- Azerbaijani police have set up posts along the Goris-Kapan highway.
- Major General Kamo Vardanyan has been appointed as the minister of defense of Artsakh.
- No talks are underway regarding Armenia-Turkey normalization, says Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman.
Author: Chalian Meline
Prospects Of Armenia-Turkey Rapprochement – Analysis
By Emil Avdaliani
Potential Armenia-Turkey rapprochement could have a major influence on South Caucasus geopolitics. The opening of the border would allow Turkey to have a better connection with Azerbaijan beyond the link it already has with the Nakhchivan exclave. Moscow will not be entirely happy with the development as it would allow Yerevan to diversify its foreign policy and decrease dependence on Russia in economy. The process nevertheless is fraught with troubles as mutual distrust and the influence of the third parties could complicate the nascent rapprochement.
Over the past month Armenian and Turkish officials exchanged positive statements which signaled potential rapprochement between the two historical foes. For instance, the Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan said that he was ready for reconciliation with Turkey “without preconditions.” “Getting back to the agenda of establishing peace in the region, I must say that we have received some positive public signals from Turkey. We will assess these signals, and we will respond to positive signals with positive signals,” the PM stated. Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Ankara could work towards gradual normalization if Yerevan “declared its readiness to move in this direction.”
On a more concrete level Armenia has recently allowed Turkish Airlines to fly to Baku directly over Armenia. More significantly, Armenia’s recently unveiled five-year government action plan, approved by Armenia’s legislature, states that “Armenia is ready to make efforts to normalize relations with Turkey.” Normalization, if implemented in full, would probably take the form of establishing full-scale diplomatic relations. More importantly, the five-year plan stresses that Armenia will approach the normalization process “without preconditions” and says that establishing relations with Turkey is in “the interests of stability, security, and the economic development of the region.”
So far it has been just an exchange of positive statements, but the frequency nevertheless indicates that a certain trend is emerging. This could lead to intensive talks and possibly to improvement of bilateral ties. The timing is interesting. The results of the second Nagorno-Karabakh war served as a catalyzer. Though heavily defeated by Azerbaijan, Armenia sees the need to act beyond the historical grievances it holds against Turkey and be generally more pragmatic in foreign ties. In Yerevan’s calculation, the improvement of relations with Ankara could deprive Baku of some advantages. Surely, Azerbaijan-Turkey alliance will remain untouched, but the momentum behind it could decrease if Armenia establishes better relations with Turkey. The latter might not be as strongly inclined to push against Armenia as it has done so far, and specifically during the second Nagorno-Karabakh war. The willingness to improve the bilateral relations has been persistently expressed by Ankara over the past years. Perhaps the biggest effort was made in 2009 when the Zurich Protocols were signed leading to a brief thaw in bilateral relations. Though eventually unsuccessful (on March 1, 2018, Armenia announced the cancellation of the protocols), Ankara has often stressed the need of improvement of ties with Yerevan without demanding preconditions.
Beyond the potential establishment of diplomatic relations, the reopening of the two countries’ border, closed from early 1990s because of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and Turkey’s solidarity with and military and economic support for Azerbaijan, could also be a part of the arrangement. The opening of the 300 km border running along the Armenian regions of Shirak, Aragatsotn, Armavir, and Ararat could be a game-changer. The opening up of the border is essentially an opening of the entire South Caucasus region. The move would provide Armenia with a new market for its products and businesses. In the longer term it would allow the country to diversify its economy, lessen dependence on Russia and the fragile route which goes through Georgia. The reliance on the Georgian territory could be partially substituted by Azerbaijan-Armenia-Turkey route, though it should be also stressed that the Armenia transit would need considerable time to become fully operational.
Economic and connectivity diversification equals the diminution of Russian influence in the South Caucasus. In other words, the closed borders have always constituted the basis of Russian power in the region as most roads and railways have a northward direction. For Turkey an open border with Armenia is also beneficial as it would allow a freer connection with Azerbaijan. Improving the regional links is a cornerstone of Turkey’s position in the South Caucasus. In a way, the country has acted as a major disruptor. Through its military and active economic presence Turkey opens new railways and roads, thus steadily decreasing Russian geopolitical leverage over the South Caucasus.
As mentioned, both Ankara and Yerevan will benefit from potential rapprochement. It is natural to suggest that the potential improvement between Turkey and Armenia, Russia’s trustful ally, would not be possible without Moscow’s blessing. Russia expressed readiness to help Armenia and Turkey normalize their relations, saying that would boost peace and stability in the region. “Now too we are ready to assist in a rapprochement between the two neighboring states based on mutual respect and consideration of each other’s interests,” the Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, said. Yet, it is not entirely clear how the normalization would suit Russia’s interests. One possibility is that the Armenia-Turkey connection would allow Russia to have a direct land link with Turkey via Azerbaijan and Armenia. However, here too the benefits are doubtful. The route is long and will likely remain unreliable. For Russia trade with Turkey via the Black Sea will remain a primary route.
Presenting a positive picture in the South Caucasus could however be a misrepresentation of real developments on the ground. The Armenian-Turkish rapprochement is far from being guaranteed because of ingrained distrust between the two sides. Moreover, there is also the Azerbaijani factor. Baku will try to influence Ankara’s thinking lest the rapprochement goes against Azerbaijan’s interests. Moreover, as argued above, Russia too might not be entirely interested in the border opening. This makes the potential process of normalization fraught with numerous problems which could continuously undermine rapport improvement.
Thus, realism drives Turkish policy toward Armenia. Ankara needs better connections to the South Caucasus. Reliance on the Georgian transit route is critical, but diversification is no less important. The results of the Second Nagorno-Karabakh war present Turkey and Armenia with an opportunity to pursue the improvement of bilateral ties. Yet, the normalization could be under pressure from external players and deep running mutual distrust. Moreover, the two sides will need to walk a tightrope as a potential blowback from nationalist forces in Turkey and Armenia can complicate the process.
This article was published at Caucasus Watch
Click here to have Eurasia Review’s newsletter delivered via RSS, as an email newsletter, via mobile or on your personal news page.
Once An Economic ‘Frozen Zone,’ Southern Caucasus May See Economic Boost Beyond Oil
Backed by the juggernaut of the Chinese state, the “Belt and Road” project has been a hotspot for international investment for over a decade.
A glance at the map shows the most direct land route for trade between Asia and the West passes through the Southern Caucasus. Yet this ancient branch of the “Silk Route,” famous in history and legend, has until now been sidelined by investors and policymakers.
All that could be about to change.
The Southern Caucasus has been in large part an economic “frozen zone,” with border conflicts in all three countries — Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia. Azerbaijan and Armenia have been at loggerheads over Armenia’s 30-year occupation of Karabakh, and Georgia and Russia have clashed over the territories of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. With a few isolated exceptions such as BP’s investment into Azerbaijan’s extensive Caspian oil and gas fields, the region has struggled to attract transformative FDI.
UNCTAD’s latest World Investment Report shows the results. While Azerbaijan recorded a respectable FDI stock of $32 billion in 2019, and Georgia a modest $19 billion, the figure for Armenia — despite the efforts of its influential international diaspora — was just $5 billion. A cocktail of conflict and closed borders has deterred all but the most adventurous of investors.
A series of changes underway in the region suggests the possibility of re-evaluation: the promised re-opening of borders, new transit infrastructure linking to global networks, national policies on economic diversification and the move beyond carbon, and a series of investor-friendly reforms.
Taken together, these four factors could put the region back on the international investment map.
The opportunity to re-open borders is a direct result of the deal signed between Azerbaijan and Armenia last November, which marked the end of the “Karabakh war.” An important clause specifies that “all economic and transport connections in the region shall be unblocked.” While it would be naive to suppose that the passage from a generation-long conflict to peaceful co-operation could ever be easy, the economic peace dividend which this could bring — particularly to isolated and landlocked Armenia — provides a powerful incentive.
One interesting signal has been the renewed and positive economic dialogue between Armenia and Turkey after four decades of closed borders. Both countries’ leadership have in recent weeks been setting a different and pragmatic tone. Progress on the ground between the two would be a diplomatic breakthrough for economic realism and could open the door to opportunities across the region.
Recent years and months have also seen important developments in the region’s global connectivity: the Baku-Tblisi-Kars rail line, opened in 2017, provided an important link in the chain which allowed the first-ever rail freight journey from China to Turkey last December. This demonstrated the region’s central importance to the Trans-Caspian International Transport Route — more memorably branded the “Middle Corridor” — just in time to remind the world during the Suez Canal blockage of the strategic importance of alternatives. At the same time, it showed that the region’s geography allows Azerbaijan and Georgia to co-operate on ambitious projects across their shared border. Meanwhile, only a few tens of kilometers of rail remain to be completed across Azerbaijan’s southern border with Iran to finalize a key route on the new and promising “Mumbai to Moscow” North/South Corridor.
Reforms have dramatically improved conditions for foreign investment. The latest Doing Business report from the World Bank, comparing the favorability of conditions across 190 states, rates Azerbaijan and Georgia in the top 40. Meanwhile, free economic zones — such as the Alat zone — simultaneously help solve export infrastructure issues while providing attractive incentives to international investment partners and entrepreneurs.
In the 1850s, Sweden’s Nobel brothers sent agents to the Southern Caucasus prospecting for new sources of high-quality timber to use as gun stocks for their flourishing small arms business. They found the trees – but they also, quite literally, struck oil. The result was the world’s first oil boom, predating even the U.S. The brothers were swiftly followed by the Rothschilds and a host of international entrepreneurs.
The region is now moving beyond oil. But it is also moving beyond conflict and closed borders. While politics and conflict have for so long dominated the fate of the Southern Caucasus, now is a moment when international business would do well to re-evaluate the region. Today’s prospectors might, like the Nobels, discover opportunities they hadn’t thought possible.
Ilham Nagiyev is chairman of Odlar Yurdu Organization in the U.K. and chairman of the board of A2Z LLC, a leading IT company in Azerbaijan
Turkish press: Turkey, Pakistan, Azerbaijan to hold joint military drill
Turkish soldiers take part in a joint drill with the Azerbaijani military in Baku, Azerbaijan, July 27, 2021. (IHA File Photo)
The Turkish, Azerbaijani and Pakistani militaries will hold joint drills for the first time from Sept. 12-20 in Baku, Azerbaijan’s defense ministry said Saturday.
The goal of the “Three Brothers – 2021” exercises is to improve cooperation between their special forces and to share knowledge and experience, the ministry said in a statement.
In July, Turkish, Azerbaijani and Pakistani parliament speakers accepted the Baku Declaration in a ceremony held at the Azerbaijani Parliament.
The joint declaration emphasizes the need to strengthen cooperation among the three countries, based on cultural and historical ties, mutual respect and confidence. It also emphasizes Turkey, Azerbaijan and Pakistan’s roles in building peace, stability and development in their regions.
Turkey and Azerbaijan held joint live-fire drills in Baku earlier this year.
Ankara last year threw its support behind Baku, whose Nagorno-Karabakh region had remained under illegal Armenian occupation for nearly three decades before finally being liberated last November.
Last September, clashes erupted between the former Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan when the Armenian army launched attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces and violated several humanitarian cease-fire agreements.
During the 44-day conflict, which ended in a truce on Nov. 10, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages in Nagorno-Karabakh from a nearly three-decade occupation. The two countries finally signed a Russia-brokered deal to end fighting and work toward a comprehensive solution.
Turkey and Azerbaijan enjoy strong relations, as the two countries embrace the “one nation, two states” motto.
During his presidency, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has visited Azerbaijan more than 20 times, while the number of delegation visits has reached more than 100.
Armenian citizens condemn authorities’ plans for Independence Day
Armenian authorities have decided to hold a large-scale celebration of the 30th anniversary of the country’s independence, but the public criticized these plans, and relatives of the dead militaries demanded to cancel the holiday. Armenian human rights defenders treat the lavish celebrations prior to the first anniversary of the 2020 autumn war as inappropriate.
The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that Armenia lost 3773 persons who perished in the Karabakh war; 243 persons are still regarded as missing, Nikol Pashinyan, the Prime Minister, has stated.
He has added that the celebrations on September 21 in Yerevan, first of all, will be dedicated to those who sacrificed their lives for the independence of Armenia and Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh).
The victims’ relatives agree that life goes on, but they believe that it is necessary to wait for at least one anniversary of the tragedy and refrain from celebrations at the state level.
Elizaveta Ogandjanyan, the mother of a perished soldier treats any festive events as inappropriate, when “there are still missing persons and prisoners of war (POWs).”
Karin Tonoyan, who lost her son in the Karabakh war, called in her Facebook the government’s decision “another manifestation of authorities’ cynicism”.
In the opinion of Djasmin Kirakosyan, the money that is planned to be spent on the holiday is better to spent on buying weapons and equipping the country’s army.
Nina Karapetyants, a human rights defender and the head of the Helsinki Association of Armenia, has criticized the government’s decision to hold a “colourful event”.
Zhanna Aleksanyan, the head of the human rights organization “Journalists for Human Rights”, believes that “if there are more than 4000 casualties in the country, and one year has not yet passed, everyone should reckon with this.”
This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 09:43 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.
Author: Armine Martirosyan; Source: CK correspondent
Source:
© Caucasian Knot
Artsakh builds new residential district in Askeran for IDPs
10:44,
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS. President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan visited the Aygestan and Noragyugh communities of Askeran region where the construction of new homes intended for internally displaced persons is underway.
The new districts will comprise 550 houses for the residents who were displaced from the Azokh and Drakhtik communities of Hadrut, Karin Tak of Shushi, and Avetaranots of Askeran as a result of the 2020 war.
The first houses will be ready in 2022, but the construction will be entirely completed in 2023, the presidency said.
The construction is financed jointly by the governments of Artsakh and Armenia.
President Harutyunyan underscored that his government is focused on solving the housing issue of all IDPs.
Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan
RFE/RL Armenian Report – 09/09/2021
Thursday, September 9, 2021
Armenian Troops Join Russian-Belarusian War Games
Russia - Armenian soldiers (left) march at the Mulino training center during the
opening ceremony of the Russian-Belarusian Zapad-2021 military exercises,
September 9, 2021.
Armenian soldiers participated on Thursday in the opening ceremony of vast joint
military exercises conducted by Russia and Belarus amid concerns voiced by NATO.
The main part of the weeklong “Zapad-2021” (“West-2021”) exercises will start on
Friday at more than a dozen training grounds in the two states. According to the
Russian Defense Ministry, they will involve up to 200,000 military personnel,
apparently making them the biggest war games in Europe in decades.
The bulk of the participating troops are from Russia and Belarus. The others
were sent by three other members of the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty
Organization -- Armenia, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan -- as well as India and
Mongolia.
Photographs released by Armenia’s Defense Ministry showed around 80 Armenian
soldiers marching during the opening ceremony held at the Russian military’s
Mulino training center about 360 kilometers east of Moscow.
The ministry said late last week that its troops will take part in the drills in
line with a Russian-Armenian plan of joint military activities in 2021. It did
not specify their number.
Armenia moved to deepen its already close military ties with Russia shortly
after the six-week war in Nagorno-Karabakh stopped by a Russian-brokered
ceasefire last November.
Defense Minister Arshak Karapetian visited Russia for at least three times this
summer. His Russian counterpart Sergei Shoigu reportedly assured him on August
11 that Moscow will continue to help Armenia reform and modernize its armed
forces.
RUSSIA -- Servicemen from India, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Armenia and
Russia pose for pictures during opening ceremony of the Zapad-2021 (West-2021)
joint Russian-Belarusian drills on the Mulino training ground, September 9, 2021.
The Zapad-2021 drills are based on a scenario where Russia and Belarus are under
attack. Russian Deputy Defense Minister Nikolai Pankov insisted on Thursday that
they are purely defensive in nature.
Tensions have run high in recent months on Belarus’s borders with NATO members
Lithuania, Latvia and Poland. Western officials say Minsk has been pushing
illegal migrants into those countries to put pressure on the European Union in
response to EU sanctions imposed on authoritarian President Alexander
Lukashenko’s regime.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg urged Russia last week to be open about
the upcoming drills and the troop numbers involved. A NATO spokeswoman said, for
her part, that the U.S.-led alliance was not invited to observe them in breach
of an international agreement governing military exercises in Europe.
Grief-Stricken Armenians Resent Lavish Celebration Planned By Government
• Artak Khulian
Armenia - A man prays at one of the fresh graves of Armenian soldiers killed in
the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh and buried in the Yerablur military pantheon in
Yerevan, January 28, 2021.
Families of Armenian soldiers killed in last year’s war with Azerbaijan have
expressed outrage at a “large-scale and colorful” celebration of Armenia’s
upcoming Independence Day promised by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
Pashinian announced on Wednesday that such festivities will be held in Yerevan’s
central Republic Square on September 21 to mark the 30th anniversary of the
country’s declaration of independence from the disintegrating Soviet Union.
“That will be first and foremost dedicated to our martyrs who sacrificed their
lives for Armenia’s independence, security and sovereignty,” he said during a
cabinet meeting.
The announcement appears to have angered many relatives of the Armenian victims
of the six-week war in Nagorno-Karabakh that broke out almost one year ago.
Some of them took to social media to condemn it and even threaten to disrupt the
planned event. They said that any pompous celebrations would be highly
inappropriate in a country which is still mourning the war dead and has not yet
found, identified and buried all of its fallen soldiers.
Armenia -- A woman pays respects to a victim of the war over Karabakh, during a
gathering for a memorial ceremony, at the Yerablur Military Memorial Cemetery in
Yerevan, on December 19, 2020.
According to official figures, about 3,800 Armenian soldiers were killed and
more than 200 others went missing or were taken prisoner during the hostilities
stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire last November. Karabakh Armenian search
teams still recover, on a virtually daily basis, soldiers’ remains from former
battlefields now controlled by Azerbaijani forces.
Some opposition politicians and public figures added their voice to the uproar,
demanding that the government scale down the Independence Day events.
Most people randomly interviewed by RFE/RL’s Armenian Service in the streets of
Yerevan also favored a muted celebration of the key national holiday.
Armenia -- Members of Armenian security services use ballistic folding shields
as Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian visits Yerablur Military Pantheon cemetery on
the day of nationwide mourning for those killed in a military conflict over
Nagorno-Karabakh in December 19, 2020.
“The independence holiday must be marked but not ‘colorfully,’” said one man.
“What does marking it ‘colorfully’ in memory of the dead mean? What is it?”
“It should be marked but not in the way presented [by Pashinian,]” said a woman.
“I think that in these circumstances we have no right to celebrate any holiday,”
opined another Yerevan resident.
The government has not yet reacted to the criticism. It has already contracted a
private company to stage the festivities at Republic Square.
The company’s founder, Ashot Arakelian, gave few details of the planned event
when he spoke with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Thursday. He said only that it
will feature classical music.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
Azerbaijan’s Limited Diplomatic Options
By David Davidian
US General George Patton was quoted as declaring, “For over a thousand years Roman conquerors returning from the wars enjoyed the honor of triumph, a tumultuous parade. In the procession came trumpeteers, musicians and strange animals from conquered territories, together with carts laden with treasure and captured armaments. The conquerors rode in a triumphal chariot, the dazed prisoners walking in chains before him. Sometimes his children robed in white stood with him in the chariot or rode the trace horses. A slave stood behind the conqueror holding a golden crown and whispering in his ear a warning: that all glory is fleeting.” After Azerbaijan’s partial victory in the Second Karabakh War, Azerbaijani President Aliev demonstrated nearly all of Patton’s observations in their modern manifestations. What remains is for someone to whisper in Aliev’s ear.
David Davidian
From the chaos created in all partially won conflicts, the Second Karabakh War resulted in unexpected challenges for Azerbaijan. One challenge for Aliev is the uncomfortable fact that Armenians are the indigenous inhabitants of this region and thus their presence needs to eradicated to give historical justification for Baku’s territorial claims. While Armenians lost much of the land they reigned over for nearly thirty years, Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding regions, Azerbaijan is cementing its partial victory by demolishing any _expression_ of Armenian culture and existence on the land now under its control. Azerbaijan, however, cannot claim a complete victory over Armenians since Azerbaijan doesn’t exercise sovereignty over the Armenians of core Nagorno-Karabakh. Both Azerbaijan and Armenia agreed to accept Russian “peacekeepers” on land over which Azerbaijan claims sovereignty, as the basis for the war’s ceasefire. Most likely, without such “peacekeepers,” no Armenians would exist in what remains of Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan prefers complete authority over all of what it considers its internationally recognized border while simultaneously deploying several thousand of its soldiers outside of such demarcation on sovereign Armenian territory. What might appear on the surface as Azerbaijani hypocrisy, By engaging in actions it accused Armenians of for a generation, Baku might appear hypocritical, but these actions are actually an _expression_ of Baku’s stalled diplomacy. These diplomatic limitations are further demonstrated by the following:
1 – Azerbaijan refused to show up at the August 23, 2021 Crimean Platform, attended by forty-seven other countries. This event was “a diplomatic initiative of Ukraine and its president … designed to be an international coordination mechanism to restore Russia–Ukraine relations by means of reversing the 2014 annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation.” This summit was not in the interest of Russia, and Azerbaijan’s presence would have offended Russia. If Azerbaijan’s military and diplomatic capabilities were entirely under its control, it would make sense for Baku to support the restoration of Ukrainian sovereignty over Crimea since it parallels what Azerbaijan demands in the restoration of what it considers is its internationally recognized borders which includes Nagorno-Karabakh. Turkey, Azerbaijan’s big brother, fully supports a Ukrainian Crimea. As a result, Azerbaijan has a policy dilemma.
2 – Earlier in August 2021, Azerbaijan was asked by the Kosovo Minister of Defense for Baku’s official recognition of this NATO-created entity. It is unclear what Pristina was thinking when asking such a request of Baku, considering Kosovo was created under circumstances that paralleled the creation of Nagorno-Karabakh, obviously an intolerable situation for Azerbaijan. Were Baku clear of any lingering military or diplomatic encumbrances regarding Nagorno-Karabakh, it might opt (regardless of its hypocrisy) for Kosovo recognition considering Azerbaijan’s strategic partners Turkey, Pakistan, and Israel also recognize Kosovo.
3 – Azerbaijan is under Turkish pressure to recognize Turkey’s occupation of Northern Cyprus, as a separate state. If Baku were to recognize this entity as a sovereign state, it would surely invite reaction by Greece and the Republic of Cyprus. The latter two are EU members who would call for immediate sanctions against Baku. Both Greece and Cyprus would retaliate and recognize Nagorno-Karabakh. Even though Azerbaijan is supplying gas-starved Europe through Greece via the Azerbaijani-Turkish Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP), the economic and diplomatic cost would be too high for Baku to hold EU’s gas supply hostage following EU sanctions after an Azerbaijani recognition of Northern Cyprus. Azerbaijan refused to recognize the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh and accused Armenians of violating internationally recognized borders. Turkey has done in Northern Cyprus what Azerbaijan “accuses” Armenians of doing. Azerbaijan could recognize Northern Cyprus, but subsequent EU sanctions and loss of gas revenue would tie its hands.
4 – Azerbaijan succumbed to a contingent of two thousand Russian peacekeepers stationed within what Baku considers its internationally recognized land, and worse, land that it claims won from Armenians. This contingent is separating the remaining Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh from the Azerbaijani Army. However, in an instant, this Russian contingent can take on any enhanced role in Russia’s interest without asking Baku’s permission. Similarly, Turkey would like a base in Azerbaijan, but Baku would be subject to the ire of Moscow. Azerbaijan appears not in full control of its domestic policies.
5 – The recent announcement of significant gas deposits in the Iranian sector of the Caspian, with the capability of supplying twenty percent of Europe’s gas requirements, could incentivize the EU to consider lifting sanctions on Iran. Hydrocarbon extraction and transportation interests monitor such exploration, especially regional suppliers such as Russia and Azerbaijan. Russia and Azerbaijan view Iran as a significant competitor potentially serving European gas requirements. In a possible preemptive move, Azerbaijani soldiers have not only violated Armenia’s frontiers, putting pressure on the Armenian leadership but also engaged in blocking the main south-north transportation roads between Iran and Georgian ports. Such aggressive Azerbaijani actions signal to Iran that it may have to deal with Baku -– not Armenia — before looking north too much longer, even though Iran declared it intends to use Armenia. Additionally, Azerbaijan has begun constructing its south-north route on land it captured in the Second Karabakh War from the Azerbaijani-Iranian border towards the Azerbaijani-Russian border, in an attempt to facilitate Iranian gas exports and exports north. Baku’s attempt to be the go-to dealer between Iran, Russia, while excluding Georgian Black Sea ports, may have repercussions ranging from Israeli operations against Iran to Turkish designs, to the survival of Azerbaijan’s regime in cutting off Georgian-Iranian trade. Some may consider post-war Azerbaijani military pressure as skillful diplomacy, others do not.
6 – Armenia will receive three billion dollars in an EU economic development grant over the next five years. Baku considers this an unfair reward after Azerbaijan “liberated” what it considers its territory. Others consider it a quid pro quo for an engineered defeat of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh. Even with Azerbaijani gas reaching the EU, the EU’s gas supply is diversified with contributions from Algeria, the Netherlands, Norway, and Russia. Azerbaijan’s allocation is not enough to blackmail the EU into not investing in Armenia.
7 – Perhaps the worst shackle for Azerbaijan is the endemic anti-Armenian hatred within Azerbaijani society promulgated as effective state policy. From pre-school to adulthood, an entire generation has been socialized to equate Armenians with the embodiment of evil. Torture and the beheading of Armenians were spread across social media and celebrated by Azerbaijani society throughout the Second Karabakh War. Hatred against Armenians was a method to bolster Azerbaijani nationalism and keep Aliev in power by blaming the ills of Azerbaijan on Armenians. Such techniques were used by Nazi Germany and the transformation of Islamic Turkey into a nationalist Turkey. Even if a titular peace is signed between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Baku will have to undo a generation of anti-Armenian hatred if any agreement is to succeed.
Though Southern Caucasus regional dynamics have changed drastically in the past year, Azerbaijan still finds limited options even with enhanced military agreements with Turkey and having captured land from Armenians. Baku is now even more indebted to two masters; Turkey and Russia.
Author: David Davidian (Lecturer at the American University of Armenia. He has spent over a decade in technical intelligence analysis at major high technology firms. He resides in Yerevan, Armenia).
Armenian PM congratulates President of Brazil on Independence Day
11:44, 7 September, 2021
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan sent a congratulatory message to President of Brazil Jair Bolsonaro on the occasion of the Independence Day, the PM’s Office told Armenpress.
The message runs as follows:
“Your Excellency,
I convey to you my warmest congratulations and best wishes on the National Holiday of the Federative Republic of Brazil – the Independence Day.
The friendship and mutual trust established between our countries are serious preconditions for the further development and strengthening of relations. I am convinced that with joint efforts we will add new content to our bilateral agenda and will link Armenia and Brazil with many new strong ties.
Please accept, Excellency, the assurances of my highest respect”.
Moscow supports the intensification of OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs’ efforts on Karabakh settlement
19:02, 2 September, 2021
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS. Moscow supports the intensification of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs’ efforts on Karabakh settlement based on the existing mandate, ARMENPRESS reports representative of the Foreign Ministry of Russia Maria Zakharova said.
‘’In the context of the adequate monitoring of the new regional realities, we believe that the troika (the Co-Chairs) can contribute to the strengthening of trust between Yerevan and Baku, as well as to the solution of humanitarian issues. This would give an opportunity to set to the discussions of political issues… The new Russian Co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group Igor Khovayev is currently on a regional trip. He has already held talks with the Azerbaijani leadership, similar meetings are scheduled in Yerevan’’, she said.