Strategic inferences from Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict 2020, post ceasefire

WION News, India
Dec 5 2020

Devastation in Nagorno-Karabakh Photograph:( Reuters )


Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a ceasefire deal to end the war for control of Nagorno-Karabakh enclave last month, after a series of Azeri victories in its fight. The deal guarantees a land corridor linking Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia, which will be monitored by Russians (2000 peacekeepers and 100 armoured personnel carriers), besides a staggered withdrawal of Armenian forces from Azeri districts surrounding the enclave.

The agreement is much to the displeasure of Armenia — even though it has prevented many innocent killings in the crossfire for the time being. The conflict is one of the latest, with effective use of some modern arsenal like drones and a mix of hybrid warfare combined with political powerplay. It has many strategic and military inferences/lessons applicable globally in modern warfare. It also generates some questions, which global bodies and some countries will find difficult to answer.   

Armenia-Azerbaijan

 

The peace deal marks an end to six weeks of fierce clashes over Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian region of Azerbaijan that broke away from Baku’s control during a bitter war in the 1990s. Karabakh declared independence nearly 30 years ago, but the declaration has not been recognised internationally and it remains a part of Azerbaijan under international law. The dispute has continued to simmer over decades as the majority of inhabitants in the enclave are Armenians. 

Azerbijan and Turkey may have some reasons to celebrate, but with mounting anger in Armenia and dissatisfied residents of Nagorno-Karabakh, the duration of peaceful period remains uncertain. Understandably Armenian leadership was left helpless, with no choice but to save further casualties, after loss of region’s strategically vital town Shusha, so located that it overlooks Nagorno-Karbakh’s main city Stepanakert and the main road linking Armenia to the enclave. Armenians feel let down by poor response from its allies and Russia and find themselves plunged in internal turbulence.  

Strategic implications: External players

The conflict exposed the weaknesses of NATO and the European Union, and their inability to help their allies at the time of crisis. The most important strategic impact has been a boost to radicalised Islam, emerging out of Erdogan’s overambition to grab Islamic leadership to become Caliph, besides reviving Ottoman Empire and seek control of oil and gas pipelines in the region. Although the region has had a history of hostilities, but the recent one was allegedly triggered by the active support of Erdogan.

The fact that he openly supported it with conventional weapons and transported non state actors from like-minded countries like Pakistan and Syrian mercenaries/terrorists, to fight on behalf of Azerbijan, which helped it to win the conflict makes Erdogan’s position stronger in countries and groups believing in radicalised version of Islam. The immediate impact is visible in EU getting into the grip of radicalisation faster than they thought, as it watched the massacre of Armenian Christians, without having so far punished Turkey.  

The conflict exposed NATO as a divided house, incapable of taking a decisive action against threat to its allies. Notwithstanding the strategic location of Turkey and NATO assets deployed there, its time to put its house in order, by punishing its problem child, Erdogan.

NATO failed to even give a  threat of expulsion to Turkey, despite its actions in this conflict and opening friction point with Greece in Mediterranean Sea. With US and France embroiled in internal affairs, NATO seemed leaderless and directionless. This raises a bigger question whether the era of alliances is over in interconnected world, and the viability of democracies getting together in other regions like Indo-Pacific to counter Chinese threat to world has a chance or otherwise? 

The biggest loss of reputation is for Russia, which chose to play neutral, selling arms to both the parties to the conflict, despite a military pact with Armenia and a base there. It insisted Yerevan to not get involved in the conflict with Azerbaijan, unless their territory itself came under threat. It exhibited its weakness to control Erdogan, stop genocide of people of its erstwhile states and induction of various radicalised non state actors of Syria fighting against Christians in the region. 

Promoting one-sided peace agreement and deploying Russian peacekeepers in the disputed Caucasus territory guaranteeing linking land corridor to Nagorno-Karabakhh (besides protecting Russian oil and gas pipelines), coupled with Armenian withdrawal  is a response, too little, too late. 

China, which was playing neutral, as both countries are partners in BRI, could emerge as one of the main beneficiaries by gaining a new route for the BRI, besides leverage over Iran during crucial negotiations. The corridor between Nakhchivan and Azerbaijan would offer Beijing a second route to Europe in the South Caucasus bypassing Iran.

Military lessons

The Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict highlighted that Hybrid war is a reality, even in conflicts between states. The idea of hiring mercenaries/terrorists on religious lines is viable, as exhibited by Turkey and Pakistan; hence having a terror industry makes sense with adequate takers to hire their services. 

Recently, the Human Rights Watch reported ill treatment of Armenian Prisoners of War, in violation of the Geneva Convention. This is a dangerous trend which must be checked by global community. 

The conflict highlighted the air battle being influenced maximum by use of drones. The precision strikes by drones on all types of targets were game changers. The future wars will demand much higher reliance on drones to achieve desired effects without fear of human casualties. Drone warfare including countering drone threat from adversaries, has to be an essential component of technological warfare. Swarming, surveillance and many such uses including strategic bombing may be possible through drones in future.

Russia President Vladimir Putin said the agreements reached will create the necessary conditions for a long-term and full-format settlement of the crisis, but I have my doubts because dissatisfied Armenians and unpunished Turkey, cold shouldering by EU and NATO, form a recipe for further troubles.

(Major General S B Asthana can be reached at Facebook, LinkedIn, and Google+ as Shashi Asthana, @asthana_shashi on twitter, personnel site – [email protected] Profile – www.linkedin.com/in/shashi-asthana-4b3801a6, and YouTube – st1yle=”margin:0px 0px 20px;padding:0px;text-transform:none;line-height:28px;text-indent:0px;letter-spacing:normal;,serif;font-size:18px;font-style:normal;font-weight:400″>(Disclaimer: The views of the writer do not represent the views of WION or ZMCL. Nor does WION or ZMCL endorse the views of the writer)



Armenia’s PM’s visit to Moscow postponed

Aysor, Armenia
Nov 30 2020
Read Aysor.am inTelegram

Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had a phone conversation with Russia’s Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin at latter’s initiative.

Mishustin informed that basing on epidemiological situation he applied to the Eurasian Economic Commission to conduct the regular session of the Eurasian Inter-Governmental Council scheduled for December 4 remotely.

The interlocutors also discussed a number of issues on the agenda of Armenian-Russian allied relations.

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Stepanakert Branch of Converse Bank reopens

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 16:40,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS.Stepanakert Branch of Converse Bank will reopen on 30.11.2020. The Branch will render comprehensive services to the customers on a regular basis from Monday to Friday, 9:30-17:00.

 Converse Bank is a financial institution offering comprehensive banking services.  The Bank is managed by Eduardo Eurnekian Group.

Valérie Boyer urges France not to demonstrate neutrality over Artsakh and recognize its independence

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 20:54,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 25, ARMENPRESS. Member of the National Assembly of France Valérie Boyer urged at the Senate not to demonstrate neutrality over Nagorno Karabakh (ARtsakh) issue and recognize its independence, ARMENPRESS reports Boyer said during the Senate debate on the resolution on the necessity to recognize Nagorno Karabakh Republic.

‘’I couldn’t think that in this hall we might again speak about ethnic cleansings. I regret for that, but our silence is the reason of that. Nothing has been done for Armenia, nothing was done when thousands of Armenians were deported. Our country remained neutral, saying that a Minsk Group Co-chair should be neutral. We cannot remain neutral when jihadists act. Remain neutral means leaving our brothers, sisters, Armenians alone against this aggression’’, she said.

The member of the National Assembly said that only the recognition of Artsakh’s independence can become the security guarantee for the people living there.

‘’We have to recognize Karabakh –  a small country that has great significance and religious value’’, Boyer said, adding that France has to be the first to recognize Artsakh’s independence.

Mobile network, internet restored as Artsakh rebuilds infrastructures

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 11:43,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. As Artsakh is actively rebuilding its infrastructures which were damaged in Azeri bombings, the telecommunication system is already entirely restored in Artsakh, the State Service of Emergency Situations spokesperson Hunan Tadevosyan told ARMENPRESS.

“We’ve had problems with mobile communication and internet in the recent period. The Karabakh Telecom stations were targeted many times by the Azeri forces during the war. Now the restoration work is in the final stage, and today we can say that there is no communication problem in Artsakh,” he said.

Water, power and gas supply junctions were also damaged during the war, but most of these infrastructures are already restored.

Power and water supply is entirely restored, and the gas supply restoration is yet to be completed in only few districts of Stepanakert.

“Huge work is also done in the direction of de-mining and neutralizing unexploded ordnance. The emergency situations team of the Russian peacekeepers joined this work today. Our sappers were working day and night before they arrived. This work was being done even when the war was still ongoing.”

Tadevosyan said their rescuers are also involved in the search operations for missing servicemen together with the Russian peacekeepers and the International Committee of the Red Cross.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Putin played key role in brokering Nagorno Karabakh armistice, Kremlin says

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 15:18, 13 November, 2020

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 13, ARMENPRESS. The role of Russian President Vladimir Putin in resolving the Nagorno Karabakh conflict was key, intense work that spanned many days preceded the settlement, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in an interview to RT, reports TASS.

“This role was key”, he noted. “Many, many days of hard work preceded the signing, sometimes even round-the-clock work, it was President Putin’s work”.

The Kremlin spokesperson also stated that on the background of the Karabakh situation, it’s possible to avoid conflicts between Armenians and Azerbaijanis living in Russia. Asked how the Russian authorities are going to normalize the relations between these two Diasporas, Peskov said most of the Armenians and Azerbaijanis are “respectful and responsible members of the Russian society”.

As for the contradictions between Russia and Turkey over the NK conflict, Dmitry Peskov said this factor doesn’t hinder the close partnership between the two countries. He said Turkey has adopted a consistent position on “approving the scenario of solving the conflict by force”. The Russian presidential spokesperson reminded that President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan are in constant dialogue.

 

Editing by Aneta Harutyunyan

Russia’s position on NK remained unchanged during last 4.5 years – PM Pashinyan

Russia’s position on NK remained unchanged during last 4.5 years – PM Pashinyan

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 22:44, 13 November, 2020

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 13, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan referred to the discussions that Russia would have provided better assistance to the Armenian side during Nagorno Karabakh war, if there was other Government in Armenia, since the present leadership was unable to ensure proper relations with Russia. ARMENPRESS reports in an interview with Public TV PM Pashinyan emphasized that it’s about the position on Nagorno Karabakh issue, recording that Russia’s position on Nagorno Karabakh issue has not changed in any way during the last 4.5 years.

”I mean today Russia’s position on Nagorno Karabakh issue is the same as it was 4.5 years ago. And in today’s state of affairs there are realities that are in line with that position, particularly, the presence of the Russian peacekeepers’’, Pashinyan said, adding that it’s not about the relations between the authorities of Armenia and Russia, but the position of Russia.

To the question if they are not linked with one another, PM Pashinyan said, ”You can be fully confident that in this war they are in no way linked. Because if they were linked, there would have been some changes in that position following May, 2018 and would be different from the position of pre-2018. But that position has not changed and I official announce it. But on the other hand, I can say that there are, have been and will be normal working relations between the authorities of Armenia and Russia’’.

To the question referring his relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Pashinyan said, ”Working, very good”.

Armenia Ministry Says 2,317 Servicemen Dead In Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict

Republic World
Nov 14 2020
Written By

Zaini Majeed

Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Armenia on November 14 said that at least 2,317 servicemen are dead in six weeks of clashes with Azerbaijan armed forces in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. “To date, our forensic service has examined the corpses of 2,317 dead servicemen, including unidentified ones,” Armenian health ministry spokeswoman Alina Nikoghosyan said in a statement. The casualties surged from nearly 1,000 previous deaths of Armenian soldiers confirmed by the ministry.  “On behalf of all the staff of the Ministry of Health, we express our condolences to all the lost mothers, fathers and their relatives,” Nikoghosyan said. Azerbaijan’s defense ministry is yet to disclose military casualties. 

Meanwhile, the villagers in Charektar on the border with the neighbouring district of Martakert scorched houses ahead of the Azerbaijan army takeover. Huge flames erupted outside of Nagorno-Karabakh as civilians fled their homes to escape to Armenia before the land was conquered by Azerbaijan as part of peace negotiations. Unwilling to hand over the territory to the Turks, civilians launched a mass exodus setting fire, sending properties into thick plumes of smoke as they evacuated. As many as 10 homes in Charitar were torched as the agreement to return Armenian territory as al-Baggar was negotiated, as well as the Agdam region by 20 November, and the Lachin region by December 1 occupied by the Armenians since 1990s conflict, according to sources of Anadolu Agency. 

Read: Azerbaijan Downs Russian Helicopter In Armenia

Read: Armenia, Azerbaijan Agree To End Fight In Nagorno-Karabakh

In accordance with the pact brokered between the ex-Soviet rivals to end hostilities, Russian military officials dispatched the Russian peacekeepers and observers to station at the Nagorno-Karabakh disputed territory. Nearly 2,000 troops were to be deployed at 16 observation posts in mountainous Nagorno-Karabakh and along the Lachin corridor, as per sources Associated Press. However, the terms of a cease-fire agreement that gave territorial concessions to Azerbaijan was protested by thousands that flooded Armenia’s capital.

Civilians stormed into government buildings and demanded that the Moscow-brokered agreement be invalidated and the control must be handed over to ethnic Armenian forces. Meanwhile, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev hailed the agreement as a “victory” for his country and a “defeat of Armenia”, acknowledging Baku’s military. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, on the other hand, called the truce “unspeakably painful”. 
Calling the Nagorno-Karabakh deal signed by Russia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan an “important” gain, Turkey’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Twitter, “Brotherly Azerbaijan has achieved an important gain on the battleground and table. I sincerely congratulate this sacred success.” “We will continue to be one nation, one spirit with our Azeri brothers,” he added. Meanwhile, Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said that it was in talks with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees office, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, and the UN development programme to address the civilian casualties and humanitarian crisis from the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. 

Asbarez: ARF Leaders Tell Consul General Pashinyan Must Resign

November 13,  2020



Armenian Revolutionary Federation Western U.S.

Armenian Revolutionary Federation leaders told Armenia’s Consul General Ambassador Armen Baibourtian on Thursday that the agreement signed by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan that ended the relentless war against Artsakh and Armenia was defeatist and humiliating and that it has already categorically been rejected by the people.

“Such a document is the biggest treason against our nation,” the ARF leaders told Baibourtian.

Meeting with Baibourtian at the Consulate, ARF Bureau member Dr. Viken Yacoubian and the co-chairs of the ARF Western U.S. Central Committee, Avedik Izmirlian and Dr. Carmen Ohanian, were clear in conveying the broad discontent by the ARF and its vast network of affiliate organizations over the specifics of the agreement.

The ARF leaders said that the Armenian government, headed by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, bears sole responsibility for the crisis that has arisen from the signing of the document. They also expressed their disappointment and protest and added that they join the thousands of protesters in Yerevan in demanding Pashinyan’s resignation.

Outlining the complex realities anticipated ahead, the ARF leaders emphasized the need to alter the course of the situation that could lead the nation on to a dead-end course. They said that Armenia needs new negotiators who can confront these new challenges.

They also called for the immediate release of opposition leaders and members who have been taken into custody by Armenia’s National Security Service on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Ambassador Baibourtian pledged to convey these concerns to officials in Yerevan.

Declaration on ending war cannot be considered comprehensive settlement of NK conflict – FM

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 21:02,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Zohrab Mnatsakanyan held telephone conversations with Foreign Minister of Russia Sergey Lavrov, Foreign Minister of France Jean-Yves Le Drian and Deputy Secretary of State of the US Stephen Biegun, ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MFA Armenia.

The interlocutors exchanged views on the situation following the November 10 declaration of Prime Minister of Armenia, Presidents of Russia and Azerbaijan. Minister Mnatsakanyan emphasized that the mentioned declaration is about establishment of ceasefire and deployment of peacekeepers in Artsakh and cannot be assessed as a comprehensive solution to Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

The Armenian FM and the high representatives of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chair countries also referred to the central role of Turkey in preparing, inciting and carrying out the war by Azerbaijan against Artsakh, which was manifested by both being directly involved in the military operations and sending foreign terrorists to the conflict zone. Mnatsakanyan clearly emphasized that any role of Turkey in peacekeeping mission must be ruled out, despite the attempts of that country.

The Armenian Foreign Minister expressed deep concern over the fate of the Armenian cultural heritage in the territories that has appeared under Azerbaijani control. Mnatsakanyan emphasized that the international community is well aware of the barbaric treatment of Azerbaijan towards the Armenian cultural heritage, as a result of which numerous pieces of the Armenian heritage have been destroyed in Nakhichevan, Azerbaijan and in Artsakh during the first Artsakh war.

The Interlocutors emphasized the importance of the continuation of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs’ format as the only internationally authorized format. Zohrab Mnatsakanyan emphasized that any issue over the Nagorno Karabakh peace process should be discussed exclusively in the sidelines of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairmanship. Mnatsakanyan emphasized the status of Artsakh and the full assurance of the security of the people of Artsakh as priorities.