provides evidence of power struggles at an inter-regional or even international level. As Miholjcic (2020, 157) noted, “In every military confict, alliances and foreign support can have a signifcant effect on opposing parties and the outcomes of military clashes. That is why analysis of international responses to local conficts must be considered when discussing seemingly insignifcant consequences of disputes between smaller states in the context of world politics and affairs.” By defning and analyzing the, at times, conficting interests of Arab states in the Caucasus, the chapter shows that their genesis had less to do with the belligerents and more to do with Turkey, and how the confict’s outcomes would affect distributions of power across the Middle East. Because the Arab Middle East is highly diverse, the chapter will use the case studies of three important states—the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Qatar and Egypt—in order to sketch the genesis and diversity of Arab interests, paying particular attention to the role played by the regime security (regime survival), particularly as it is confated with (or antithetical to) national interests and state security. In addition, the capabilities and DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-23 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Arab States and the Karabakh War 403 resources of these three states, as deployed in order to affect outcomes in the Caucasus confict, will be outlined and analyzed. The chapter proceeds as follows. Section one examines the distributions of power in the Middle East, taking into account the increase in power of the Arab Gulf states as well as Turkey over the past two decades, and the relative decline of Egypt. The role played by ideological fault lines since the 2011 Arab Uprisings is also contextualized. Section two explores the Arab Middle East-Caucasus nexus, highlighting relations between the two belligerent parties—Azerbaijan and Armenia—and the three Arab states in the lead-up to the Nagorno-Karabakh confict. The third section will explore the security burdens and interests of the UAE, Qatar and Egypt, paying attention to the role played by Turkey in informing these interests. The penultimate section analyzes the results, describing how the respective actions taken by Abu Dhabi, Doha and Cairo during the Nagorno-Karabakh confict were predicated by the security interests of their regimes, particularly as they related to their perceptions vis-à-vis the rising power of Turkey as well as the limitations of their own power capabilities. The fnal section concludes the chapter. Distributions of Power in the Middle East Scholars of international relations (IR) generally hold that the world is an anarchical system of states with fnite amounts of power on hand. As such, the control of power and its largely zero-sum nature remain the bedrock of IR theories (Axelrod and Keohane 1985; Snidal 1991; Mearsheimer 2014). In this anarchical global system, signifcant changes to distributions of power—shifting from one state to another state or grouping of states—over a relatively short period of time create greater uncertainty, thus making the global state system even more anarchical. This is compounded by shifting power distributions on the sub-global or regional level. This often manifests itself as a security dilemma, a situation in which actions taken by a state to increase its own security cause reactions from other states, which, in turn, lead to a decrease rather than an increase in the original state’s security (Tang 2009). This can be particularly pronounced at the regional level in what scholars term regional security complexes. These are “sets of units whose major processes of securitization, de-securitization or both are so inter-linked that their security problems cannot be reasonably analyzed or resolved apart from one another” (Buzan and Weaver 43–45). The Middle East forms a distinct regional security complex. While it exhibits many of the same features as other such complexes, the Middle East is peculiar in three distinct ways. First, it has no hegemonic state. Instead, the Middle East has seen the rise and fall of multiple would-be hegemons since the end of the Ottoman Empire and the creation of independent Arab states. Second, and relatedly, rather than anarchy, the global environment Uploaded by S. M. Safi
404 Brendon J. Cannon for the Middle East may better be termed hierarchy. That is, the Middle East is highly penetrated by external great powers. These both constrain the actions of Middle East leaders as well as provide the resources needed to counter threats, either domestic or external. Third, regime survival in Arab states is often confated with state/national security. In other words, actions are taken to counter perceived threats in order to ensure regime survival (Hinnebusch and Ehteshami, 2019, 250–251). In the Middle East, which has no natural hegemon, only would-be hegemons, the shifts in economic and military power are felt intensely. This is because below the constraining hierarchy of the security umbrella of the US, the global environment remains anarchy for the Middle East. Indeed, the current US penetration of the Middle East constrains some actions, but not all. Rather, as Middle East states—both Arab and non-Arab—gain or lose power, the quest for regional hegemony remains constant.1 Regional groupings or loose alliances can be formed by states along broad ideological and/ or political lines, but these are less important than regime interests, as seen in Saudi Arabia’s tacit support of Israel during the 2006 Lebanon War against an Iran-backed, but Arab Hezbollah; or the decades of mutual mistrust between Baathist Syria and Baathist Iraq. Though sectarianism and ideological divisions have sharpened since the 2011 Arab Uprisings, the alignments of power—as well as the paramountcy of the state system in the Middle East— continue to be informed by the security interests as perceived by Arab regimes (Calculli 2015). The Caucasus confict in late 2020 witnessed a tussle between Arab and non-Arab states involved in a newly minted Middle East power confguration. This occurred for three reasons. First, the power of the Arab Gulf States, fueled by the sale of hydrocarbons, had increased exponentially over the course of the 2000s, providing Saudi Arabia and, to a lesser degree, the UAE with the cause and means to make claims to the leadership of the Arab world. This was possible because of increases in their relative power and the corresponding decline in power of formerly formidable (and larger and more populous) states, Iraq and Egypt. The US invasion of Iraq in 2003 saw off the Baathist regime and led to a decrease in Iraq’s state power and led to a relative increase in both Iranian as well as Arab Gulf states’ power. The popular protests that occurred as part of the 2011 Arab Uprisings led to the end of decades-old regimes in Tunisia and Libya as well as a civil war in Syria. In Egypt, the 25-year-old military-supported regime of President Hosni Mubarak was overthrown and was followed by an extended period of political and economic crisis, as detailed below, that accelerated Egypt’s already precipitous decline from the heights of power it enjoyed during the 1960s. Second, the decrease in power of formerly powerful Arab states as a result of the US invasion of Iraq and then the Arab Uprisings allowed the UAE and Saudi Arabia to adopt policies and strategies to protect their respective regimes and, at the same time, upend the novel political accommodations in Egypt, Tunisia and elsewhere. Their subsequent adventurism and Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Arab States and the Karabakh War 405 risky foreign policy actions in the conficts in Yemen and Libya should be understood from this perspective. The third development was the rise of Turkey—a non-Arab Middle East state—and, as importantly, its return to the political and strategic spaces of the Middle East in ways not experienced for over 100 years. This point requires some explanation given its centrality to the topic. To wit, Turkey’s new-found interest in its backyard is a product of its loss of an empire, its diffcult birth as a state and its Cold War history. Turkey, for example, bandwagoned with the US and became a NATO member in 1952 in order to protect its hard-won territorial sovereignty, indeed its very existence, from its age-old enemy, Russia. But Turkey’s alignment with the West did not result in a corresponding openness in terms of political opportunity spaces and markets. Rather Turkey’s leaders championed policies of economic autarky that led to heavy state intervention and regulation. When Turkey did begin to liberalize—its economy under Turgut Ozal in the early 1980s, and then politically during the 1990s—it found itself unencumbered by the economic strictures of what had been an ongoing European integration project (correspondingly, Turkey became only a passive benefciary), but offering a range of goods and services at a particular price and of a quality that the bloc desired. In addition, as the Cold War ended, Turkish businesses, particularly construction and Mittelstand producers of goods (the so-called Anatolian Tigers), began to look to the markets in the east and south, particularly in Central Asia and the Middle East/North Africa (MENA) region. In essence, because Turkey’s economy had developed along a particular, somewhat isolated trajectory while at the same time adopting many of the free market, capitalist trappings of the West, it found itself with a relatively robust economy accustomed to frequent shocks that certainly outperformed those of its neighbors to the east and produced goods that underpriced those of its Western counterparts (Cannon 2021, 127–129). The rise of an economically and militarily powerful Turkey was accompanied by Ankara’s resurgent economic as well as political interests in its near abroad (the Balkans, the Caucasus, the Middle East and sub-Saharan Africa). As Turkish power expanded, propelled in part by ideological affnity between the post-2002 mildly Islamist rulers of Turkey—the Justice and Development Party (JDP)—and Muslim Brotherhood (MB) political communities across the Arab Middle East, it led some Arab regimes to question Ankara’s motives and role. During the reign of the JDP’s leader, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Turkey generally supported movements informed by political Islam. This, along with Ankara’s vocal support of Palestinian movements such as Hamas, led some in Ankara to see Turkey as a potential contender to lead the Muslim World, harking back to Ottoman times and thereby pitting Turkey squarely against Saudi Arabia, the state that currently claims this moniker (Fuller 2020). Particularly after the 2011 Arab Uprisings and the rise of a shortlived (and Ankara-supported) MB-led government in Egypt, the UAE as Uploaded by S. M. Safi
406 Brendon J. Cannon well as Saudi Arabia felt increasing discomfort and actively intervened to replace Cairo’s Islamists with a military-led government. This dealt Turkey’s regional ambitions a blow and struck a rancorous tone in relations between these Gulf monarchies and Ankara. Yet, in the decade since the Arab Uprisings, Turkey has reasserted itself across the region, both in reaction to conficts along its borders and on account of competitive and aggressive Turkish foreign policies meant to expand its regional role and infuence (Yavuz 2020). First, Turkey established zones of infuence in Syria and bolstered its presence in northern Iraq to combat Kurdish irredentism and related political violence.2 Turkey also became involved in the civil war in Libya and quickly shaped signifcant outcomes that led to a 2020 ceasefre that favored the Turkish-backed government. Turkey’s outreach to sub-Saharan Africa also gathered steam, as Turkey’s government-linked conglomerates sold weapons and built infrastructure while Ankara established itself as a resident power in the Horn of Africa (Rossiter and Cannon 2019; Donelli 2021; Cannon 2021). In the eastern Mediterranean, Egypt sparred with Turkey over the exploration and exploitation of huge reserves of natural gas. The dispute pitted Turkey against not only Egypt but Greece and the Republic of Cyprus. Throughout 2020, Turkey deployed naval vessels to protect its exploratory maritime efforts. In response, Greece and Egypt separately deployed their own vessels to shadow the Turkish ships. While not a Mediterranean state, Abu Dhabi’s leadership struck an increasingly strident tone on the issue and the UAE signed defense cooperation agreements with Greece and Cyprus in 2020 while continuing to support Egyptian claims to the gas felds. Arab Middle East-Caucasus Nexus Both Armenia and Azerbaijan have maintained generally cordial and working relations with the Arab Middle East. Azerbaijan, for example, has embassies in almost every Arab state.3 Azerbaijan is, after all, a Muslim majority state—albeit Shi’a rather than Sunni—and possesses large deposits of oil and natural gas. It was thus an obvious destination for hydrocarbon rich Arab Gulf states interested in potentially lucrative joint ventures. Armenia, on the other hand, is a small, resource-poor and landlocked Christian-majority state. It is thus not a natural partner for Arab states, particularly the more conservative Gulf monarchies. Indeed, Arab states such as the UAE sided with Azerbaijan during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War (1988–1994), with the UAE’s ambassador to Baku confrming the UAE’s full support for Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity as late as 2018 (Lmahamad 2020). Arab states like the UAE and Egypt have ties to Azerbaijan through the OIC, and hydrocarbon-producing Arab states would also liaise with Azerbaijan at OPEC+. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Arab States and the Karabakh War 407 In Armenia’s case, its large diaspora was the lodestar for its diplomatic endeavors after its separation from the Soviet Union in 1991. Lebanon, Syria and Egypt—all possessing a centuries-old Armenian presence—offered natural political and economic bridges in a way that France and the US did in the West. Egypt’s ties with Armenia, for instance, were established in March 1992 and Yerevan established its frst embassy in the Arab Middle East in Cairo in that same year with Egypt following suit in 1993. Unlike the UAE and other Arab states, Egypt reportedly adopted a neutral position on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue after the frst war, thus placating Yerevan as well as Egypt’s own small Armenian population. In the Persian Gulf, Armenia publicly maintains three embassies, the most important being its embassy in Abu Dhabi, which also acts as its accredited mission for Saudi Arabia. The missions in Doha and Kuwait City, by contrast, maintain a relatively low profle with websites hosted by Facebook. Despite diplomatically recognizing one another since 1998, the UAE and Armenia only exchanged ambassadors in 2012. The uptick in their relations, on the one hand, and between Armenia and Egypt on the other, occurred after the 2011 Arab Uprisings that swept Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak from power and resulted in the election of the MB-affliated Mohamed Morsi in 2012. Erdoğan, Turkey’s prime minister at the time, visited Egypt as well as Tunisia and Libya, in 2011 and fostered a close relationship with Morsi. Both Qatar and Turkey, albeit separately and without coordination, offered fnancial assistance, development aid and diplomatic support to the MB-dominated government in 2012. Morsi was, nevertheless, overthrown in 2013, and Turkey’s as well as Qatar’s relations with Egypt’s new rulers, led by the former military strongman Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, soured quickly as Cairo won much-needed support from the virulently anti-MB Arab Gulf States of Saudi Arabia and the UAE. The reactions that followed in Cairo and Abu Dhabi were meant to destroy the infuence of the MB on domestic politics in Egypt and limit the political roles of Turkey and Qatar. The UAE and Armenia exchanged ambassadors in 2012, as noted, and proceeded to sign numerous economic agreements, going so far as to describe their relationship as akin to a strategic partnership in 2017. In 2019, Abu Dhabi, the capital of the UAE and the most powerful of the seven emirates, also reportedly made preparations to recognize the “Armenian Genocide,” a reference to the events as 1915, which saw the deaths and deportations of thousands of Ottoman Armenians during World War I. This is a pet project of both the state of Armenia and the Armenian diaspora. They insist the events of 1915 amounted to genocide and have launched a sustained campaign to lobby states to recognize the events of 1915 as such (Gunter 2011; Cannon 2016). Having Abu Dhabi recognize the events would have been a diplomatic coup for Armenia and further demonstrated Abu Dhabi’s frm support of Armenia as well as its adversarial relationship with Turkey.4 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
408 Brendon J. Cannon In the aftermath of the 2013 overthrow of Morsi in Egypt, the power of using the historical matter to shame and demonize Turkey, on the one hand, and please Armenia, on the other, proved too much for Cairo. Numerous articles were published condemning Turkey’s government for genocide denial. The Egyptian parliament introduced a resolution calling for recognition of the Armenian Genocide in 2016 and an Arabic-language documentary flm, Who Killed the Armenians?, was also produced in Egypt. Though the parliamentary resolution never passed, the issue remained alive, and President Sisi referenced the highly politicized issue during his address at the 2019 Munich Security Dialogue when he highlighted Egypt’s hosting of Armenians “after the genocide” (Egypt Today staff 2019). Security Burdens and Regime Survival While the Middle East exhibits unique characteristics in terms of foreign policy development, in many ways the region’s states vary little from states outside the region: the leaders and policymakers of these states make choices that are limited by the amount, proximity and tiered nature of their security burdens. This includes not just “hard” security matters, but economic and social matters as well. States engaged in relations with other states to hedge against and counter these security burdens, which are necessarily impacted by a state’s geographic location and history as well as population. They are also impacted, as noted previously, by shifts in distributions of power within the region. All states can be said to have national security interests that infuence the policies of governments and/or leaders vis-à-vis internal and external threats, regardless of their genesis.5 However, many Arab states exhibit national interests that are not truly national, but rather are meant to counter threats in order to ensure regime survival. Indeed, in all three states, though for different reasons, regime security is paramount and is equated with national security. If the threat is internal, as is the case in states like Egypt and Saudi Arabia, the leaders may attempt bandwagoning with external states as both Cairo and Riyadh have done for decades with the US (Hinnebusch and Ehteshami 2019, 255). In the cases of the UAE and Qatar where internal threats are less pronounced and external threats more so, the ruling families of the al-Nahyans in Abu Dhabi and the Al-Thanis in Doha have, respectively, sought to build alliances and—in the case of the UAE—expand their military might exponentially (Yates 2020). Both regimes have also relied on the US security umbrella in the Persian Gulf. As such, the UAE, Qatar and Egypt are primarily interested in regime survival and therefore in developments and alignments that may further their sovereignty of action, territorial integrity and, correspondingly, increase their share of fnite power within the Middle East regional security complex. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Arab States and the Karabakh War 409 The United Arab Emirates The security of the UAE and that of its regime are reliant to a large degree on its ability to export its signifcant share of hydrocarbons, mainly oil. Given the UAE’s geographic position as well as its reliance on the export of oil, maritime shipping lanes in the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Sea must remain open. For the UAE, throughout its frst four decades of existence, this has meant the Strait of Hormuz has been the primary security concern. However, with natural changes in leadership after the death of the UAE’s founder, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahyan in 2004, coupled with a steady increase in wealth, the UAE’s leaders have placed increasing emphasis on its extra-regional and international standing as a small-to-medium power (Ulrichsen 2016). Accordingly, the UAE’s leadership has overseen an extensive overhaul of the country’s armed forces and intensifed its weapons acquisition programs. The US’ security umbrella in the Persian Gulf makes the UAE and its ruling families less insecure in a highly volatile neighborhood. The close US-UAE relationship, dating back to the Cold War, has ensured the UAE’s survival in the face of threats from larger neighbors such as Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Iran. In turn, the UAE’s emphasis on developing a highly tolerant society, a stable economy, a capable military, and close relations with other US allies, including (in mid-2020) Israel, have meant the UAE is generally understood to be a reliable partner for Washington. Beyond regime security and stability for the country via the sale of hydrocarbons, the UAE’s leadership worries deeply about the threat of militant Islam (Yates 2020, 63–66). The breakdown in the regional order following the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings led the UAE to adopt a more assertive and interventionist foreign policy ranging from Libya to Egypt to Yemen to counter what it perceived as Islamist threats to its security. It culminated in the severance of relations with Qatar, a fellow Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) member, by the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain in 2017. The UAE accused Qatar of supporting MB causes linked to political violence in places ranging from Somalia to Egypt to Palestine. When Turkey strengthened its relations with Qatar by stationing more troops in the country and expanding its military facility there, the UAE’s leadership quickly perceived the threats facing the country to now be double-barreled, pitting the Arab World led by the UAE and Saudi Arabia against the Turks and the Iranians. This had a spillover effect in the wider region as Turkey and the UAE sparred, often using proxy forces, in Somalia, Libya and, to a lesser degree, in Nagorno-Karabakh. Qatar Qatar has played a powerful role in the politics of the Middle East for over two decades despite its small size and population. Answers regarding the impetus, objectives and trajectory Qatar’s foreign policy may be found in Uploaded by S. M. Safi
410 Brendon J. Cannon the consistent attempts of its rulers to protect their sovereignty of action as well as their territorial integrity from Saudi Arabia (Roberts 2017). For instance, the Al-Thani rulers of Qatar engineered and then used the 1992 defense cooperation agreement with the US as a tool to discourage any overt meddling by a much larger and more powerful Saudi Arabia. By providing land for a massive US air and military base at Al-Udeid, Qatar’s rulers felt more assured of their regime’s survival. At the same time, they have used the soft power tools at the disposal of their compact, hierarchical, massively wealthy (on account of gas deposits) state to ensure its indispensability to multiple, powerful states.6 Qatar’s actions in support of political Islam, particularly its funding of MB-linked causes and Doha’s offers of asylum to MB leaders, led directly to the GCC crisis of 2017–2020.7 During this latest GCC crisis, as Qatar’s neighbors attempted to close its land, sea and air borders, Turkey and Iran stepped in to fll the void, providing much needed deliveries of food, aid and other critical goods by air, along with Turkey’s aforementioned redeployment of a small number of soldiers. The combination of economic and political support by Turkey for Qatar incensed its three Gulf Arab neighbors and led directly to a diplomatic froideur. Relatedly, it is worth noting that the UAE’s and Saudi Arabia’s relations had been strained with Turkey since Ankara’s support of MB-linked political movements in the aftermath of 2011. It was the moves made by Turkey in support of Qatar in 2017, however, particularly the upgrade in troop numbers, that saw the development of new, confrontational foreign policies instituted by Arab states against Turkish interests in third countries such as Somalia, Libya and Sudan. It also marked the beginning of negative media reports about Turkey, a boycott of Turkish media and goods and a string of statements condemning Turkish interference in Arab affairs.8 Egypt A focus on four essential starting points, namely, geography, interests, the Cold War and the leaders of Egypt is required in order to properly understand and perceive the foreign relations of contemporary Egypt (Chen 2011). Located at the nexus of Europe, Asia and Africa, Egypt’s geography—facing both the Mediterranean world and the Indian Ocean world— determines the fundamentals of its international relations. Egypt also has worn, and still wishes to wear, the mantle of protector of the Arab nation. Egypt’s relations, as a client state, with frst the Soviet Union and then the US, also continue to infuence its foreign policy choices, particularly given its reliance on American military and economic aid. Lastly, the power of Egypt’s titular leaders since the 1950s—Nasser, Sadat, Mubarak and Sisi— dictate the direction of Egyptian international relations. Post-2011, however, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Arab States and the Karabakh War 411 a critical new variable has been added: the role of Saudi Arabia and the UAE in Egypt’s international relations, as the Saudis and Emiratis have become the bank whereby Egypt funds much of its regional ambitions. Underneath all of this is the issue of regime security versus national security. In other words, it is possible to understand the foreign policies of Egypt only by integrating internal domestic political factors and complexities in international dynamics (Hinnebusch and Ehteshami 2014). Egypt presents a particularly stark picture here, one that was amply demonstrated circa 2011–2013 when a majority of Egyptians revolted against the decades-long rule of Mubarak, then catapulted Morsi and the MB to power, only to have another popular revolt supported by the army (this time) overthrow Morsi and return a military clique to power. Dentice (2020) noted, “From Nasser to al-Sisi, Egypt adopted a security approach to explain its foreign policy in order to protect its national interests abroad and to expand its regional leverage and soft power in the MENA region as a whole.” But the mandarins in Cairo must also craft a careful strategy to maintain the existing balance domestically and to contain any threat to regional order. Egypt has weakened considerably since its days as would-be hegemon in the 1960s. A combination of explosive population growth and a corresponding lack of economic restructuring means that Egypt’s statist economy remains better suited to Cold War times than the early twenty-frst century. Given Egypt’s perennial economic crises which, in turn, sparked the overthrow of Mubarak, the rise of Morsi (supported by Turkey and Qatar) and the subsequent installment of Sisi, Egypt’s leaders have gravitated to the richer Arab Gulf States as their regional patrons. In turn, they have adopted political positions favored by Riyadh and Abu Dhabi. Egypt, for example, joined the three GCC states in boycotting Qatar. Egypt’s leaders also distanced themselves from Erdoğan’s Turkey given its support of Morsi and the MB as well as Ankara’s stance on gas in the eastern Mediterranean. The preceding sections on the national security interests of the UAE, Qatar and Egypt exhibit two commonalities. The frst is the primacy of regime security and the fact that regime security is equated with national security in all three states. The second commonality is Turkey. For both Egypt and the UAE, Turkey’s growing power and assertiveness, be it in the eastern Mediterranean or in the Caucasus, demonstrate not so much evidence of Ankara’s Ottoman-era tendencies for control, but rather what the leaders in Cairo and Abu Dhabi perceive to be the vulnerability of their regimes to causes linked with political Islam that have been supported, at least nominally, by Ankara. For Qatar, Turkey’s support during the GCC crisis—substantive as well as symbolic—offered the small state another powerful patron and source of protection against its larger and more formidable neighbors. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
412 Brendon J. Cannon Confict in the Caucasus and the Arab Middle East The confict lasting from late September to early November 2020 pitted Azerbaijan against Armenia over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. The background of this confict and other particulars are covered at length elsewhere in this book. Suffce to say, the confict resulted in a decisive victory for Azerbaijan and a resounding defeat for Armenia. Azerbaijan was supported by Turkey, militarily as well as politically, and Ankara’s assistance, including Turkish-made drones contributed substantially to the outcome. In addition, Azerbaijan’s close relations with Israel, particularly its purchases of Israeli-made kamikaze drones and the digital terrain models (DTM) of Nagorno-Karabakh by Israeli defense companies, enabled it to collect intelligence effectively and make precision missile strikes. Armenia, in contrast, was supported by Russia and the majority of members of the OSCE Minsk Group, to include France and the US. Yet, this potentially powerful array of support was in reality nominal, consisting of calls for ceasefres and attempts to implement them. It was only after Azeri forces looked likely to seize Armenian territory proper that Russia stepped in and forced a ceasefre on the warring parties, one that established Azerbaijan’s battlefeld victories and reestablished Baku’s land bridge to its Nakhichevan exclave for the frst time in over three decades. The UAE, Qatar and Egypt acted, for the most part, in a similar fashion to their Western counterparts vis-à-vis the confict. They decried the confict, calling for its peaceful resolution and urged the belligerents to cease hostilities. Beneath the diplomatic utterances, nevertheless, were undercurrents of support for either Armenia or Azerbaijan or, to put it more bluntly, for or against Azerbaijan’s patron and Armenia’s nemesis, Turkey. The United Arab Emirates The UAE’s largest and wealthiest emirate, Abu Dhabi, adopted a proactive approach to the Nagorno-Karabakh confict in order to affect outcomes. Abu Dhabi’s leadership held a pro-Yerevan position because they understood that the crisis could create problems for Turkey. Abu Dhabi’s rulers saw Turkey backing Azerbaijan against Armenia, which was backed by the might of Russia, including over 40,000 Russian troops stationed on Armenian soil. The perception was that Turkey may be able to tilt outcomes in its favor in a distant proxy war in Libya, for example, but not one against a Russian-backed state on the very borders of Russia. As events showed, however, this was a miscalculation on the part of the UAE. Russia failed to support Armenia in its efforts to maintain control over Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave that is internationally recognized to be part of Azerbaijan, despite the status quo lasting from 1988 until 2020. Immediately after the November 9, 2020 ceasefre agreement, Armenian President Armen Sarkissian visited Abu Dhabi for a “working visit.” Abu Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Arab States and the Karabakh War 413 Dhabi’s de facto ruler, the Crown Prince and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, Mohamed bin Zayed al-Nahyan, affrmed the UAE’s support for the ceasefre, reportedly expressing “hope that the ‘comprehensive ceasefre’ agreement between the two countries—both friends to the UAE— would be a step towards a lasting, stable peace that turns the page on this confict and reinforces the foundations of stability in the Caucasus” (WAM 2020). Both leaders also noted they remained committed to “developing relations in a way that achieves the mutual interests of the two countries and their peoples,” and Armenia’s president thanked the UAE for the role the UAE played in providing support to unspecifed countries and peoples (WAM 2020). The president may have been referencing the Russian-made T-72 tanks, as many as 300, sent to Armenia at the outset of the confict reportedly by Abu Dhabi.9 If the UAE’s rulers did purchase the Russian-made tanks, it would be telling for three reasons. First, it would demonstrate the importance the UAE places on its relations with Russia. By coming to Armenia’s aid, as Russia’s proxy, Abu Dhabi showed it reliability as a partner for Moscow, particularly given the diplomatic spat with Azerbaijan that ensued after Russia’s large weapons sales to Armenia in 2016. Second, it would show the UAE acting as a facilitator for the delivery of Russian arms to a politically sensitive region. Third, Abu Dhabi’s willingness to send armaments would clearly signal its support for Armenia in the confict. The third point requires explanation, however. That is, Abu Dhabi, like Moscow, maintains good relations with both Yerevan and Baku. The UAE’s actions supporting Armenia should therefore not necessarily be construed as anti-Azerbaijan, per se. Rather the aim of Abu Dhabi’s ire, given its regime’s overriding security interests and anti-MB stance, was Turkey. Turkey’s actions in Qatar, Syria, Libya and the Horn of Africa over the course of the 2010s—all perceived as threatening by Abu Dhabi’s leaders—meant the UAE took action to support Armenia in order to hurt Turkey. As Bruno (2020) noted, “Ultimately, the UAE would consider Turkey’s support for Baku as dangerous, and would see a decided beneft in backing Armenia, which might put Abu Dhabi closer to Russia.” Qatar Qatar’s leadership took an interest in the confict for two reasons. First, Qatar fancies itself as a mediator par excellence, one with a global reach. There is some truth in this. Qatar has mediated between the Taliban and the US as well as the Palestinian factions Fateh and Hamas. It also negotiated a cessation in hostilities and then sent soldiers to police the contested border between Eritrea and Djibouti. Qatar’s strengths as a confict negotiator come from a combination of its massive wealth, independent foreign policies (as distinct from its Gulf state neighbors) and its ability to offer fnancial inducements to warring parties (Barakat 2012). Accordingly, Qatar reportedly offered to mediate early in the confict, as did Georgia and Iran. One avenue it pursued was through Iran. Specifcally, Qatar’s Uploaded by S. M. Safi
414 Brendon J. Cannon ambassador to Iran visited the Armenian embassy in Tehran and asked the ambassador, Artashes Tumanyan, to deliver a letter from Qatar’s emir to President Sarkissian. Whether this was done in concert with Iran is unclear, but Qatari mediation efforts likely failed for the same reason Georgian and Iranian ones did: Azerbaijan understood it possessed the military edge over Armenia—on account of Turkish and Israeli military and intelligence support—and therefore was in no mood to talk. The second reason Qatar took an active interest in the war was its relationship with Turkey. Much has been written on this so-called alliance of MB supporters (Aras and Akpınar 2017; Gause 2017). Nevertheless, much of the literature has viewed Turkey-Qatar relations through the lens of the GCC crisis, seeing cooperation and collusion in places like Sudan, Somalia and Libya where there was little to none.10 In the Caucasus, Qatar (unlike Turkey) has good relations with both Armenia and Azerbaijan. Thus, Doha cannot be said to have actively supported Turkey or either of the belligerents. Indeed, once Doha realized it would be unable to mediate in the confict and thereby fulfll one of its national interests—to be an indispensable small state for larger powers—Qatar chose to favor the middle ground. In doing so, it maintained its good relations with Ankara, Baku and Yerevan. The reporting of Al-Jazeera, an international Arabic news channel based in Doha, on the confict is worth noting. Al-Jazeera is often seen as an arm of the Qatari state, but this conclusion is suspect for a number of reasons. Al-Jazeera’s reporting is not necessarily refective of the positions of Qatar’s ruler.11 That Al-Jazeera covered the confict was also not surprising given its truly international reach. Its coverage was neutral (as opposed to pro-Armenian) as was that of its related think-tank, the Al-Jazeera Center for Studies. Indeed, a report issued on October 10, 2020 about Turkey’s regional strategy defended Turkey’s actions in the Caucasus but cautioned that Ankara may overextend itself and, thus, may incorrectly assess the clout of its opponent in a future crisis. Egypt Egypt’s Foreign Ministry, like Saudi Arabia’s, issued a statement calling for the peaceful resolution of the confict and for outside powers not to intervene. Egypt’s strong relations with Armenia coupled with Egyptian leaders’ mistrust of Turkey led Cairo to side privately with Armenia. Demonstrating their mutual support of one another against Turkey, the Armenian Ministry of Foreign affairs issued a special statement on August 15, 2020 criticizing Turkey’s “destabilizing activities” in the eastern Mediterranean, and expressing its full support to Greece, Cyprus and, implicitly, Egypt. On September 12, just prior to the commencement of the confict, Armenia’s foreign minister made a high-profle visit to Egypt where he commended his Egyptian counterparts for their “commitment to peace” in Libya and affrmed Armenia’s solidarity with Egypt in the eastern Mediterranean. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Arab States and the Karabakh War 415 Egypt’s and Armenia’s foreign ministers both decried Turkey’s undermining of peace and stability across the wider region (Snell 2020). Despite Armenia’s efforts and the sympathies of Egypt’s leaders, Cairo failed to generate any material support for Armenia that may have affected outcomes in the confict.12 This was the case for reasons related to the interests of Egypt’s regime leaders. First, Sisi and his cadre continued to deal with major unrest across the country. A long-simmering insurgency in Sinai involving elements related to the Islamic State (IS, or Daesh) continued alongside incidents of unrest related to the overthrow of Egypt’s frst popularly elected government in 2013. Second, Egypt’s neighbors remained a source of problems. Armed combat in Libya’s civil war may have ended, but the 2020 ceasefre remained shaky and refected the victory of Tripoli’s government, using Turkish arms, over the eastern forces of Field Marshall Khalifa Haftar, backed by Egypt and the UAE. To Egypt’s south, Sudan remained in turmoil engendered by the popular overthrow of President Omar al-Bashir in 2019 after 30 years in power. As threateningly—and even more diffcult for Egypt to address effectively—was the flling of a giant dam in Ethiopia, which threatens to massively impede the fow of water from the Blue Nile to Egypt, thus threatening livelihoods and Egypt’s largely Nile-based economy. Third, Egypt remains fscally weak and therefore reliant on Riyadh and Abu Dhabi for fnancial support. Egypt’s providing of materiel to Armenia would have been too little to affect outcomes, would have angered Baku as well as Ankara and would have done little to bolster the security of Egypt’s regime. Egypt’s leaders were not the only interested spectators in the unfolding confict in the Caucasus. Unlike the First Karabakh War, the clashes that took place in late 2020 piqued the interest of many Egyptians because of Turkey’s role.13 Many Egyptians view Turkey as a troublemaker in the eastern Mediterranean region. They therefore perceived Turkey’s actions in Nagorno-Karabakh as another example of aggressive Turkish foreign policy, informed by and using Turkish nationalist as well as Islamist rhetoric in order to increase Ankara’s infuence not just in eastern Mediterranean, but in the Caucasus.14 Egyptian interest in the confict reportedly led to several online and television exposes and discussions. A proliferation of commentaries and stories also featured in newspapers, detailing (with opprobrium) Turkey’s actions in the Caucasus and linking them to Syria and Libya (Majid 2020; Qasim 2020). Particularly interesting to Egyptians—given similarities to recent occurrences in Libya—were reports that Turkey had sent Syrian mercenaries to Nagorno-Karabakh in support of Azeri forces. The idea that the confict might become a quagmire, a confict akin to Syria’s decade-long war, and draw in Turkey reportedly gained traction in certain circles in Egypt.15 The idea was that by bleeding Turkey in the Caucasus Ankara’s ability to meddle effectively in the eastern Mediterranean and Libya would be limited, thereby resulting in greater Egyptian autonomy of action— backed by Emirati monetary and material support—in its near abroad. Turkey’s worsening economic situation also provided evidence to some in the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
416 Brendon J. Cannon Arab Middle East that Turkey would be unable to continue its quest for infuence for long, particularly as states like Egypt and the UAE reacted, either be rearming and/or supporting anti-Turkey proxies (Qasim 2020).16 Conclusion Being geographically separate and inhabiting a separate regional security complex, the fact that Arab Middle East states took an active interest in the confict in Nagorno-Karabakh is telling and refects recent shifts in distributions of power, more activist foreign policies and issues related to regime survival. The research demonstrates that the confict between Azerbaijan and Armenia as well as its local repercussions would not, in and of themselves, have drawn in the interests and capabilities of Egypt, Qatar and the UAE. Rather, it was the confict’s outcomes and their potential effects on distributions of power across the Middle East that led these Arab states to eschew spectatorship for more active involvement. Cairo’s, Abu Dhabi’s and Doha’s actions, in turn, were predicated by the titular role played in the Caucasus confict by Turkey. Egypt and the UAE both adopted pro-Armenia positions not because Cairo and Abu Dhabi supported the Armenian occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh, but because they hoped the confict would cut Turkey down to size. Qatar, contrariwise, adopted a studied neutrality that demonstrated its good relations with the two belligerents as well as their backers, Iran and Russia in the case of Armenia, and Turkey in the case of Azerbaijan. Notes 1 For a detailed study on how this struggle for Middle Eastern regional hegemony is playing out extra-regionally in the Horn of Africa, see Cannon and Donelli (2019) and Donelli and Cannon (2021). 2 For a study on Turkey’s shifting interests and progressive establishment of zones and infuence, see Cannon, et al. (2018); Köstem (2020). 3 Azerbaijan does not currently operate embassies in Syria, Oman and Yemen. 4 Reports are inconclusive as to Abu Dhabi’s offcial recognition. Nevertheless, the prospect of Abu Dhabi’s recognition was warmly welcomed in Yerevan and by the Armenian diaspora. 5 A state’s extant and enduring security burdens often, but not always, defne its strategic choices. Security burdens are often divided into two tiers: frst-tier security burdens can be understood as those coming from states possessing the extant and enduring capability and intent to cause catastrophic harm to the national security of the state in question. Second-tier security burdens may be defned as those emanating from states possessing the possible capability and intent to cause enduring, extant, and serious harm to the national security of a country (Donelli and Cannon, 2021, 12–14). 6 David Roberts (2017b) noted that Qatar has “sought to harness the post-Cold War zeitgeist to forge the Qatari state as a mediator, a font of soft power in the sporting, media, and educational arenas, and as a state enmeshed in an ever-thickening web of international relations via its liquefed natural gas (LNG) shipments to states like the United Kingdom, China, Japan, and South Korea.” Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Arab States and the Karabakh War 417 7 For example, in 2014 and as a prelude to the 2017-2020 GCC crisis, Saudi Arabia threatened to blockade Qatar by land and sea unless it cut its ties with the Muslim Brotherhood, close Al Jazeera, and expel local branches of two US think tanks, the Brookings Doha Center and the Rand Qatar Policy Institute. See David Hearst (2014, March 9). Saudi Arabia Threatens to Lay Siege to Qatar: Cooperation or Confrontation?, Huffngton Post. https://www.huffngtonpost.com/ david-hearst/saudi-arabia-threatens-to_b_4930518.html. 8 For example, on August 1, 2020, UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash tweeted “The provocative statement of the Turkish Minister of Defense is a new [failure for] his country’s diplomacy…Relations are not managed with threats and intrusions, and there is no place for colonial illusions at this time, and it is more appropriate for Turkey to stop interfering in Arab affairs.” 9 The reporting remains unverifed (see, for example, Intelligence Online 2020). 10 For a corrective to this view, see Cannon (2019, 33). 11 Giorgio Cafero, CEO of Gulf State Analytics, personal interview (online) with author, February 25, 2021. 12 Ahmed Kandil, Head of International Affairs Unit and Head of Energy Studies Program, Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, Cairo, personal interview (online) with author, March 8, 2021. 13 The interest generated in the confict was not limited to Egypt. After the outbreak in hostilities, Arab News, an English-language daily newspaper published in Saudi Arabia, published an October 2, 2020 interview with Mher Margaryan, Armenia’s Permanent Representative to the UN, in which he pleaded with the world not to let another genocide happen to the Armenians. Armenian claims that Turkey was seeking to continue the “genocide” in Nagorno-Karabakh on October 4, 2020. Arab News also reported on its website on October 4, 2020 that a Twitter poll showed that almost half of Arab readers believed Turkey was behind the escalation in confict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. 14 Ahmed Kandil, personal interview (online) with author, March 8, 2021. 15 Ahmed Kandil, personal interview (online) with author, March 8, 2021. 16 This theory has had currency in the West as well as the Arab Middle East for over a decade. In 2010, Turkey’s economy was in good shape and its reputation intact across the Middle East. Nevertheless, an International Crisis Group report concluded that “Ankara has many balls in the air and sometimes promises more than it can deliver, over-sells what it has achieved and seeks a role far away when critical problems remain unsolved at home.” In 2020, a report concluded: “Over the past year, Turkey has taken extensive and at times provocative actions to expand its presence along its periphery in the Mediterranean and the Levant, and outward into the greater Mediterranean, Red Sea and Horn of Africa—a pattern that resembles the country’s mighty predecessor, the Ottoman Empire. But to maintain this kind of momentum, Turkey must have a strong economy. If it can weather this fnancial storm, it can pursue its ambitions of becoming a regional power. If not, then Erdoğan will have to fght just to maintain the gains Turkey has made so far” (Rose, 2020). Bibliography Aras, Bülent, and Pınar Akpınar. “Turkish foreign policy and the Qatar crisis.” IPC Policy Brief (Istanbul: Istanbul Policy Center (2017). Axelrod, Robert, and Robert O. Keohane. “Achieving cooperation under anarchy: Strategies and institutions.” World Politics: A Quarterly Journal of International Relations (1985), 38(1): 226–254. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
418 Brendon J. Cannon Barakat, Sultan. The Qatari Spring: Qatar’s Emerging Role in Peacemaking. Research Paper No. 24, Kuwait Programme on Development, Governance and Globalisation in the Gulf State. London: LSE, 2012. Bruno, Alessandro. 2020. “Nagorno-Karabakh confict and Gulf states’ stakes.” Gulf International Forum, October 20. https://gulff.org/nagorno-karabakh-confictand-gulf-states-stakes/ Buzan, Barry G., and Ole Waever. Regions and Powers: The Structure of International Security. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Calculli, Marina. “Sub-regions and security in the Arab Middle East: ‘hierarchical interdependence’ in Gulf-Levant relations.” In Regional Insecurity after the Arab Uprisings, pp. 58–81. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015. Cannon, Brendon J. “Foreign state infuence and Somalia’s 2017 Presidential Election: An analysis.” Bildhaan: An International Journal of Somali Studies 18, no. 1 (2019): 20–49. Cannon, Brendon J. Legislating Reality and Politicizing History: Contextualizing. Offenbach am Main: Manzara Verlag, 2016. Cannon, Brendon J. “Turkey’s military strategy in Africa.” In Turkey in Africa, pp. 127–143. Oxon: Routledge, 2021. Cannon, Brendon J., and Federico Donelli. “Asymmetric alliances and high polarity: evaluating regional security complexes in the Middle East and Horn of Africa.” Third World Quarterly 41, no. 3 (2020): 505–524. Cannon, Brendon J., Mikiyasu Nakayama, Daisuke Sasaki, and Ash Rossiter. “Shifting policies in confict arenas.” Journal of Strategic Security 11, no. 4 (2018): 1–19. Chen, Tianshe. “Four Points toward the Understanding of Egypt’s Foreign Relations.” Journal of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies (in Asia) 5, no. 1 (2011): 83–101. Dentice, Giuseppe. 2020. “Shifting priorities: The evolution of Egypt’s foreign policy.” Italian Institute for International Political Studies (ISPI), September 24. https:// www.ispionline.it/en/pubblicazione/shifting-priorities-evolution-egypts-foreign -policy-27409#n1 Donelli, Federico. Turkey in Africa: Turkey’s Strategic Involvement in Sub-Saharan Africa. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2021. Donelli, Federico, and Brendon J. Cannon. 2021. “Power projection of Middle East states in the Horn of Africa: linking security burdens with capabilities.” Small Wars & Insurgencies, 1–21. Egypt Today Staff. 2019. Egypt implicitly recognizes Armenian Genocide.” Egypt Today, February 18. https://www.egypttoday.com/Article/1/64896/ Egypt-implicitly-recognizes-Armenian-Genocide Eurasian Times. 2020. “Has Iran deployed 200 heavy armor tanks to help Armenia take on Azerbaijan?.” October 5. https://eurasiantimes.com/iran-deploys-200heavy-armor-tanks-to-help-armenia-take-on-azerbaijan-reports/ Fuller, Graham. 2020. “Is Turkey out of control?.” Responsible Statecraft, December 4. https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2020/12/04/is-turkey-out-ofcontrol/ Gause III, F. Gregory. “What the Qatar crisis shows about the Middle East.” POMEPS Brief 31 (2017): 10–11. Gunter, Michael M. “Politicizing history.” In Armenian History and the Question of Genocide, pp. 75–97. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. Hinnebusch, Raymond A., and Anoushiravan Ehteshami, eds. The Foreign Policies of Middle East States. Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2014. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Arab States and the Karabakh War 419 Hinnebusch, Raymond A., and Anoushiravan Ehteshami, “Foreign policymaking in the Middle East: complex realism.” In International Relations of the Middle East. Oxford: Oxford University Press, (2019): 249–270. Intelligence Online. 2020. “Abu Dhabi’s weapons proliferation set to cause problems with Biden administration.” Issue 867, December 16. Köstem, Seçkin. “Russian-Turkish cooperation in Syria: Geopolitical alignment with limits.” Cambridge Review of International Affairs 34, no. 6 (2020): 1–23. Lmahamad, Ayya. 2020. “Azerbaijan, UAE mull socio-economic ties, Nagorno-Karabakhconfict.”MENAFN,August13.https://menafn.com/1100633035/ Azerbaijan-UAE-mull-socio-economic-ties-Nagorno-Karabakh-confict Majid, Sayyid Abul. 2020. “Baʿda al-Shamāl al-Ifrīqī waˈl Sharq al-Awṣaṭ: ‘Turkiya al-Ardogāniyya’ Bawābat al-Jihādiyyn ilā al-Qqūqāz” [After North Africa and the Middle East: ‘Turkey of Erdoğan’ the Gate of Muslim Jihadis to Caucasus].” Al-Ahram, October 14. https://gate.ahram.org.eg/News/2503784.aspx Mearsheimer, John. “Anarchy and the struggle for power.” The Realism Reader 179 (2014). Miholjcic, Nina. “International response to the Second Karabakh War.” Caucasus Strategic Perspectives 1, no. 2 (2020): 155–166. Qasim, Mahmoud. 2020. “Nagorno Carabākh: Ṣirāʿ Yatajadad bayna Mosco wa Anqara [Nagorno-Karabakh: A confict regenerates between Moscow and Anqara].” Egyptian Center for Strategic Studies, July 11. https://www.ecsstudies.com/9813/ Roberts, David B. “Qatar and the UAE: Exploring divergent responses to the Arab Spring.” The Middle East Journal 71, no. 4 (2017a): 544–562. Roberts, David B. 2017b. Securing the Qatari State. The Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington, Issue paper 7, 1–10: 4. Rose, Caroline D. 2020. “As Turkey’s economy goes, so goes its ambitions.” Geopolitical Futures, September 30. https://geopoliticalfutures.com/as-turkeys-economy-goesso-goes-its-ambitions/ Rossiter, Ash, and Brendon J. Cannon. “Re-examining the ‘Base’: The political and security dimensions of Turkey’s Military presence in Somalia.” Insight Turkey 21, no. 1 (2019): 167–188. Snell, Joe. 2020. “Intel: Armenia’s foreign minister in Egypt says Turkey undermines ‘peace and stability in the region.’” Al-Monitor, September 14. https://www. al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2020/09/egypt-armenia-foreign-ministers-yerevan-cairo-peace-partners.html Snidal, Duncan. “International cooperation among relative gains maximizers.” International Studies Quarterly 35, no. 4 (1991): 387–402. Tammen, Ronald L., Jacek Kugler, and Douglas Lemke. “Foundations of power transition theory.” In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics, 2017. Tang, Shiping. “The security dilemma: A conceptual analysis.” Security Studies 18, no. 3 (2009): 587–623. DOI: 10.1080/09636410903133050. Ulrichsen, Kristian Coates. The United Arab Emirates: Power, Politics and Policy-Making. Oxon: Routledge, 2016. WAM. 2020. “Mohamed Bin Zayed, President of Armenia discuss regional and global developments, efforts to contain COVID-19.” November 15. https://wam. ae/en/details/1395302886738 Yates, Athol. The Evolution of the UAE Armed Forces. Solihull: Helion and Company, 2020. Yavuz, M. Hakan. Nostalgia for the Empire: The Politics of Neo-Ottomanism. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
19 The Nagorno-Karabakh War Diaspora Politics in Canadian Foreign Policy1 Ozay Mehmet Introduction Traditionally Canadian foreign policy is designed to project Canada as a loyal partner in the dominant western alliances of the day. This has included participating on the allied side of both world wars, actively participating in the United Nations and NATO, defending democratic-capitalist causes during the Cold War, and making military, diplomatic, and fnancial commitments to help promote global stability and justice in the modern era of terrorism and rogue states (https://thecanadaguide.com/basics/foreign-policy/ accessed on 3/11/2020). This chapter critically examines the pro-Armenian policy in relation to the war over Nagorno-Karabakh during fall 2020, emphasizing that it does not follow the traditional Canadian foreign policy as outlined above. Rather, this case has been shaped by the Armenian diaspora in Canada. For reasons explained in the chapter, the conduct of Canadian foreign policy in this case is inconsistent with the Canadian reputation as a multicultural model that respects international law and human rights. The chapter also argues that this case fails to promote solidarity within the NATO alliance and in the UN. The chapter is organized in fve Parts as follows: Part I is an Introduction. Part II examines selected cases of Best Practice in Canadian foreign policy, which has earned Canada a well-deserved and favorable image abroad. These Best Practice cases illustrate and justify an independent Canadian foreign policy, to the maximum degree possible. More generally, Canadian foreign policy has followed the lead of bigger powers. Accordingly, Part III examines the case for an independent foreign policy. It is found that, as a middle-level power, Canada is seriously constrained by fnancial and military resources for a fully independent foreign policy. Even more seriously, it is found that a new domestic threat to independent Canadian foreign policy exists, namely, Diaspora ethnic politics. This is documented in Part IV, the DOI: 10.4324/9781003261209-24 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh War 421 core of the chapter, based on the war in fall 2020 over Nagorno-Karabakh and undue infuence of the Armenian diaspora lobby in this case. Finally, Part V will highlight the principal conclusions of the chapter. Best Practice versus Traditionalism in Canadian Foreign Policy Canadian foreign policy has oscillated between exceptionalism approaching Best Practice and Traditionalism whereby policymaking has been by proxy, following the lead of Westminster or Washington. In the former, Canada has demonstrated a rare, admirable case of independent voice, whereas in the latter, more traditional situation Canada lacked independence. In the frst section of this Part, we shall examine some examples of the Best Practice, and in the second section we shall similarly look at traditionalism. A historical review of Canada’s foreign policy is outside the scope of this chapter. However, over the course of the last century, it may be argued that Canada’s foreign policy has been best when Ottawa acted from a principled Canadian perspective, going against instructions or guidance from London, Washington or elsewhere. Four selected cases will now be reviewed briefy to illustrate Best Practice: (1) The Chanak Affair, 1922, (2) Pierre E. Trudeau’s China policy, (3) Cuba 1976, and (4) former PM Chretien’s refusal to join in the invasion of Iraq in deference to the Bush Administration. The Chanak Affair, End of Colonialism On 9 September 1922, the Turkish National army, led by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, liberated Izmir, pushing out to sea the invading Greek army. Then, the Turkish forces marched north to confront the British soldiers guarding Gallipoli. At the little town Canakkale on the Asian side, a renewed war loomed pitting Britain and Kemalist Turkey. Fatigued after years of fghting, neither side wished a new war. PM Lloyd George in London had different ideas. Ready to fght the upstart Kemalist regime, he was short of soldiers and immediately appealed to the British Empire to dispatch soldiers for a new war against Turkey. Affrmative replies came, as anticipated, from Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. But not from Ottawa. Thus, the Chanak Affair (Allen, 1961: Chap. XXVIII), as it is known in Canadian history, exploded, ultimately bringing down Lloyd George. War was averted, and soon an Armistice deal was reached, paving the way for a comprehensive Peace Treaty negotiated between the Allies and the new Kemalist Turkey. How this outcome was reached out of the Chanak Affair is to be found in the personality of Mackenzie King, the independent-minded Prime Minister in Ottawa. He was a proud man with a strange obsession for spiritualism, Uploaded by S. M. Safi
422 Ozay Mehmet spending much time in his Gatineau estate in seances communicating with his beloved dead mother. Due to an error, the telegram from London asking troops did not frst reach him; instead, he learned the news from newspapers. Shocked, he did not, as expected, say “Ready, Aye, Ready” to reporters who asked him if Canada was about to go to war against Turkey. “Parliament will decide” is what he said, playing instead a delaying tactic. The Governor General, the Opposition and pro-British lobby were furious. But King held his ground. The Canadian Parliament was in summer recess and delay was inevitable. In the end, Lloyd George did not get his way; he resigned, and war was averted. King’s indirect rejection of troops prevailed, with a surprisingly positive outcome. In 1931 the British Parliament passed the Statue of Westminster, and British colonialism ended in Canada. The exceptional voice of independent Canadian foreign policy opened a door to the future Commonwealth, burying the legacy of a subservient colonial past. The age of imperial wars now belonged to history. Trudeau’s China Policy In 1968 Trudeau became Canada’s prime minister. In foreign affairs, his top priority was normalizing relations with the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Diplomatic relations between the PRC and Canada were established on 13 October 1970. On 25 October 1971, the PRC took its seat at the UN and Taiwan was expelled. Trudeau’s independent China initiative was epoch-making. It directly encouraged Richard Nixon on 21 February 1972 to become the frst US president to visit Mao. This opened the door to normalization of US-China relations after 25 years of estrangement. Full diplomatic relations were restored in 1979. In October 1973, at the height of Trudomania, Pierre Elliot Trudeau, offcially visited the Chinese Leader Mao Zedong in Beijing, in old age, known then as the Great Helmsman. Communist China was going through a bloody Cultural Revolution. A power struggle was ongoing, fnally resulting in the passing of effective power to Deng Xiaoping. Trudeau Visits Cuba In 1976 Pierre E. Trudeau broke new ground once again, becoming the frst Western leader to visit Fidel Castro in revolutionary Cuba. The threeday visit was cordial and generated a warm, friendly relationship. Back in Ottawa, John Diefenbaker, leader of the Opposition, was angry and criticized Trudeau for ignoring Cuba’s involvement in the Angolan War. Subsequently, Trudeau took a step backward, cutting relations with Cuba, but nevertheless Trudeau’s 1976 visit was a signifcant act of independence in Canadian foreign policymaking. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh War 423 Saying No to Bush on Iraq But Getting Involved in Syria 1 Perhaps the greatest act of independent Canadian foreign policymaking was PM Jean Chretien’s rejection of a request by the US President George W Bush to join in the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Chretien opposed the Blair-Bush plan. It was illegal as it lacked UN approval. Regime-change in Baghdad, brutally toppling Saddam Hussein was unjustifed. It was very costly, politically, and in human lives. Iraq has been in turmoil ever since; the region has been destabilized by millions of death and displacement. It also directly led to Islamic fundamentalism and terrorism that has continued to this day. The Blair-Bush invasion was a Neocon Big Lie. Dick Cheney at the Pentagon led the invasion with false information and lies. There were no weapons of mass destruction. Saddam was a brutal dictator; his regime held Iraq together by force. After the invasion and removal of Saddam, the US-led coalition failed to bring democracy to Iraq. Indeed, the country descended into chaos. Jihadist terrorism started, frst with Al Qaeda, then the Islamic State (ISIL) and the Syrian Civil War. These waves of terrorism were products of the US-led Coalition which bore moral responsibility for millions of human lives lost or displaced. In the end, Canada did join the US-led coalition by sending troops to Afghanistan early in 2002 and fnally ending in 2014. Ottawa also participated, on a smaller scale, in confronting ISIL in Iraq and Syria. This was really a sideshow of “a slow-burn confict between Iran and the USA” (National Post, 11/1/2021). 2 The Syrian mission displeased Ankara as it seemed Canada was supporting groups which Ankara considered terrorist. The latest cause of friction occurred in October 2019, when Turkey launched Operation Peace Spring in northeastern Syria. This cross-border military incursion targeted the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a Kurdish terrorist organization, while creating a safe zone along the Turkish-Syrian border. Turkey hoped this zone would house some of the 4 million Syrian refugees Turkey is hosting at a huge cost to the Turkish nation. In addition, Turkey has a huge terrorist problem and expects support, at least sympathy from NATO allies like Canada. For the Turkish government, the SDF is simply a cover for the Syrian-Kurdish YPG, a Syrian extension of the terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). Even though the PKK is accepted as a terrorist organization by Canada and the USA, it appeared to Ankara as if Canada were actively supporting it and ignoring the fact that the PKK has been fghting the Turkish state inside Turkey for decades, and more recently in Syria. In the end, the Canadian mission in Syria ended in a military sense, shifting to a more humanitarian character. Signifcantly, after the Liberal victory Uploaded by S. M. Safi
424 Ozay Mehmet over PM Stephen Harper, the Justin Trudeau government announced and implemented a policy of accepting 25,000 Syrian refugees into Canada. The US-led invasions and adventures in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria are highly questionable acts of aggressive warfare or policing the world for the US interest. Beyond regime change, the USA has made no secret of its primary interest in securing and controlling oil felds or keeping a watchful eye on Iran. Canadian foreign policy should not facilitate such American interests, any more than British imperial interests of the past. Chretien’s brave stand in 2003 was a mark of a sovereignty, an act of principled policymaking in global affairs worthy of applause. It is a wonderful, but short-lived example of how an independent Canadian voice can make a difference in building a more peaceful world. The four cases above demonstrate that, when there is determined leadership in Ottawa, independent foreign policy emerges. That is when Canada shines in global affairs, displaying courage and creativity and winning much praise around the globe. Sadly, such handling of Canadian foreign policy did not occur regarding Karabakh. Prior to 1931, there was no Canadian foreign policy, only foreign policy made in Westminster, London. Even after this date, Ottawa has principally followed Westminster or Washington in formulating foreign policy. The lead of London is historical, a form of emotional link to the Crown as the Queen of Canada; in the case of Washington, it is commercial, designed to protect the largest bilateral trading in the world from the Cold War to the contemporary threats of terrorism and rogue states. Canadian troops have joined the US-led Coalition of the Willing to send troops as peacekeepers to Somalia, Afghanistan, Syria, and elsewhere. Within NATO, Canada has always followed the lead of the USA or Britain. The following selection of three examples provides greater detail of the traditional Canadian foreign policy, effectively by proxy. 1 When the Makarios Coup in Cyprus occurred at Christmas, 1963, with an attack on the Turkish community by Greek forces and the Partnership Republic was violently destroyed, the All-Greek regime emerged. At that time, L.B. Pearson was the Canadian envoy at the UN. Canada had no embassy in Cyprus, and virtually no knowledge about that island except whatever London provided. Suddenly, Pearson played a vital role in 1964, shaping the UN role in the Cyprus dispute. It was all premediated, foreign policy by proxy, with input from London and Washington, where the Makarios Coup and breakup of the 1960 Republic, had been planned and manipulated (Sonyel in Dodd, 1999, esp. pp. 25–26). Acting with the USA and British as a guarantor of the newly independent Republic of Cyprus, Pearson shepherded the creation of peace-keeping and peace-making for Cyprus, effectively adopting a blind eye to the Makarios Coup and the mass-scale violation of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh War 425 constitutional order and human rights violations. Under UN Res. 164 of March 1964, Canadian troops were dispatched to Cyprus, “with the consent” of the Makarios regime, in effect giving legitimacy to the Makarios regime, the aggressor. Even though a Green Line boundary was set up between the warring ethnic Turks and Greeks on the island for peacekeeping, peace-making under the “good offces” mission of the UN Secretary General was doomed from the start since Res. 164 had given recognition to the aggressor. A six-month term was chosen for peacekeeping, expecting a quick end to the Makarios Coup. Half a century later, the UNSG peacekeeping mission drags on, while the peacemaking is routinely renewed every six months. This sad tale of UN failed mediation, most recently in Crans-Montana, Switzerland (http://www.uncyprustalks.org/after-failure-of-crans-montana-talkswhat-next-for-cyprus-peace-process/ accessed on 3/11/2020) was the product of the faulty decision-making by the UNSC in March 1964 of rewarding the aggressor. In later Resolutions, the principle of political equality of Turkish and Greek Cypriots was acknowledged. However, Makarios and his successors ever since have insisted on the confrmation of the All-Greek regime, rejecting all else. The fact is that Britain, the USA, and especially the European powers, have generally adopted a pro-Greek stance, accepting the Greek Cypriot regime into the EU and ignoring the constitutional rights of the Turkish side under the 1960 Independence agreements. As a result of Pearson’s actions at the UN, Britain maintained its two sovereign bases in Cyprus, while US President Lyndon B. Johnson stopped Turkey from using its intervention rights on the island to come to the protection of the Turkish community. Johnson’s action pushed the then Turkish prime minister Ismet Inonu to launch a strategic shift away from NATO toward rapprochement with Russia that has continued to this day. 2 Another notable example of Canadian foreign policy by proxy is the case of Palestine. Traditionally, Canada has followed the USA to support Israel while paying lip-service to Palestinian rights. Under PM Harper, Ottawa’s pro-Israel policy was especially strong, designed to win the Jewish Canadian vote. It also stemmed from Harper’s Biblical faith seeing the Holocaust as the greatest evil, tied with his willingness to equate anti-Zionism with anti-Israel sentiment. Thus, Harper partially “criminalized” criticism of Israel (https://theneoconzionistreport.fandom.com/wiki/Criminalizing_Criticism_of_Israel_in_ Canada......accessed on 14/12/2020) and donated $0.5 million to the Gulenist inter-faith institute in the Ottawa suburb of Kanata (Yavuz and Balci, eds., 2018). Somewhat surprisingly, after Justin Trudeau won against Harper, traditional Canadian support of Israel continued, undoubtedly refecting the strength of the Jewish lobby in foreign affairs at the Prime Minister’s Offce at the expense of the Global Affairs bureaucracy. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
426 Ozay Mehmet Canada’s Israeli policy has not been cost-free. For example, in June 2020, Canada lost a temporary seat on the UN Security Council, largely due to its traditional pro-Israeli voting. Nevertheless, the fact that Canada considers West Bank settlements on Palestinian land “inconsistent” with international law is often opposed to a handful of countries supporting the lead of the USA in protecting Israel. 3 A third case of foreign policy by proxy is the technology war launched by the USA against China to protect American intellectual property in the Silicon Valley. US trade sanctions are extra-territorial, an aggressive case of forcing third countries to abide by US laws. Extra-territoriality conficts with national laws as well as such trade blocs as the EU (https:// www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/STUD/2020/653618/EXPO_ STU(2020)653618_EN.pdf...accessed on 3/1/2021). They go against rulebased WTO multilateralism, which, of course the Trump administration has systematically ignored. American extra-territoriality has long been a problem in Canada, the latest being the Meng case. On December 1, 2019, Meng Wanzhou, the CEO of the Chinese technology giant Huawei, was arrested by Canadian police on American request. Subsequently, the USA requested her extradition. Since she committed no crime in Canada and there was no Interpol warrant for her arrest, Meng could not be extradited. She has since been detained in Vancouver in house arrest. In the meantime, China has retaliated, tit-for-tat, by arresting Canadian citizens in China on dubious charges of spying. Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor are businessmen. No legal evidence exists to justify their detention. China is displeased with Canada acting as a proxy for the USA. A stalemate has resulted whereby the future of Canada-China relations stands in limbo. Families of Canadians arrested in China. have requested the unconditional release of Meng, hoping that this would result in the Canadians’ release. Ottawa, however, is unable to act for fear of upsetting USA. In the end, Ottawa waits for the USA to settle this dispute and free Canadians, victims of tit-for-tat diplomacy. Canadian nation-building is a story of economic development. However, Canada’s development has been driven more by American than home-grown entrepreneurial activity. Canada did not produce its own Carnegies, Rockefellers, or Vanderbilts. Moreover, Canadian business elites from the Family Compact era have been “happy to be bought by a bigger American competitor” (McQuaig, 2019: 6). “Silent Surrender” (Levitt, 1970) has turned Canada into a branch-plant economy. It was a problem in the 1960s and 1970s when the Watkins Report bluntly stated: “Foreign ownership is still the norm for large companies in Canada, giving a continuing branchplant character to the Canadian economy typical of a less-developed country” (quoted in McQuaig, ibid.: 7). During the COVID-19 Pandemic in early 2021, Canada found itself facing a critical vaccine shortage. Without Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh War 427 domestic vaccine-producing capacity, Canada was shut out of the EU and US vaccine supply and Ottawa had to seek WHO COVAX help normally intended for developing countries’ beneft. Canadian vulnerability is real, and as the Meng case refects, American dominance is damaging today. It is counter-productive for Canadian policymaking, and it is equally undesirable for the conduct of global affairs for a better world. A More Independent Canadian Foreign Policy A recent major book on the politics of Canadian foreign policy has concluded that, increasingly it is being shaped by domestic imperatives (Nossel et al., 2015). This implies a more made-in-Canada foreign policy. But who speaks for Canada? What exactly are Canadian values promoted on the global level? Canada is a multinational country, having emerged out of a FrenchEnglish dualism in the aftermath of the Centennial in 1967, thanks to an open-door Immigration policy based on merit without regard to race or religion. What matters is not what immigrants wear on their head, but what is in their head. As a nation of immigrants, diversity is a distinctive character of Canada. While ethnic diversity is consistent with multiculturalism, the fact is that some ethnic groups may be more infuential than others, giving rise to tensions and conficts within the Canadian multicultural mosaic (see further below). Equal treatment of ethnic differences, no less than the traditional Anglo-French tensions, must be reconciled for harmony and peace. A Confederation of 10 Provinces and vast Territories extending to the Artic North, historically Canada has depended for its prosperity on waves of natural resource exploitation. In colonial times, prior to 1914 in the days of pioneers and Fur Trade, Canada was “hewers of wood, drawers of water,” its trade linked to London. With the emergence of the USA, this colonial pattern gradually shifted to a North-South axis, American markets and investment delinking Canada from Britain, and Washington replacing London as the nerve center of foreign policymaking. Now, up to 90% of Canadian exports enter the USA, and likewise American investment fuels Canada’s economy. Attempts to diversify Canadian trade to Europe or the Asia-Pacifc have had little success. A more diversifed trade would mean less dependence on the USA, and a more independent foreign policy. At the end of the day, however, resource constraints, as noted above, exercise a dominant role in Canadian capacity to go it alone globally. Ideally, Canada is a strong voice of multilateralism in global affairs. That means a principled and evenhanded support of the UN system in defense of human rights and confict resolution in accordance with international law and conventions. In the unsettled post-Pandemic world, an independent Canadian voice in global affairs may be needed, more than ever before. But there is a resource constraint on a fully independent Canadian foreign policy: As a middle-range power, the amount of fnancial and military resources Ottawa can, and indeed should, mobilize for foreign policy is Uploaded by S. M. Safi
428 Ozay Mehmet limited. It must, therefore, rely on its NATO allies and multilateralism, such as the UN agencies, to offset resource constraints. It follows that Canada should not readily sacrifce its NATO allies, nor abandon international law, especially UNSC resolutions for the expediency of domestic imperatives. A pragmatic solution to resource constraint is the model of like-minded Nordic countries. In this context, it is important, in cases of clear Canadian interest, to differ from Washington or London. Examples have been cited above to make the case that where this has been implemented, it served Canada well, earning the country a positive image internationally. As documented above, it served Canada well, earning the country a positive image internationally. However, there is a major problem in this direction: The role of ethnic lobbies in Canada. Some academics have pointed out the dangers of diaspora politics in Canada (https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/the-dangerous-game-of-diaspora-politics/article544912/ … accessed on 15/12/2020). Canadian foreign policy must not become hostage to ethnic lobbies, pursuing non-Canadian objectives. Extreme violence occurred in Washington on 6 January 2021 where a bloody insurrection occurred on Capitol Hill, incited by no less than the US president himself. This was a direct assault on American democracy aimed at overturning the free will of the people in an attempt to enable Trump to remain in the White House. Is such a case of extreme violence imaginable in Canada? Extreme ethnic violence, while unlikely, is possible. More likely, political violence may erupt, undertaken by such a group as the ASALA, the Armenian terrorist organization. At least one authority (Bell, 2005) has argued that Canada “nurtures” and “exports” ASALA-type terrorism. Bell has shown (ibid., pp. 22–25), how extensively Armenian terrorists shed blood in Canada. Regretfully, as explained below, Canadian security and political authorities, as well as the news media, have responded by a general appeasement policy, turning Canada into a terrorists’ “safe haven” (Bell, ibid., 38). Appeasement policy reached its climax under Francois-Philippe Champagne’s tenure at Global Affairs during the Nagorno-Karabakh War when Canadian foreign policymaking effectively became a hostage of the Armenian Canadian diaspora. Champagne’s riding of Saint Maurice has a small, but active Armenian community, centered on the local church. This is typical of Armenian Canadians who have been active in Canadian politics for a long time. It is worth examining this fact in detail leading to the Nagorno-Karabakh case. Diaspora-Led Foreign Policy: The Case of Nagorno-Karabakh Following the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1989/1990, Canada opened diplomatic relations with Azerbaijan and Armenia. In 1997 an honorary consulate was opened in Yerevan in 1991, while diplomatic relations between Ottawa and Yerevan have been handled through Canada’s Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh War 429 embassy in Moscow. Similarly, the Canadian embassy in Ankara handled relations with Baku. As two NATO allies, it is self-evident that Ottawa has more signifcant relations with Turkey, covering military cooperation and peace-keeping operations in several countries. This is exemplifed by the Canadian diplomatic mission in Ankara. In diplomatic relations, by contrast, Canada’s relations with Armenia are far from being globally signifcant. Nor are economic or strategic relations major. It follows, therefore, that Canadian foreign policy on Armenian issues must be primarily an extension of domestic political agenda. In mid-October 2020, at the height of the Azerbaijan-Armenia War over Nagorno-Karabakh (what the Armenians call the Republic of Artsakh), the government of Justin Trudeau took a highly pro-Armenian policy stance: The foreign affairs Minister Champagne announced, with immediate effect, suspension of sensor technology exports to Turkey, pending a review of the export permit issued earlier to a Canadian frm. Signifcantly in this case, action preceded the review of facts. PM Trudeau later stated that he talked to the Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan about this subject, declaring that Canada is working with allies to “put an end to the violence” over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. He also talked to Turkish president Recep Tayyip President Erdogan, stressing the need for peaceful resolution of the confict. The sudden and immediate suspension imposed on Turkey, understandably, offended Turkey. Turkish authorities, who were not consulted about the matter, declared that the Canadian suspension was contrary to the spirit and letter of NATO alliance, since both Turkey and Canada are members. They also voiced strong objection about the fact that the Canadian decision was taken to appease the Canadian Armenian Diaspora who asked that the Canadian government recognize “the Republic of Artsakh.” In addition, they alleged that Turkey sent combat F16 jets, drones equipped with Canadian sensor technology, military advisers, and Syrian jihadist mercenaries to help Azerbaijan forces. These allegations were denied by Ankara which, from the start of hostilities never hid its unconditional support for Azerbaijan. Turkish authorities declared strict guidelines governed the use of imported Canadian military equipment. It was also added that the Turkish drone BAYRAKTAR TB2 was using local technology, effectively denying Canadian/Armenian allegations. Signifcantly, Turkey has now become one of the leading countries producing UAVs, unmanned aviation vehicles with its own technology. The Armenian lobby’s anti-Turkey campaign in Ottawa was a politically motivated public relations (PR) war. As the confict over Nagorno-Karabakh raged, in Ottawa the Armenian lobby and friends accelerated their efforts to score points in the public propaganda arena. Newspapers published opinion pieces by pro-Armenian pundits. Stories about donations by Armenian-origin celebrities were prominently advertised. The national radio and TV, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, provided a highly Uploaded by S. M. Safi
430 Ozay Mehmet sympathetic interview with the Armenian ambassador compared to a frosty one with the Turkish ambassador. Diasporic Armenian groups went on the offensive to infuence policy. Ethnic groups are part of the Canadian multicultural mosaic. They enrich Canadian life so long as they stick to cultural agenda. But some ethnic organizations are often extensions of homeland politics. Greek or Armenian and other ethnic groups use clubs, religious institutions to promote and sustain homeland political or military objectives. In some cases, these objectives may coincide or reinforce Canadian interests, for example NATO solidarity. In most cases, however, homeland politics may refect irredentist or terrorist aims. In some cases, such imported politics may be targeting other ethnic groups, maligning them, or spreading hate in pursuit of some irredentist ideology back home. Such was largely the case of the war over Nagorno-Karabakh. No less than Russian president Vladimir Putin himself declared that in this war, Armenia was occupying Azerbaijani land. Thus, wisely, Russia, which had a defense treaty obligation toward Armenia, stayed out. In Canada, however, the diaspora Armenian lobbies actively joined the war, ignoring international law, forcefully attempting to harness Canadian foreign policy as an extension of irredentist Armenian objectives. This effort was the continuation of the traditional appeasement policy in Ottawa, seeking to accommodate Armenian demands. Turkey and Azerbaijan were targets of a huge publicity blitz urging the Canadian government to adopt a pro-Armenian stance. The appeasement policy had worked in the past (as explained further below), so, it could be expected to work yet again in the Nagorno-Karabakh case. The highlight of the Canadian Armenian publicity blitz in Ottawa was a mischievous Motion introduced in the Canadian Senate by a Greek- origin Senator who asked that the Canadian government immediately recognize “the Republic of Artsakh” and condemn Turkey-Azerbaijan for the war. Fortunately, most Senators knew better, and rejected this one-sided Motion. Meantime, Ankara pursued its total support of Azerbaijan. Beyond allout moral support to Baku (in line with the One Nation, Two Countries doctrine), Turkish support was primarily in military training and development of Azerbaijan forces, a process which lasted several years prior to the War. It is quite true that drones inficted serious damage to the Armenian air force. However, Azerbaijan most likely used its own drones developed from Israeli technology bought prior to the War. Canada, of course, dared not accuse Israel of aiding Azerbaijan. Ottawa simply looked the other way in this case. Turkey supported Azerbaijan simply because the aggressor in this confict is clearly Armenia, going back to 1991 when the Soviet Union disintegrated. Some 16% of Azerbaijani territory has been under Armenian occupation since the early 1990. More than a million Azerbaijan citizens have been displaced and are refugees in their own land. Most signifcantly, international law, based on UN Security Council resolutions, have demanded immediate Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh War 431 and complete Armenian withdrawal from Azerbaijan territory. For almost three decades the Minsk Trio [Russia, France, and USA] have attempted, in vain, to uphold international law, always failing because of Armenian objections. Why did Canada take such a strong, pro-Armenian stand over the fghting in Nagorno-Karabakh? Some may argue that Canada stands always for peace and against war, which is why Canada refused involvement in Iraq. The Iraq case is irrelevant. No one asked or wanted Canada to get involved in the Armenian-Azerbaijan War. The issue is not one of war or peace. It is rather one of international law which Canada, otherwise proudly claims to support. Under international law, there is no such entity as “the Republic of Artsakh”; the disputed territory is part of Azerbaijan. The pro-Armenia stance adopted by the Trudeau government is full of contradictions. First and foremost, it is inconsistent with international law, which Canada has at least a moral obligation to uphold. Second, it violates international human rights as it rewards the aggressor/occupier. Canada in this case failed to distinguish between aggressor and victim. Some even go so far as to argue that Canada objected to killing Armenians using Canadian technology. This type of moral preference is hypocritical. All killing (Azerbaijan or Armenian is wrong), but that is what happens in war. The key fact of the case is that it was not proven that Canadian technology was indeed used. Acting on accusations by an ethnic lobby renders Canadian foreign policy a tool of ethnic politics. Third, the manner of suspension of sensor technology export to Turkey was questionable. It should have at least been taken following a fact-fnding review verifying the fact, and not before it. For one thing, Israeli military technology was bought and used by Azerbaijan forces. Turkey rejected the accusation, and the Turkish press announced the use of Turkish home-made sensor technology. The hasty way the Canadian suspension was announced appeared as an appeasement act in deference to the Armenian lobby in Canada. Furthermore, it went against the NATO spirit which requires solidarity and cooperation among members. Of course, neither Armenia nor Azerbaijan is a NATO member, and, therefore, it can be argued that Canada had no NATO obligations in this war. This argument, however, does not justify the ethnic preference displayed by Ottawa. Armenia is in the Russian zone of infuence. It has a defense pact with Russia which has a signifcant military base in Armenia. Hypothetically speaking, were Armenia to attack Turkey, would Canada reject its NATO obligation to come to Turkey’s aid? This is not an idle question as Armenia has irredentist claims against Turkey. The Armenian constitution designates Eastern Anatolia as “Western Armenia,” a claim deeply supported by the Diaspora groups in Canada and elsewhere, as well as Armenian terrorist organizations like ASALA. Signifcantly, President Putin has adopted a far more balanced stance on the confict than Canada. Putin declared that the Russian defensive Uploaded by S. M. Safi
432 Ozay Mehmet guarantee of Armenia did not apply in this confict since the War was outside Armenia. At a minimum, Ottawa should follow a neutral policy in ethnic conficts, strongly avoiding ethnic preference. That is an essential pre-condition for being a respected voice of peace, human rights, and stability in global affairs. Ottomanization of Canadian Foreign Policy But who exactly determines Canadian foreign policy? To what extend does it refect Canadian interest as opposed to ethnic bias? That means, it should not be subordinated to domestic ethnic diaspora lobbies. However, as noted above, foreign policymaking may face a new threat: Ethnic fragmentation or more aptly Ottomanization. This is a case of undue infuence by Canadian Armenian lobbies, imported from the nineteenth-century Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman Empire, in its last hundred years, faced constant rebellion when Christian minorities in the Balkans demanded independence, with European support. Greece was the frst to win its independence in 1829. Afterwards, the Bulgars, Serbs, and Romanians followed. Typically, Russia, the Ottoman’s arch enemy, supported the Balkan people (Yavuz and Blumi, 2013). Millions of Ottoman Muslims perished in the Balkan conficts or were expelled and became refugees, the survivors fooding into Anatolia (McCarthy, 1995). At the Empire’s weakest phase prior to 1914 and during WWI, the Armenians in Anatolia rose in revolt, again with Russian support. The lesson here is that a multinational state may be torn asunder from within: That happens when ethnic minority nationalism goes violent. Churches, youth, and cultural associations take on political roles, even actively aiding and abetting rebellion and urging the population to treason. In the decades prior to WWI that is exactly what happened in Anatolia. The Ottoman government faced an organized general rebellion and massscale treason aimed at dismemberment of the state. This point has been well-made in a memorial for Colonel Altikat, by Paul Heinbecker, a former Canadian ambassador to Germany and the United Nations, and a former Deputy Minister, Global Affairs, Canada: Canada cannot survive as a multicultural, diversity-valuing society if national, ethnic, or religious groups import their conficts into Canada. Diaspora politics is the tinder of a fre that could consume not just those who ignite it, but all of us. (Quoted in a Speech at the Senate by Senator Boehm on 10/12/2020) The case of Ottoman Armenian rebellion against the Ottomans requires elaboration. Evidently, what little is known of this case in Canada, is almost all from anti-Turkish sources. How many Canadian politicians, for example, know the Armenian terrorists’ attack on major banks in Istanbul in Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh War 433 1896 to win the support of European powers for the “Armenian Cause”? Or know the long list of Armenian rebellions in Erzurum, Sassun, Zeitun, and elsewhere? (Gürün, 1985: 127–162). Unlike the ethnic minorities of the Ottoman Balkans, the bulk of the Armenian rebellion took place in Anatolia, the Turkish homeland. In addition, the timing of the rebellion was crucial, given that the Turkish nation was fghting an existential war. At the start of WWI, the Tsarist armies attacked Eastern Anatolia at a time when the British and French were planning their joint attack at Gallipoli. The Ottoman army, badly led by the War Minister Enver Pasha, suffered a huge disaster at Sarıkamış, when the Russian army, including Armenian volunteers, won a victory over the Ottomans, and penetrated deep into Eastern Anatolia. At this critical juncture, the Armenian rebels set up a government in Van after massacring the Turkish citizens (McCarthy, 2006). They also started a rebellion in Cicilia, encouraged in this by Britain and France (Ğüçlü, 2010). In response, the Ottoman government arrested and imprisoned Armenian intellectuals on charges of treason. The Ottoman military relocated the Armenian population out of the warzone. Large numbers of innocent victims perished due to starvation, disease, and banditry. All people in Anatolia suffered. This is what Armenians, especially in the Diaspora, call their “Genocide.” Selective acknowledgement of human suffering is ethically unjustifed, refecting ethnic bias. Canada should refrain from such ethnic bias. In the bloody WWI era, the Turks (not the Ottomans) ultimately won, but only as result of four more years of fghting for their homeland (1919–1922), in the Turkish War of Independence led by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. After the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, the Russians evacuated Eastern Anatolia in disarray, and the Kemalist forces liberated Eastern Anatolia. Armenian armies retreated into Soviet Armenia, while the surviving Ottoman Armenians moved initially to Syria and Lebanon, and then to Europe, France and fnally to the USA and Canada. This is how diaspora Armenian politics emerged in those countries. Canada is unlikely to suffer an Armenian rebellion. But it is not free from terror and violence (Bell, 2005). ASALA, the Armenian terrorist organization, has carried out several organized crimes around the globe as well as on Canadian soil, murdering Turkish diplomats, ostensibly in revenge for their expulsion from Ottoman Turkey in 1915 (Gürün, 1985; Lewy, 2005). In Ottawa there is a monument in the memory of Col. Attila Altikat who was murdered in cold blood by Armenian terrorists in 1981, the frst act of terrorism in Canada. Perpetrators of this crime have never been found; Canadian justice remains undone. The Altikat murder was followed by numerous other attacks on Turkish diplomats at the Turkish embassy in Ottawa, severely injuring innocent Turkish offcials, including the Turkish commercial counsellor K. Kani Güngör and Canadian security guards. In Toronto, Armenian terrorists attacked the city subway injuring large numbers of Canadians. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
434 Ozay Mehmet In retrospect, it appears that a silent policy of appeasement has been followed. In 2004 a Private Members Bill, Motion 380, with only a few MPs present, was adopted as government policy. This Motion recognizes the 1915 relocation of Ottoman Armenians as “Genocide,” making the Canadian government one of the few Western powers to do so offcially. Every year, on 25 April, the Canadian PM issues a statement expressing solidarity with the Armenian Diaspora. The Turkish Canadian community, after years of lobbying, fnally managed to get approval for a memorial monument for Col. Altikat. Land for the monument was donated by the National Capital Commission. However, Turkey shouldered the cost of building the monument at the spot, opposite the Champlain Bridge, where the Colonel was murdered by Armenian terrorists and where it could only be named “Fallen Diplomats.” The Turkish Canadian community, sponsor of the project, holds annual memorials in remembrance of Col. Altikat in front of the monument, always reminding Canadian authorities of justice undone in this cold-blooded murder case. Terrorism should have no place in Canada. It has bloodied communities in Quebec, where the FLQ crisis erupted in 1971, and Sikh terrorism led to the Air India bombing in 1985, which killed 329 innocent passengers. Ethnic diaspora politics in Canada is organized, with a criminal link in a highly secretive world, imbedded in community networks, nurtured by fund-raising and cultural festivals and events as fronts, and political lobbying (Singh 2012). It has been deadly as in the case of the Armenian ASALA whereby hired killers entered Canada on several deadly assignments, undetected by security or intelligence services. The sad fact is that Canadian politicians and security forces seem to have been either unaware or duped by Armenian propaganda and misinformation. Few know the relevant Ottoman history of the Armenian rebellion and treason. False claims have surrounded the tragic events of 1915 from the beginning (Orel and Yuca, 1996), and it is a campaign that continues to this day, apparently to feed a Diaspora hungry for self-identity even when based on misinformation, especially brainwashing of the youth (Toumani, 2014). Ethnic terrorism cannot be dealt with by a policy of appeasement on the part of Canadian police or policymakers. The Canadian press media as well has generally adopted such an appeasement policy (Bell, 2005). The RCMP is still investigating the Altikat fle, after four decades. As mentioned above, the Turkish Canadian community organizes each year a Memorial keeping Atlikat’s memory alive and requesting that justice be done for him. The appeasement policy of Canada regarding the Armenian Diaspora is complex. It appears it is nurtured by fnancial contributions coming to (otherwise) worthy causes in Canadian life. Several such cases can be given. A leading example is the Canadian Museum of Human Rights in Canada. Initially, it was to be a Holocaust Museum for Jewish victims of Hitler’s Genocide. Palestinians, Canadian First Nations, and other minorities were virtually ignored. With big funding from wealthy Canadian Armenians, the case of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh War 435 Ottoman Armenians has also been prominently displayed, accommodating Armenian demands for rewriting History. That is divisive in terms of the Canadian multiculturalism in as much as it refects ethnic preference, in this case amounting to favoritism for Canadian Armenians, or worse, putting Human Rights for sale, and allowing Armenian donors to defne Canada’s offcial understanding of rights in global conficts (https://humanrights.ca/ news/canadian-museum-for-human-rights-and-armenian-genocide-museum-institute-sign-memorandum-of...accessed on 3/11/2020). Other notable Armenian funding has gone into genocide study centers (e. g. the Zoryan Institute) to keep alive a steady program of anti-Turkish publishing and disseminating information to perpetuate the identity politics of the Diaspora. During the Nagorno-Karabakh War loud noises were spreading from such sources of a “Second Genocide.” Funds were raised, including from notables in the flm industry, such as Kardashian, and volunteers recruited to go and join the fghting in the “existential” war with the Armenian army. Some municipalities, with no role in foreign affairs, but with signifcant Armenian diaspora populations, adopted pro-Armenian motions recognizing the “Republic of Artsakh.” It is against this background of offcial appeasement and accommodation that the latest Canadian policy on Nagorno-Karabakh War 2020 must be analyzed and evaluated. It is a policy stand at variance with the Best Practice as outlined above when Canada acted independently, and it runs the risk of Ottomanizing foreign policymaking. Conclusion Independent voice, whenever expressed, has served Canada well. In cases where it has been used, as shown above, it has amounted to Best Practice. For resource constraints, Best Practice may not always be feasible in Canadian foreign policy beftting a middle-level power committed to multilateralism. It should be utilized as an ideal and practiced wisely in defense of a principled pursuit of Canada’s own national interest in line with human rights and international law. From the review above, the following lessons for future, principled Canadian foreign policy emerge as guidelines in cases of foreign ethnic confict: 1 Imperial/hegemonic wars should be avoided. Canada has done well to stay out of Lloyd George’s 1922 adventure, and similarly PM Chretien wisely rejected the illegal US-led invasion of Iraq. 2 Canada should be on the side of international law, especially UNSC resolutions, as in the case of the Armenian-Azerbaijan confict. It is un-Canadian to promote irredentist objectives, however infuential diaspora Armenian lobbies might be in Canada. On this basis, the pro-Armenian foreign policy in Ottawa was unjustifed. Appeasement of Uploaded by S. M. Safi
436 Ozay Mehmet terrorism or supporting irredentism is not a policy to uphold Canadian values. 3 Multilateralism suits Canada well, as both a middle-level power and a multi-cultural country. In this context, in addition to cooperation within the UN system, it is important to uphold the NATO alliance. Canadian policymakers in international affairs may not always be able to go it alone, but they should work closely within NATO to develop and sustain an independent voice. At home, it would be totally inconsistent if foreign policy is determined, or even signifcantly infuenced, by narrow ethnic politics, such as the Armenian Diaspora. Canada’s best interest in promotion Human Rights and international rule of law would be compromised. Ethnic bias should have no place in independent Canadian foreign policy. This principled approach fts extremely well with such conficts as Nagorno-Karabakh. Accommodating the Armenian diaspora interests as former FM Francois Philippe Champagne2 has done, was ill-advised, and his removal from offce was warranted. Instead, Canada should promote peacemaking and normalization of relations, for example, between Turkey and Armenia. Even though, the Swiss Protocols in 2009 regarding Turkish-Armenian normalization (https://www.rferl.org/a/Turkey_ Armenia_To_Sign_Landmark_Agreement_To_Normalize_Ties/1848293. html accessed on 3/11/2020) may be moribund, now that Armenia and Azerbaijan have signed a peace deal, Ankara and Yerevan should be encouraged to seek normalization without any ethnic bias. Notes 1 Grateful thanks for comments on an earlier draft of the study by several friends, including Tareq Ismael, Balkan Devlen, and Bilgin Buberoglu. The author is fully responsible for all opinions expressed. 2 Champagne was removed in a cabinet shuffe on 12 January 2021, effectively demoted. Hopefully, this demotion signals a healthier foreign policy in Ottawa, including better Canada-Turkey relations. The new FM is Marc Garneau, the frst Canadian in space. References Allen, Ralph, 1961, Ordeal by Fire, vol. 5: Canada 1910–1945, New York: Doubleday. Bell, Steward, 2005, Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism Around the World, Mississauga, ON: John Wiley. Dodd, Clement H., ed., 1999, Cyprus: The Need for New Perspectives, Huntingdon, UK: Eothen Press. Güçlü, Yücel, 2010, Armenians and the Allies ın Cilicia, 1914–1923, Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
The Nagorno-Karabakh War 437 Gürün, Kamuran, 1985, The Armenian File: The Myth of Innocence Exposed, K. Rustem, Nicosia: Oxford University Press. Levitt, Kari, 1970, Silent Surrender: The Multinational Corporation in Canada, Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press. Lewy, Geunther, 2005, The Armenian Massacres in Ottoman Turkey: A Disputed Genocide, Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. McCarthy, Justin, 1995, Death and Exile: The Ethnic Cleansing of Ottoman Muslims, 1821–1922, Toronto: Federation of Canadian Turkish Associations. McCarthy, Justin, 2006, The Armenian Rebellion at Van, Salt Lake City: University of Utah. McQuaig, Linda, 2019, The Sport & Prey of Capitalists: How the Rich are Stealing Canada’s Public Wealth, Toronto: Dundurn. Nossel, Kim Stephane Rioussel and Stephane Paguin, eds. 2015, The Politics of Canadian Foreign Policy, 4th ed., Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press. Orel, Şinasi and Süreyya Yuca, 1996, The Talat Pasha Telegrams: Historical Fact or Armenian Fiction? K. Rustem, Nicosia: Oxford University Press. Singh, Anita, 2012, “The Diaspora networks of ethnic lobbying in Canada” Canadian Foreign Policy Journal, 18(3). Toumani, Meline, 2014, There Was and There Was Not, A Journey Through Hate and Possibility in Turkey, Armenia and Beyond, New York: Henry Holt and Co. Yavuz, M. Hakan and Bayram Blaci, eds., Turkey’s July 15th Coup: What Happened and Why? Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. Yavuz, M. Hakan and Isa Blumi, eds., War and Nationalism: The Balkan Wars, 1912–1913 and Their Sociopolitical Implications, Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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Notes on Contributors Eldar Abbasov, PhD from the Lomonosov Moscow State University in 1988. In 1989–1991, he worked as a senior lecturer at the Department of History of the National Research Technological University “MISIS”. In 1991, he was invited to the Department for the Service of the Diplomatic Corps of the Russian Foreign Ministry, where he worked until 1995. From 1996 to 2015, he worked in the field of business, simultaneously engaged in scientific ­activities. His research interests include the recent political history of Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Russia. He is fluent in the English and Turkish languages. Shamkhal Abilov is currently affiliated with the Department of International Relations, Azerbaijan Tourism and Management University, Baku, Azerbaijan. He also is a PhD candidate at Humboldt University in Berlin. Abilov received his BA from the International Relations Department of ­Qafqaz University in 2008 and his MA from the Leipzig University and University of Vienna in 2011 in the field of Global Studies. Abilov’s research interests are Azerbaijan, Conflict Studies, Caspian Studies (Caucasus & Central Asia) and to some extend also Urban Studies, Ethnicity & Nationalism. Abilov is the author of various academic articles related to his research interests and co-author of the book titled Karabakh in 99 Questions. Ali Askerov, PhD, teaches peace studies at the Department of Peace and Conflict Studies, UNC – Greensboro. His interests are peace education, ethnic conflicts, political violence, human rights, international morality, and the history of political ideas. He is an author of numerous books and articles. Araz Aslanli is a lecturer in the Academy of the State Customs Committee, Azerbaijan State University of Economics (UNEC), and Khazar University. He is a head of the Caucasus Center for International Relations and Strategic Studies (QAFSAM). He has published six books and many articles on the Karabakh issue and the foreign policy of Azerbaijan. Emil Avdaliani is a Professor at the European University and Ilia State University in Tibilisi, Georgia. He received his PhD from Ivane ­Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University, Faculty of Humanities in 2016. He published books on Coin as a Means of Propaganda According to Georgian Uploaded by S. M. Safi
440 Notes on Contributors Numismatics. Tbilisi, 2020; Georgia and Silk Roads (VI-XIII cc.). Tbilisi, 2019; ­E ntrepreneurship in late XIX-early XX century Georgia. Tbilisi, 2018; and Rome, Byzantium and the Imperial Defense System (IV-VII cc.). Tbilisi, 2017. He is currently writing a book on the modern history of the Southern Caucasus. Michael B. Bishku is a Professor of Middle Eastern History at Augusta University in Georgia. He is a former President of both the American ­Council for the Study of Islamic Societies and the Association of Global South Studies and is currently on the Board of Advisors for the Oxford Bibliographies Online for Islamic Studies. Dr. Bishku has also taught at Boğaziçi University in Istanbul and is a Schusterman Fellow in ­Israel Studies at Brandeis University. He has published numerous articles on the history and politics of the South Caucasus and Middle East especially in the area of foreign policy, including among many others “The South Caucasus Republics: Relations with the U.S. and EU” (Middle East Policy, 2015), “The Interactions and Experiences of the Armenians and Jews in the O ­ ttoman Empire and the Republic of Turkey from the Young Turk ­Revolution of 1908 to the Present” (Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 2017), and “Are Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Israel’s Benjamin ­Netanyahu ‘Two Sides of the Same Coin’?” (Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, 2019). Brendon Cannon is Assistant Professor of International Security at the Institute of International & Civil Security (IICS), Khalifa University, Abu Dhabi, UAE. He earned a PhD in Political Science with an emphasis on International Relations at the University of Utah, USA (2009). His research interests include regional security in the Middle East and eastern Africa, the role of extant and enduring security burdens on international relations in the Western Indian Ocean region, and Turkish foreign policy in the ­Middle East and Africa. He is the author of multiple articles appearing in ­African Security, Defence Studies, Third World Quarterly and African Security ­ Review. Edward Erickson is a Professor of International Relations at Antalya Bilim University, Antalya, Turkey and a retired Professor of Military H ­ istory from the Department of War Studies at the Marine Corps University. He retired from the U.S. Army as a lieutenant colonel with multiple combat tours in the field artillery and additional experiences as a foreign area ­officer specializing in the Middle East. Dr. Erickson earned a PhD in history from the University of Leeds in the UK and is recognized as an authority on the World War I in the Middle East and Turkish military policy. He has published over ten books and many articles on the Turkish and Ottoman military as well as counterinsurgency. His books include: The Turkish War of Independence, A Military History, 1919–1923; A Global History of Relocation in Counterinsurgency Warfare (London: Bloomsbury Academic Press, 2020); A Soldier’s Kipling, Poetry and the Profession of Arms (Barnsley, UK: Pen and Sword Books, 2018); Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Notes on Contributors 441 ­ alestine, The Ottoman Campaigns of 1914–1918 (Barnsley, UK: Pen and P Sword Books, 2016); Gallipoli, Command under Fire (Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 2015); Ottomans and Armenians, A Study in Counterinsurgency (New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2013); A Military History of the Ottomans, from Osman to Ataturk, co-author with Mesut Uyar (Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Publishers, 2009); A History of the Ottoman Army in the First World War (Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publications Group, 2000). Orhan Gafarli holds a PhD in International Relations from Ankara University and specializes in Russian-Turkish relation and the wider ­ ­Eurasian region. A former doctoral fellow at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Center, Harvard University (2017–2018), Dr. Gafarli currently works with the Ankara Policy Center in Turkey. Previously, he cooperated with several analytical centers, including the Foreign Policy Center in ­Moscow, BILGESAM in Ankara, and the Future for Advanced Research & Studies think tank in Abu Dhabi. He speaks English, Russian, Turkish, and Azerbaijani. Michael M. Gunter is a professor of political science at T ­ennessee Technological University in Cookeville, Tennessee. He is also the ­ ­Secretary-General of the EU Turkey Civic Commission (EUTCC) headquartered in Brussels. In the past he taught courses for many years during the summer at the International University in Vienna, as well as courses on Kurdish and Middle Eastern politics, among others, for the U.S. ­Government Areas Studies Program and U.S. Department of State ­Foreign ­Service Institute in Washington, DC. He is the author of 10 critically praised scholarly books on the Kurdish question, and editor or co-editor of 9 more books on the Kurds, among others, including two books and numerous ­articles on the ­Armenians. He has published numerous scholarly articles on the Kurds and many other issues including the Armenians in such leading scholarly ­periodicals as the Middle East Journal, Middle East Policy, Middle East Quarterly, Critique: Critical Middle Eastern Studies, Orient, Journal of A ­ rmenian S ­ tudies, Orbis, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, Maghreb Review, Sociology of Islam, American Journal of International Law, International Organization, World Affairs, Journal of International Affairs ­(Columbia University), Brown Journal of World Affairs, Columbia Journal of Transnational Law, ­Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law, Current ­History, Third World Quarterly, International Journal of Turkish Studies, ­Insight Turkey, Turkish Studies, ­Terrorism: An International Journal, and Arms Control, among numerous others. His most recent books are The Kurds in the Middle East: Enduring Problems and New Dynamics, co-ed. (Lanham, MD: Lexington, 2020); Kurdish Autonomy and U.S. Foreign Policy, co-ed. (New York and Bern: Peter Lang, 2020); The Kurds: A Divided Nation in Search of a State, 3rd ed. (Princeton: Markus Wiener Publishers, 2019); ­Routledge Handbook on the Kurds, ed. (London & New York: Routledge, 2019); ­Historical D ­ ictionary of the Kurds, 3rd ed. (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2018); Kurdish Issues: Essays in Honor of Robert W. Olson, ed. Uploaded by S. M. Safi
442 Notes on Contributors (Costa Mesa: Mazda Publishers, 2016); Out of Nowhere: The Kurds of Syria in Peace and War (London: Hurst Publications, 2014); and Armenian History and the Question of Genocide (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011). Jamil Hasanli is a professor of modern history of the Caucasus and ­Russia. Hasanli was a public policy scholar at Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in 2011 and 2020 (Washington, DC); and ­Reagan-­Fascell Democracy Fellows of the National Endowment for Democracy in 2019 (­Washington, DC). He was a visiting professor at East China Normal ­University in Shanghai. Hasanli has published 35 books. His recent books are: At the Dawn of the Cold War: The Soviet-American Crisis over Iranian Azerbaijan, 1941–1946 (Boulder: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, 2006); Stalin and the Turkish Crisis of the Cold War, 1945–1953 (Boulder: Lexington Books, 2011); Khrushchev's Thaw and National Identity in Soviet Azerbaijan, 1954–1959 (Boulder: Lexington Books, 2014); Foreign Policy of the Republic of Azerbaijan, 1918–1920. The Difficult Road to Western Integration (New York: Routledge, 2016); The Sovietization of Azerbaijan: The South C ­ aucasus in the Triangle of Russia, Turkey, and Iran, 1920–1922 (Salt Lake City: The University of Utah Press, 2018); Leadership and Nationalism in Azerbaijan: Ali Mardan bey Topchibashov, Founder and Creator (New York: Routledge, 2018); Soviet Policy in Xinjiang: Stalin and the National Movement in Eastern Turkistan (Boulder: Lexington Books, 2020). Vasif Huseynov is a senior advisor at the Baku-based Center of A ­ nalysis of International Relations (AIR Center). He holds BA in International ­Relations from the Academy of Public Administration (Azerbaijan), MA in Global Political Economy from the University of Kassel (Germany), and PhD in Political Science from the University of Goettingen (Germany). Gubad Ibadoghlu is a political economist and a senior policy analyst for social and economic studies at Azerbaijan’s Economic Research Center, a Baku-based NGO that promotes economic development and good governance. His research focuses on politics on natural resources and revenue management. He was a researcher at the Higher Economic School, W ­ arsaw in 1999/2000, at Central European University, Budapest in 2004/2005, in the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2008/2009, at Duke ­University in 2015/2016, at Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton in 2017/2018 ­Academic Years. Since September 2018, he is based at R ­ utgers University, and teaching four courses in the Spring Semester in the ­ ­Department of P ­ olitical Science. Additionally, he is an affiliating postdoc fellow in the ­Rutgers Center for European Studies. Kamala Imranli-Lowe is the author of several different publications on the history of the Armenians and Azerbaijanis, including historical, political, and cultural aspects of the Karabakh conflict and its coverage by the Western media. She was awarded a PhD degree from the Centre for Russian, European, and Eurasian Studies (CREES), the University of Birmingham, UK, in 2013. Her PhD thesis dealt with the territorial conflicts between the Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Notes on Contributors 443 first Armenian and Azerbaijani republics in 1918–1920/21. Since completing her one-year Research Fellowship in 2014 at the University of Birmingham, she has continued her professional activities independently as an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Birmingham in 2015–2018 and without affiliation since then. Dr. Esmira Jafarova is a Board Member of the Center of Analysis of ­International Relations (AIR Center), Baku, Azerbaijan. She holds a PhD from the University of Vienna, Austria and an MA degree from the ­Central European University (CEU), Budapest, Hungary. She is the author of the book titled Conflict Resolution in South Caucasus: Challenges to ­International Efforts, by Lexington Books, 2015. Mesiagha Mahammadi is a senior advisor at the Baku-based Center of Analysis of International Relations (AIR Center). Previously he worked for Baku Higher Combined Arms Command School as Associate Professor, Institute of Oriental Studies as Head of Department of Iran Philology and for the Center for Strategic Studies (SAM) as a senior fellow. Ceyhun Mahmudlu is a founder and a President of Caspian Research ­Institute (CASPRI). He is also a visiting professor at Cornell University, ­Department of Government. His research interest covers energy geopolitics, regional security, peace and conflict resolution, cyber security, nationalism, and Islam in greater Caspian region. Ceyhun Mahmudlu is a co-editor of Azerbaijani and Beyond: Perspectives on the Construction of National Identity (Verlag Dr. Köster, 2017) and co-author of Karabakh in 99 Questions(CBA, Baku, 2014). Currently, he is working on the book project State, Law and Islam in Azerbaijan (on changing religious policy in Post-Soviet Azerbaijan). Ceyhun Mahmudlu is an author of number of policy briefs and scholarly articles. His recent scholarly works have appeared at Renewable and Sustainable Energy Review, Energies, Sustainability, Energy Strategy Review, Problems of Post-Communism, and so on. Prior to CASPRI, he was a visiting scholar at the Department of Central Eurasian Studies of Indiana University. From 2012 to 2015, he was a founder and a director of Center for Security and Energy Research at Qafqaz University, Azerbaijan. Kamal Makili-Aliyev is an associate professor in international law and human rights at Malmö University, a lecturer in human rights at U ­ niversity of Gothenburg and an affiliated researcher at Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law. With his primary research interests located in fields of international law and international relations he previously held positions as vice-rector of Lomonosov Moscow State ­University Baku Branch, a senior research fellow at the Center for Strategic Studies (Azerbaijan) and a senior legal advisor at the Constitutional Court of ­A zerbaijan. He is a Fellow of National Security Institute in Amherst, MA (USA). Ozay Mehmet, PhD (Toronto), Distinguished Research Professor, ­International Affairs/Economics, Senior Fellow, Modern Turkish Studies, Carleton University, Ottawa (mehmet5010@rogers.com). Ozay Mehmet is a Canadian of Turkish-Cypriot origin: married, has three sons, and lives Uploaded by S. M. Safi
444 Notes on Contributors in Ottawa with wife Karen (part-time in North Cyprus). He was educated in Cyprus, London School of Economics (1959–62), and he received his MA and PhD in economics at the University of Toronto (on a Canadian Commonwealth Scholarship). He has taught at various Canadian universities [Windsor, York, Toronto, Ottawa, and Carleton]. He is the author of more than 20 academic books and over 100 articles in academic j­ournals. He is ­currently Senior Fellow/Lead Scholar of the Centre in Modern ­Turkish Studies, ­Norman Patterson School of International Affairs at Carleton ­University. Professionally, Ozay Mehmet is a specialist in economic development, with special reference to Asian Tigers, Turkey, and Cyprus. He has consulted extensively for several international development agencies including the World Bank, Asian Development Bank, Canadian ­International ­Development Agency, Commonwealth Fund for Technical Cooperation, many UN agencies (ILO, WHO, UNDP), and others. His projects have been funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Council of Canada, ­International Development Research Agency, Conference Board of Canada, and Asia Pacific Foundation. Some of his books are: Westernizing the Third World (1st ed in 1995 Routledge, several editions, hardcover and paperback); Islamic Identity and Development (1st ed in 1990, several editions, translated into other language); Towards a fair Global Labor Market (1999, Routledge – with ­ Errol Mendes and Robert Sinding); Sustainability of Microstates: The Case of North Cyprus (University of Utah Press, 2010); The Southern ­E nergy Corridor: Turkey’s Role in European Energy Security (Springer 2018); ­Modern Geopolitics of the Eastern Mediterranean: ­Hydrocarbons in the Age of Energy Transformation (Springer 2020). Farhad Mirzayev, PhD, Leicester, Graduate of the Baku State U ­ niversity (Azerbaijan). Holds LLM from the University of Nottingham, MBA from the University of Cambridge, and PhD in Law from the University of Leicester where he was supervised by Prof. Malcolm Shaw. Did an executive legal education at the Harvard University. Practicing international lawyer with over 23 years’ experience in public and private international law in CIS & Russia, UK, and the Middle East. Has an extensive experience in representing clients in international arbitrations. Principal of BM Morrison Partners international law firm since 2011 with offices in London, Dubai, Baku, and Moscow. Author of over a hundred articles and papers on public and private international law. Ranked as one of the top leading lawyers by leading international legal guides such as Chambers, Legal500, IFLR1000. Farid Shafiyev is Chairman of the Baku-based Centre of Analysis of ­ International Relations, and Adjunct Lecturer at ADA University, ­A zerbaijan. He holds a PhD from Carleton University and an MPA from Harvard Kennedy School of Government, as well as a Bachelor of Law and Diploma in History from Baku State University. He is the author of ­Resettling the Borderlands: State Relocations and Ethnic Conflict in the South Caucasus (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2018), edited volume Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Notes on Contributors 445 ­ zerbaijan’s Geopolitical Landscape, 1991–2018 (Karolinium Press, 2020), A and numerous articles and op-eds. M. Hakan Yavuz, currently a Professor of Political Science at the ­University of Utah, works secularism, ethnic conflict, ethnic cleansing, and genocide, transnational Islamic networks, civil society, and the public sphere. Professor Yavuz’s publications includes M. Hakan Yavuz, Nostalgia for the Empire: The Politics of neo-Ottomanism (New York: ­Oxford ­University Press, 2020); M. Hakan Yavuz, Islamic Political ­Identity in ­Turkey ­(Oxford U ­ niversity Press, 2003); M. Hakan Yavuz, Secularism and Muslim ­Democracy in ­Turkey (Cambridge University Press, 2009); M. ­Hakan Yavuz, ­Toward and ­Islamic Enlightenment: The Gülen Movement (New York: Oxford ­University Press, 2013); with Bayram Balci, Turkey’s July 15th Coup: What Happened and Why? (University of Utah Press, 2017); with Peter Sluglett, eds. D ­ iplomacy and War: 1877–78 Russo-Ottoman Wars and the Treaty of Berlin (­University of Utah Press, 2011); with Isa Blumi, eds., War and ­Diplomacy: The ­Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878 and the Treaty of ­Berlin (Salt Lake City: University of Utah, 2013); with Feroz ­Ahmad, eds, War and Collapse: World War I and the Ottoman State (Salt Lake City: ­University of Utah Press, 2015). Uploaded by S. M. Safi
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Index Abiyev, S. 236 Abkhazia 283, 290, 306–308 Aghdam 137–138, 139–140, 156 Ajaria 291 Akar, H. 295 Akbarov, R. 235 al-Bahyan, M. B. Z. 413 Al Jazeera 414 Aland Islands 123–124 Albania 16–17 Albanian Catholicosate 17–18, 22, 94 Albanian melikdoms 21 Albanians 17, 94; Aghuans 18 Albright, Madeline 156 Ali Akbar Velayeti 154 Aliyev, H. 69–70, 76, 328, 348, 349, 351–352, 356, 358, 373–374 Aliyev, I. 84, 162–163, 183, 234, 237– 239, 248, 252, 254–255, 283, 286–287, 294–295, 304, 329, 356, 357–359, 388, 396 Alma-Ata Declaration 155 Amidror, y. 376 Amnesty International 102 Arab states 10 Araghchi, A. 394–395 Armenian/Artsakh Armed Forces (Second Karabakh War) 228–230, 233–242 Armenian Christian (and Catholicism) 92–96, 104, 293–294, 370 Armenian Diaspora 143–145 Armenian irredentist nationalism 5–6, 292 Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) 90, 101–102 Armenian National Council 24 Arran 18 Artsakh 16, 17, 60, 182–183 Arutunyan, A. 183 Arzumanyan, R. 74 ASALA movement (Canada) 428, 431, 433–434; Altikat, A. 433–434 Atatürk, M. K. 343 Azerbaijan Armed Forces (Second Karabakh War) 224–242 Azerbaijan baylarbaylik 21 Azerbaijani Independence Act (1918) 23 Bagirov, K. M. 81–82, 345 Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline 322–323, 354 Balayan, Z. 345–346 Barkhudaroz, M. 235 Blank, S. 329–330 Bodin, J. 117–118 Bolshevik control of Karabakh 28; of Nakhchyvan and Zangazur 28–29 Brezhnev, L. 67 Bryce, Lord James 96 Brzezinski, Z. 4 Bush, G. H. W. 156, 327 Bush, G. W. 328, 356 Cacqueray-Valmenier, M. de 293 Canada 420–436; Armenian diaspora relations 429–432; best practice foreign policy 421–424; China policy 422, 426; Cuba 422; diaspora-led foreign policy 428–432; Iraq invasions (2003) 423; mulilateralism foreign policy 426–428; Ottomanization of foreign policy 432–435; Second Karabakh War 429–432; Syria 423; traditionalist foreign policy 424–427 Castellino, J. 116 Caucasian Bureau 46–50, 52–53 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
448 Index causes, Second Karabakh War (2020) 245–256; emotional and psychological burden 250–251; external interest in war 255–256; failure of international mediation 249; loss of trust 249–250; military readiness 251; nationalism and patriotism in Azerbaijan 254–255; power consolidation 251–252; ripeness and readiness for war 246–249; Russia’s interests 253–254 Cekuta, R. 332 Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party (CC RCP) 35–36, 45, 47–51, 52, 62, 70–71, 77–83; Armenian Bolsheviks 47, 52, 60–62, 67–68, 71–72, 74–75, 77–80, 82–83; Azerbaijan Bolsheviks 38, 45–46, 52, 53, 67, 69–70, 81–82, 130 Chafets, Z. 366–367 Chakhalyan, V. 314–315 Chamchyants, M. 92–93 Champagne, F. P. 428–429 Chanak Affair 421–422 Chechnya 352 Chicherin, G. 35, 36–38, 40–46, 49 Choen, R. 369 Chretien, J. 423 clash of civilizations 292–294 Clinton, H. 329 Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) 145, 282, 304, 356 Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) 178–179 Conference on Yugoslavia Arbitration Commission 116–117, 119 Conficts in Karabakh 1–2; ancient and medieval history 16–19; confict (1918–1921) 23–29, 168–169, 342–343; modern period history 19–23; premodern conficts 90–91, 341–342; 21st century 103–104; Four-day war (April 2016) 331, 359–360 consequences, Second Karabakh War (2020) 256–261; Armenia access to Turkey, Iran and Russia 258–259; Armenia relations with Russia and West 258; cargo transportation diversifcation with Azerbaijan 258; foreign trade composition 259–260; military expenditures in Armenia and Azerbaijan 260–261; Russian infuence in the Caucasus 256–257; war effects on Azerbaijani and Armenian economies 259; weakening relations with the West 257 Cornell, S. 122 Council of People’s Commissars (CPC), Armenia 46–47 Crawford, J. 116 Crimea 117, 283, 291 Cuban Missile Crisis 59 Cyprus 424–425 Darband 16, 18 Dashnaks (Armenia) 36, 38, 40, 45–48, 287, 298 Davutoglu, A. 287 de Waal, T. 134, 140, 345–346 Demichev, P. 77 Demirchyan, K. 72, 345 Denikin 25 Dostoyevsky, F. 96 Echmiadzin Catholicosate 22 Egypt 407–408, 410–411, 414–416 Elchibey, A. 98, 348, 385 Elekdağ, S. 287 Elistratov, P. 67–68 Elizavetpol guberniia 23–24 Erdogan, R. T. 8–9, 285–286, 355–356, 396 Eremian S. 17 Eritrea 119 Eurasian Economic Union 279–280 European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) 176, 215; Chiragov and others v. Armenia (2015) 176, 190, 204–205; Katangese People’s Congress v. Zaire 179; Luizidou v. Turkey case (1995) 185; Muradyan v. Armenia (2016) 176; United Communist Party of Turkey and Others v. Turkey 179– 180; Zalyan, Sargsyan and Serobyan v. Armenia (2016) 176 European liberalism 95–96 European Union 91, 257–258, 307, 354; Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) 258; TRASECA 349, 354 Events of 1915 60–61, 91–92, 151, 287, 289, 368–370, 434 First Karabakh War (1994) 2, 3–4, 83, 99, 131–146, 158–159, 224, 250–251, 254, 279, 296–297, 325–326, 348; Bishkek Protocol 159; ceasefre 158– 159; CIS Presidents’ Summit 159–161 France 25, 145, 286, 293; support of Armenian claims 25 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Index Freedom Support Act 9, 145, 324–325, 327; Section 901 324–325, 327 Garo, A. 278 Gasparyan, M. 69 Gasparyan, O. 251 Gellner, E. 2 George, D. L. 421–422 Georgia 38, 59, 117, 283, 290, 298, 303–318, 342, 356, 357–358; Internal Georgia 312–315; Armenian population and unrest 312–315; Azerbaijani ethnic population and unrest 313–315; Alliance of Patriots 314; diplomatic opportunity (mediation), Second Karabakh War 316–317 Gladstone, W. 96 Goble, P. 327 Goltz, T. 133 Goradiz 141–142 Gorbachev, M. 6, 71–72, 73, 75, 78, 81, 171, 343, 345–346 Gulf Cooperation Council 410 Gulistan Peace Treaty (1813) 73–74; Karabakh Khanate 73–74 Gulustan Treaty 21 Guzansky, Y. 367 Hague Regulations (1907) 204–205, 215 Hai Dat (Armenian Cause) 277 Hakobyan, A. 80 Hanegbi, T. 370–371 Hans-Adam II, Prince 121 Hasanov, H. 235, 237 Hasanov, Z. 233 Hashimov, P. 254–255 Helsinki Final Act of 1975 116, 117, 206 Hoagland, R. 331 Human Rights Watch 132–134, 137–138 humanitarian intervention 121–122 Huseynov, M. D. 43–44, 48 International Court of Justice (ICJ) 116–119, 183, 213–214, 217 International Law 172–176, 188–190, 204–205, 216–217; Armenian role 204–205; Articles on Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts 189; International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD) 176; Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties 172; Treaty of Kars 173 449 Iran 10, 140, 154–155, 258–259, 372–376, 381–399; Armenian relations 385–387, 389–390; Azerbaijani relations 383–385, 387–389; Azerbaijan and Israel 389; Iranian Advisory Council 393; Iranian Azerbaijanis 391–392; Karabakh confict (1992–2020) 383– 390; Second Karabakh War 390–397; Tehran-Moscow-Yerevan geopolitical axis 385 Ishkhanian, R. 277–279 Israel 10, 255, 366–377; Armenian relations 368–372; Azerbaijani relations 372–376; energy diplomacy 373–374; Periphery 1.0 367–368 Jabrayil 21, 23–24, 29, 30 Jamali, M. J. 388–389 Kalbajar 133–135, 156, 357, 360 Kaputikyan, S. 345–346 Karabakh-Ganja 20 Karabakh Governor-Generalship 25 Karabakh Khanate 21, 341 Karadcic, K. 293 Karaev, A. 47, 52 Kazanjyan, V. 51 Kazimirov, V. 160, 349–350 Kevorkov, B. 71, 78–80, 82 KGB 61 Khachen 18 Khalafov, K. 395 Khamenei, A. 382, 395 Khlestov, O. 63 Khojaly 102–103, 145 King, M. 421–422 Kirov, S. 49, 53 Kocharian, R. 165, 187, 249, 251–252, 281, 328, 369–370 Kochinyan, A. 66–67 Kosygin, N. 67 Kozlov, S. 69 Kozyrev, A. 349–352 Kurakchay Treaty 21 Kurds 133 Kurekchay Agreement 341 Lachin corridor 231, 238–239, 256, 283, 357–358, 360 Lavrov, S. 161, 282–283 Legran, B. 43 Lenin, V. 35, 41 Lindenstraus, G. 368 Litzenberger, E. 335 Lukyanov, A. 78 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
450 Index Mahdesian, A. 95–96 Makharadze, P. 52 Mamedova, F. 17–18 Manucharov, A. 80 Maresca, J. 327 Marr N. 17 Mass Karabakh Movement (MIATSUM) (1965–1988) 59–84, 88–89 Mdivani, B. 35, 40 Medvedev, D. 357–358 Meghri region (Armenia) 256 Melkumyan, G. 69 Metzger, Y. 370 Middle East 402–416; Caucasus nexus 406–407; distribution of power 403– 406; Second Karabakh War 412–416; security burdens 408 Mikhailov, V. 77 Mikhaylov, Boris 35 Mikoyan, A. 35, 38, 40, 67 Milosevic, S. 293 Minsk Group 3, 122, 135–145, 150–158, 160–161, 179, 180–182, 253, 257, 265, 281–282, 305, 321, 325–331, 336, 349–356, 412 Mirzayev, H. 235, 238 Mirzoyan, L. 53 Mkoyan, E. 312–313 Morsi, M. 411 Moscow Declaration (2008) 286, 358 Moscow Treaty (March 16, 1921) 47, 50, 63, 354 Mravyan, A. 47 Mubarak, H. 407, 411 Muradyan, I. 59–60, 71–72, 75–77 Muslim Brotherhood 407, 411 Muslim relations 372–376 Muslim sentiment (Azerbaijan) 99–100 Mustafayev, K. 235 Mutellibov, A. 347 Myasnikov, Alexandr (Martuni) 46, 53 Nagorno Karabakh (1920–1923) 5, 34–55 Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO) 16, 80–81, 130–131, 151–152, 153–155, 168–169, 175–176, 185–188, 276, 282, 344–348 Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region (NKAR) 34–35, 53–54, 61, 63–64, 67–78, 82–83 Nakhchivan corridor (enclave) 37, 39, 44, 60, 62–64, 72–73, 75, 291, 296, 309–310, 354, 399 Nalbandian, E. 370–371 Naneishvili, Viktor 27, 35 Narimanov, N. 35, 40–42, 43–46, 47–49, 50, 54, 65 national consequences, Second Karabakh War (2020) 261–267; Armenia 262; Azerbaijan 261–262; Nagorno-Karabakh 262–263; Russia 263–264; Turkey 264–265 NATO 59, 204, 307, 322, 350, 420, 427, 431; Partnership for Peace Program 322, 350 Nazarbayev, N. 154–155, 347 Nazaretyan, A. 44–45 Negroponte, J. 367 neo-Ottomanism 101 Netanyahu, B. 371, 373–374 North Caucasus 347–348 Obama Administration 330 Orakhelashvili, I. 49 Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE, formerly CSCE) 3, 122, 135–145, 154–155, 165–166, 180–182, 245–249, 348; Budapest Summit 159–161; Common State 181; Goble Talks 181, 354; Kazan Formula 179, 359–361; Key West Talks 180–181, 327, 329, 355–356; Lavrov Plan 181–182; Madrid Principles 162, 181, 328, 352–353, 356 Organization of Islamic Cooperation 373 Oriental Studies Sector, Armenian SSR, Academy of Sciences 64–65; Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography 65, 66–67; Institute of History of the Academy of Sciences 65–66; Armenia nationalism 64–80, 97–98, 104; see also Mass Karabakh Orientalist perspective 6, 88–105; Azerbaijan 88–105; Said, E. 91 Orjonikidze, S. 36–39, 44–45, 48–49, 52, 54 Orkhistena 16 Oskanian, V. 369–370 Otene 16 Ottoman Empire 6, 24, 91, 94–95, 96–97, 151, 284, 289, 291, 341–342, 432–433 Ozal, T. 285–286 Pact for Stability and Cooperation in the South Caucasus 310 Palestinians 425–426 Papazian, V. 369–370 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
Index Pashinyan, N. 8, 84, 145–146, 152, 162, 163, 239, 248–252, 256, 279–280, 283–285, 292–295, 332–333, 360, 372, 391 Peres, S. 369, 374 Petrosyan, S. 314, 369 Pogasyan, K. 346 Pompeo, M. 333 Popular Front Movement 346–347 Primakov, Y. 351–352 Pushkin, A. 96 Putin, V. 3, 84, 115, 248, 256, 294–295, 356, 358 Qarabağ-Ganja 20 Qatar 409–410, 413–414 Rafsanjani. H. 155, 381, 383 railway corridor (Europe-Caucasia-Asia Transportation Corridor) 258–259, 265, 307–308; Abkhazia Railway 308 Raisyan, M. 312 Ramazanzadeh, A. 395–396 remedial secession 174, 185–188; Quebec case (Supreme Court of Canada) 185 Responsibility to Protect (R2P) 121–122 right to self-defense 213–214, 218 Rivlin, R. 376 Rouhani, H. 387–388, 390–391, 393–394 Russia 22–23, 100–101, 135–136, 153–154, 163–165, 248–251, 253–259, 263–267, 277–285, 290–297, 304–318, 341–362 Russian Administration, Armenian settlement (18th century) 93 Ruzinsky, A. 280 Saakashvili, M. 356 Sadikov, N. 235 Sargsyan, S. 251–252, 367, 370 Sarkisyan, S. 249–250, 329 Second Karabakh War (2020) 1, 5, 83–84, 96, 99, 101–102, 130–131, 143, 182–184, 288–290, 297–298, 303–318, 332–335, 361–362; campaign analysis 239–242; campaign planning 230–233; capabilities and capacity 226–228; culmination point 237; general staff 227–228, 234–236; generals 235–236; lead-up to war (1994-2020) 159–166, 182–184, 216–217, 223–242, 245–267; marginalization of pro-Russian 451 offcers 235–236; media coverage of Second Karabakh War 102–104; military balance 228–230; military cooperation 225–226; phases of military campaign 230–239; war strategy 230–233, 239–241 self-determination 115–128, 174, 176– 180, 206–207; de lege ferenda 121; de lege lata 121 Semichastny, V. 61–62 Sesiashvili, I. 314 Sevres Treaty 27, 284 Shakaryan, S. 69 Shakhnazarov, G. 345–346 Shirvani, A. 47 Shoigu, S. 295 Shugarian, R. 278 Shusha 21, 23–24, 29, 30, 102, 146, 183, 275 Sisi, A. F. 407–408 Siunia/Siunik/Siwnik 18 Sneh, E. 366 SOCAR 9, 289–290 Soloviev, N. 40–41 South Caucasus 256–257, 290–291, 305–318, 322–323, 342–343, 404; energy diplomacy 323–324, 349–350, 356–359; Iran policy 397–399 South Ossetia 117, 283, 290, 305, 306–307, 311 Southern Gas Corridor 323 sovereignty 117–118, 19, 190; Montevideo Convention on the Rights and Duties of States (1933) 190 Soviet rule, Azerbaijan 27 Soviet Russia and Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) 39, 341–342, 343–348 Soviet Union, dissolution of 131, 153–154, 169–172, 208–209 Stalin, J. 45, 49–54, 93, 97 Starchenko, Y. 63, 66–67 Stepanyan, G. 69 Stern, Y. 370 Succession of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY) 177–178, 185–186 Suleymanov, A. 313 Suleymanov, E. 375–376 Sumgait Event 96–97 Tahirov, R. 235 Talbot, S. 323 Ter-Gabrielyan, Saak 36, 45 Ter-Gazaryants, G. 66–67 Uploaded by S. M. Safi
452 Index Ter-Petrosyan, L. 155, 182, 277, 279, 281 territorial integrity 120–128, 175, 176–180, 214–215, 330 territorial status quo (2020) 216–217 Tigranes the Second 94 Tonoyan D. 146 Tonoyan Doctrine 179 Transcaucasia 341 Treaty of Friendship between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia 63 Treaty of Lausanne 284 Treaty of Versailles (1919) 120, 130 Tripartite Agreement (10 November 2020) 146, 184, 190–191, 334–335, 399 Trudeau, J. 424, 425 Trudeau, P. 422 Trump, D. 333–334 Tunyan, R. 51–52 Turkey 8–10, 28, 37, 39, 91, 140–141, 255, 258–260, 264–267, 275–299, 305, 309, 342–343, 360–361, 376, 386, 395–396, 404–406, 411–412, 414, 421–422, 423, 429–431; Azerbaijan foreign policy 285–286, 288–290; general foreign policy 275–299, 328–332, 356–357; Russian-infuenced truce 294–297; Second Karabakh War 288–290, 395–396; Zurich Protocols, The 288, 328–332, 357–358 Turkmanchay Treaty 22, 341 Udins 17, 22 Ulubabyan, B. 69 United Arab Emirates 10, 406–408, 412–413 United Kingdom (Britain) 24–25, 26–27, 95–96; recognition of Karabakh as Azerbaijani 25 United Nations Charter 4, 6, 143–144, 158–159, 161, 165–166, 179, 188, 206–207, 210–215; Article 51, 211–213, 282; Chapter 7 of UN Charter 143–144, 211; Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples 115; Declaration on Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation among States in Accordance with the Charter of the United Nations 115–116; General Assembly Declaration on Minorities 117; General Assembly Resolution on the Inadmissibility of Intervention 117; Human Rights Covenants on Civil and Political Rights and Economic, Social and Cultural Rights 116; self determination (Articles 1(2) and 55 4, 206–207; territorial integrity (Article 2(4)) 4, 123, 213; World Conference on Human Rights 116 United Nations resolutions 6, 131–158, 210–216, 276, 283, 325; Resolution 822 131–136, 156; Resolution 853 136–138; Resolution 874 138–141, 157; Resolution 884 141–143, 158; ceasefre initiatives (1988–1994) 7, 158–159; Resolution 10693 283, 366 United States 9, 286, 321–336, 404, 408, 423–424, 427–428; Baker rules 327; Goble plan 327, 354; energy diplomacy 323–324, 327–328, 335–336, 354–355; Second Karabakh War 332–335 Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) 226–227, 233–236, 240–241 U.S. Department of State 132, 331–332, 367 US-Israel-Turkey-Azerbaijan geopolitical axis 385 USSR Constitutional Law 170–172, 208–209 USSR (Article 72) 173, 208 USSR (Article 76) 208 USSR (Article 78) 130, 170–171, 178, 208–209 uti possidetis juris 118–119, 173–175, 176–180, 209–210; Badinter Commission 177, 179, 188–189; Rann of Kutch arbitration 119; Temple of Preah Vihear Case 119 Valyeti, A. A. 154 Vance, C. 153 Vanetsyan. A. 250 Vezirov, K. 67 Wanzhou, N. 426 Wardroom, O. 26–27 World War I 91–92, 96 Yashin, V. 81, 82 Yeltsin, B. 150, 154, 156, 347 Yildiz, T. 357 Zakatala Scandal 38, 40 Zangezur 21, 23–29, 35–37, 43–46; Protocol No. 6 46 Zarif, J. 395–396, 399 Zarobyan, Y. 60, 62 Zengilan 142 Uploaded by S. M. Safi