Greece says Turkey distorting history

  NEWS.am  
Armenia – Jan 13 2022

Turkey is distorting reality when it comes to its past, the Greek Foreign Ministry said this in response to Ankara's hysteria over Greek President Katerina Sakellaropoulou's statement on the genocide of Pontic Greeks in the Ottoman Empire, Kathimerini reported.

The Greek Foreign Ministry said that the Turkish side, unfortunately, is once again distorting reality and hiding not only what happened in the past, but also its current policies, which violate international law on a daily basis, creating tensions and poisoning the climate between the two countries.

Turkey said Thursday it regretted “baseless claims” by Sakellaropoulou during an event to present the design for the new “Hall for the Global Pontian Greeks of Sourmena.”

“These allegations do not change the very fact that it was Greece that attempted to invade and occupy Anatolia, and that the Greek army committed barbaric crimes against humanity, especially against innocent civilians in the Western Anatolian region,” it said in a statement.

Speaking at the event on Wednesday, Sakellaropoulou said that the “tragic end” of Pontic Greek presence in Anatolia, “with the methodical and systematic genocide with persecutions, massacres, attempts at violent Islamization and unspeakable barbarism, uprooted them from their ancestral homes and brought them to the path of becoming refugees.”

Armenia, Turkey agree to conduct depoliticized dialogue — Russian Foreign Ministry

 TASS 
Russia – Jan 14 2022
Earlier, Sergey Lavrov said that Russia welcomed the first meeting between Armenia and Turkey in Moscow

MOSCOW, January 14. /TASS/. Armenia’s special representative for a dialogue with Turkey, Ruben Rubinyan, and his Turkish counterpart Serdar Kilic held negotiations in Moscow on Friday to agree to conduct a constructive and depoliticized dialogue in order to identify points of agreement, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a news release.

"The two sides displayed the readiness to conduct a constructive and depoliticized dialogue in the spirit of openness and determination to achieve practical results, moving step by step from simple to complex matters. It was agreed to go ahead with the search for points of agreement, which would benefit the people of both countries and the region’s stability and economic prosperity," the statement reads.

Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Andrey Rudenko brokered the talks.

Earlier on Friday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told a news conference on Russia’s diplomacy in 2021 that Russia welcomed the first meeting between the two sides in Moscow.

"Our role is to help establish a direct dialogue, and I hope it will be successful," he stressed.

While sharing a common border, Armenia and Turkey do not have diplomatic relations. In 2009, their foreign ministers met in Zurich to sign protocols on the establishment of diplomatic relations and on the principles of relations, but these documents were not ratified. On March 1, 2018 Armenia declared the protocols null and void.

 


Peacekeepers from Armenia, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan exit Kazakhstan

 TASS 
Russia – Jan 14 2022
Gradual withdrawal of CSTO forces started on January 13

MOSCOW, January 14. /TASS/. Peacekeeper units of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) from Armenia, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan departed from Almaty to their permanent stationing locations, TASS reports from the scene.

Armenian units loaded their motor vehicles and personnel in three transport aircraft of Russian Aerospace Forces and departed from the Almaty airport.

Servicemen from Tajikistan left on board of one Russian Il-76 aircraft and also took their cadets studying in Kazakhstan’s military educational institutions for the time of holidays.

Kyrgyzstan’s peacekeepers departed from the territory of the Almaty CHPP-2 guarded by them in a motor convoy to the territory of their country. They will travel about 250 kilometers to the Kyrgyzstan’s border.

CSTO Collective Peacekeeping Forces were sent to Kazakhstan for a limited period of time for normalization of the situation in Kazakhstan. Gradual withdrawal of peacekeepers started on January 13.

 

Armenian, Turkish envoys meet for first talks on normalizing relations

EurasiaNet
Jan 14 2022
Joshua Kucera Jan 14, 2022
Mt Ararat stands behind the Armenian capital. The national symbol is across the closed border in Turkey. (iStock/guenterguni)

Envoys from Armenia and Turkey have met in Moscow to launch negotiations over normalizing relations.

The envoys – Serdar Kilic, a senior Turkish diplomat; and Ruben Rubinyan, the deputy speaker of Armenia’s parliament – met in Moscow on January 14. Following the meeting the two sides issued identical, optimistically worded statements.

“During their first meeting, conducted in a positive and constructive atmosphere, the Special Representatives exchanged their preliminary views regarding the normalization process through dialogue between Armenia and Turkey,” the two foreign ministries said. “Parties agreed to continue negotiations without preconditions aiming at full normalization.” The meeting was not filmed and afterwards the envoys did not speak to the press.

The two envoys were appointed in December as part of their countries’ moves toward restore ties in the wake of the 2020 war between Armenia and Azerbaijan. That war resulted in the return to Azerbaijan of the territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh, which Armenia had occupied since the first war between the two sides in the 1990s.

The seizure of those territories in 1993 was what prompted Turkey to close the border. While Armenia has long been in favor of normalizing relations, Turkey – under pressure from its Azerbaijani allies – refused as long as the occupation continued. “With that issue off the table, Turkey began to signal its readiness for new talks with Armenia soon after the war,” the International Crisis Group wrote in an analysis previewing the January 14 talks.

The Moscow meeting was the most concrete step yet that the two sides have taken to normalizing relations. They will have to overcome a number of obstacles and potential spoilers: Turkish and Azerbaijani commentators have been putting forward public demands conditioning restoring Ankara-Yerevan relations on other issues, like Armenia renouncing control over Nagorno-Karabakh or giving up the cause of international recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide.

That, in turn, has given fuel to Armenia’s political opposition and nationalists in the Armenian global diaspora, who have been trying to portray the talks as a unilateral concession by a weak Armenian government to their enemies. And many ordinary Armenians, who might have been in favor of restoring ties with Turkey before the war, have become more wary in the light of Turkey’s open, strong support of Azerbaijan’s 2020 offensive and a reawakening of anti-Armenian discourse in Turkey.

But no preconditions have been officially put forward, a fact that the January 14 statement emphasized. And in the days ahead of the talks the signals were mostly positive.

In late December, Azerbaijan Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said that Baku “fully supports” Armenia and Turkey’s normalization efforts. It was Azerbaijan which scuttled the last attempt at normalization, the 2009 process that became known as the “protocols.”

“Having long posed the greatest impediment to a Turkish-Armenian rapprochement, Baku’s public and private tone has changed dramatically in the wake of its victory,” the Crisis Group analysts wrote. “Some senior bureaucrats in Baku privately suggest that Turkish-Armenian normalization might even help smooth their own post-war relations with Armenia by showing the benefits of shifting from a war footing to an everyone-wins focus on trade.”

A foreign policy commentator in the Turkish pro-government newspaper Daily Sabah portrayed the talks with Armenia as part of a broader push by Ankara to improve many of its strained relations around the region, including with the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Israel.  “These recent efforts of normalization and pro-active diplomatic initiatives will constitute Turkey's priority foreign policy agenda for 2022,” wrote the analyst, Tahla Kose, in a January 14 piece.

And the fact that Russia is brokering the talks suggests that one early concern – that Moscow would try to scuttle them for fear of Turkey gaining more influence in the region – has been evaded. Russia’s involvement also is likely to blunt the objections from Armenia’s internal opposition, which has warm relations with Russia.

While a recent flareup on the border resulted in four soldiers killed – three Armenian, and one Azerbaijani – there has nevertheless been diplomatic progress between Baku and Yerevan, as well.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, at a press conference the morning before the Kilic-Rubinyan meeting, said that Armenia and Azerbaijan were close to reaching an agreement on one of the key issues in their bilateral agenda: agreeing on a demarcation of the two countries’ border. “Literally yesterday I was speaking with an Armenian colleague, who had a new proposal, we will send it along to Azerbaijan. We will see how to make [an Armenia-Azerbaijan-Russia commission working on border issues] work it out as quickly as possible.”

Also that day, Farid Shafiyev, the head of an Azerbaijani government-run foreign policy think tank, said in an interview with Interfax-Azerbaijan that Baku and Yerevan had reached a spoken agreement to create a border demarcation commission.

Joshua Kucera is the Turkey/Caucasus editor at Eurasianet, and author of .

https://eurasianet.org/armenian-turkish-envoys-meet-for-first-talks-on-normalizing-relations 

Turkey and Armenia welcome ‘constructive’ efforts to mend relations

 France 24 
Jan 14 2022

Turkey and Armenia on Friday welcomed "constructive" talks between their special envoys, who met for the first time in Moscow in a bid to mend historically strained ties. 

Armenia and Turkey have no diplomatic relations, a closed border and a long history of hostility rooted in mass killings of Armenians under the Ottoman Turks during World War I.

Armenian envoy Ruben Rubinyan and his Turkish counterpart, Serdar Kilic, met "in a positive and constructive atmosphere" on Friday, their foreign ministries said in identical statements. 

No concrete measures were announced after the 90-minute talks in the Russian capital.

However, the "parties agreed to continue negotiations without preconditions aiming at full normalisation (of relations)", the ministries added.

The statements said the date and location of the next meeting would be decided in "due time through diplomatic channels".

Historically tense ties between the two countries deteriorated further in 2020, when Turkey backed Azerbaijan in the latter's war with Armenia for control of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

The 2020 conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan, claimed more than 6,500 lives. It ended with a Russian-brokered ceasefire under which Armenia ceded to Azerbaijan territories it had controlled for decades.

Armenia and Turkey have since stepped up efforts to improve relations, including the reciprocal appointment of special envoys.


In addition, two budget airlines are reportedly set to start flights between Yerevan and Istanbul on February 2.Yerevan announced last month that it was lifting an embargo on Turkish goods that it had imposed in retaliation for Ankara supporting Turkic-speaking Azerbaijan in the Karabakh conflict.

In 2009, Turkey and Armenia signed an agreement to normalise relations, which would have led to the opening of their shared border.

However, the document was never ratified by Yerevan, which abandoned the procedure in 2018. 

 

Turkey, Armenia hold first talks on normalising ties in years

Reuters
Jan 14 2022
By Tuvan Gumrukcu and Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber

ANKARA/MOSCOW, Jan 14 (Reuters) – Turkey and Armenia on Friday said a first round of talks in more than ten years was "positive and constructive," raising the prospect that ties could be restored and borders reopened after decades of animosity.

Turkey has had no diplomatic or commercial ties with its eastern neighbour since the 1990s. The talks in Moscow were the first attempt to restore links since a 2009 peace accord. That deal was never ratified and relations have remained tense. read more

The Turkish and Armenian foreign ministries said on Friday the talks were held in a "positive and constructive" atmosphere, adding both sides were committed to a full normalisation without any pre-conditions. They said special envoys had "exchanged their preliminary views regarding the normalisation process".

The neighbours are at odds over several issues, primarily the 1.5 million people Armenia says were killed in 1915.

Armenia says the 1915 killings constitute a genocide, a position supported by the United States and some others. Turkey accepts that many Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire were killed in clashes with Ottoman forces during World War One, but contests the figures and denies killings were systematic or constitute genocide.

Tensions again flared during a 2020 war over the Nagorno-Karabakh territory. Turkey accused ethnic Armenian forces of occupying land belonging to Azerbaijan. Turkey has since called for a rapprochement, as it seeks greater influence in the region.

In separate but similarly worded statements, the foreign ministries said a date and location for the next round of talks would be finalised later.

Turkish diplomatic sources said the discussions between the delegations lasted for about 1.5 hours.

Russia's TASS news agency cited Armenia's foreign ministry as saying on Thursday it expected the talks to lead to the establishment of diplomatic relations and opening of frontiers closed since 1993.

Thomas de Waal, a senior fellow with Carnegie Europe, said in November opening borders and renovating railways to Turkey would have economic benefits for Armenia, as the routes could be used by traders from Turkey, Russia, Armenia, Iran and Azerbaijan.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said last year the two countries would also start charter flights between Istanbul and Armenia's capital Yerevan under the rapprochement, but that Turkey would coordinate all steps with Azerbaijan.

The flights are set to begin in early February. read more

Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan said on Thursday Armenia needed to form good ties with Azerbaijan for the normalisation effort to yield results.

NO EASY BREAKTHROUGH

Despite strong backing for normalisation from the United States, which hosts a large Armenian diaspora and angered Turkey last year by calling the 1915 killings a genocide, analysts have said the talks would be complicated. read more

Emre Peker, a London-based director at Eurasia Group, said a cautious approach focusing on quick deliverables was expected on both sides due to the old sensitivities, adding the role of Russia, which brokered the Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire and is the dominant actor in the region, would be key.

Cavusoglu has also said Russia contributed to the process of appointing the special envoys.

"The bigger challenge will come from the question of historic reconciliation," Peker said, adding that the fate of talks would depend on "Ankara's recognition that it must right-size its ambitions."

Reporting by Tuvan Gumrukcu in Ankara and Gabrielle Tetrault-Farber in Moscow; Editing by Robert Birsel and Frank Jack Daniel

 

Armenia: The Case for Realpolitik

The International Affairs Review
Jan 13 2022

On November 16, 2021, Azerbaijani Armed Forces initiated a military offensive along the eastern border of Armenia’s Syunik Province. While the latest provocation worsens the open-ended demarcation process in the South Caucasus, or lack thereof, it reflects a microcosm of a decades-long, elite-driven tendency towards political crisis and communal violence over conciliatory negotiations. The outcome of the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War shifted the regional balance of power by giving advantage to a stronger Azerbaijan and inflicting an existential threat to a weaker Armenia. The shortcomings of Armenia suggest the failures of a border policy predicated on emotive thinking, not materialistic aims, which now demands an application of realpolitik in decision-making. Forsaking normative expectations, the pragmatism of realpolitik embodies the pursuit of egoistic interests of the state in a world defined by structural restraints, a remedy for Armenia’s deterministic path.  

History of Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict 

The First Nagorno-Karabakh War, an outgrowth of the 1991 independence referendum, resulted in an Armenian consolidation of Karabakh and the surrounding Azerbaijani territories. Afterward, the Minsk Group—co-chaired by France, Russia, and the United States—mediated a temporary peace, upon which to discontinue inter-ethnic violence, with an intention to later formalize a long-term political settlement. An uneasy impasse kept the region intact until September 27, 2020. 

The 44-day Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, sparked by an Azerbaijani ground offensive, uprooted the post-1994 status quo. Militarily, Azerbaijan gained all seven districts lost during the first war, in addition to some delineated areas of Nagorno-Karabakh. An amalgam of advanced weapon systems and primitive practices characterized the warfare; the exemplified methods include unmanned combat drones and extrajudicial decapitation of POWs. On November 10, 2020, Russia brokered a tripartite armistice ending this war that resulted in approximately 6,000 combat deaths. The Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire underwrites a reciprocal exchange of prisoners and corpses, the establishment of transport links between Azerbaijan and the landlocked Nakhichevan enclave, and a withdrawal of Armenian forces from territories controlled since the 1990s. Before the deadline for territorial transfers, thousands of Armenians fled, often burning their property to prevent Azerbaijan from inheriting their possessions. A force of nearly 2,000 Russian peacekeepers operates under a mandate to enforce the ceasefire.      

External Actors: A Tool for Asymmetric Warfare 

During the Minsk Group mediation attempts, Armenia instrumentalized its control over the internationally recognized Azerbaijani districts to negotiate a pathway to independence for Nagorno-Karabakh. Due to lasting resentment from territorial losses, Baku insisted on re-establishing pre-war boundaries and the right of return for natives. To accomplish this, Azerbaijan relied upon a destabilization strategy by attrition, forcing Armenia to slowly disperse and exhaust state resources as low-intensity fighting permeated the region’s shared borders. However, Russia managed to balance power by distributing armaments somewhat equitably to prevent military asymmetry. 

Notwithstanding these limitations, Azerbaijan’s oil wealth allowed national defense expenditures to exceed Armenia’s spending by threefold in 2020. Leading up to the offensive, Azerbaijan purchased an estimated $120 million worth of Turkish military equipment. Both Turkey and Israel supplied Azerbaijan with a fleet of aerial reconnaissance vehicles that decimated Armenian air defenses and ground units. Complimenting the air campaign, the lesser-known tactic Azerbaijan weaponized during the war includes the importation of Turkish-backed insurgents from the Syrian National Army, whose function was to absorb corporal costs on the battlefront. Non-Russian partners continue to capture a larger share of the Azerbaijani defense market, whereas Armenia maintains an unshakable arms dependency on Russia. 

Since the ceasefire, Azerbaijan ratified a far-reaching partnership, the Shusha Declaration, with Turkey pledging security assurances and greater economic integration. A strengthening of Azerbaijani-Turkish relations signifies Turkey’s geostrategic aspirations to integrate into the emerging Eurasian infrastructure. By doing so, it would reshape the regional balance of power and put Russia (and Armenia) at a disadvantage.  

Armenia in Crisis Mode

One day after the terms of capitulation were agreed upon, thousands of Armenian civilians besieged and vandalized government buildings to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. Footage soon circulated online of Ararat Mirzoyan, the Speaker of the National Assembly, being forced from his car and beaten. Political unrest in Yerevan contrasted with victory celebrations in Baku. With Armenia’s ruling class paralyzed, Azerbaijan’s areal pursuits expanded westward, establishing customs and military checkpoints along Armenia’s main transit route with Iran, the Goris-Kapan highway. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev looks to actualize ‘ancestral claims’ over the provinces of Syunik and Gegharkunik, where Azeri troops have secured access to former Armenian mineral deposits of gold, silver, and various metal ores. Simultaneously, Azerbaijani forces initiated cross-border shootouts along the Yeraskh-Sadarak borderline between Armenia and Nakhichevan.

Azerbaijan’s multi-pronged incursions on Armenia Proper represent the latest rendition of a war of attrition, created to extract more concessions from a debilitated opponent. The coup-de-grâce stems from the proposed Zangezur overland corridor through Armenia that would reduce travel time and transportation costs for goods and persons moving between Azerbaijan and Turkey in comparison to the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway. For Armenia’s isolated economy, regional integration presents a tradeoff of economic amelioration for ceding sovereignty. As President Aliyev clarifies his intention to (forcefully) incorporate Syunik into ‘Greater Azerbaijan,’ Armenia’s domestic crisis worsens. 

A Realpolitik Approach   

From 1994 to 2020, the political strategy among elites in Yerevan rested on a process of acclimation, not demarcation, which culminated in historic losses and a re-traumatization of the national consciousness. Armenian complacency diverged from an unresolved enmity in Azerbaijan over the first war’s outcome. Since then, Armenia has found itself a casualty of internal jealousies, while neighboring states have applied tactical principles to amass asymmetric capabilities. Azerbaijan’s growing discontent illustrates a new security concern—simply put, revanchism drives foreign policy in Baku. The presence of Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh forms the sole deterrent to a renewal in large-scale fighting, yet small-scale assaults percolate under Russian oversight. Given Armenia’s material constraints and international passivity to ongoing abuses, Azerbaijan’s offensive movements remain undeterred. A widening imbalance forestalls the maturation of final peace.  

With the present conditions, Armenia’s leadership should forgo idealist dogma with a renewed focus on calculated decision-making. The means by which to fortify security depends on a delicate balancing act, whereby Yerevan diversifies its portfolio of military allies without drawing a rebuke from Moscow. In tandem with bilateral defense partnerships, the current humanitarian crisis requires a pragmatic courting of the European Union for financial assistance. Unlike Azerbaijan, Armenia can leverage its nascent democratic credentials to sustain foreign direct investment from Brussels. For Pashinyan, to counterbalance EU funds by upholding the Velvet Revolution’s reform agenda entails further reassurance for Russia concerning geopolitical alignment. Most importantly, operating within an international self-help system necessitates Armenia to acquire strategic autonomy through military modernization. Fending off border assaults, without reprisal attacks in the contested areas, serves the immediate goal of upholding Armenian sovereignty while allocating more time to shore up operational capabilities for future contingencies. If Armenia’s dark history holds one constant, moralizing accomplishes nothing. Instead, the desire for security guarantees materializes through the sole utility of military power.

Joshua Himelfarb is a first-year graduate student in International Affairs at the George Washington University. His academic interests are in energy security, economic development, and Europe and Eurasia. His past research explored material and ontological insecurities between post-Soviet republics. Contact can be made at [email protected].

Armenia Could Loosen Russia’s Grip on the South Caucasus

 The National Interest 
Jan 14 2022

Only through breaking Armenia’s dependency on Russia—through renormalization with Azerbaijan and Turkey—will the region’s true economic potential be unleashed.

by Wes Martin

On , Turkey and Armenia will begin talks aimed at reopening Europe’s final Cold War-era closed border. The historic move, supported by the West, promises to fundamentally reconfigure the South Caucasus—and Russia’s sway within it.

Blocked borders, jagged pipelines, and irrational freight routes speak to the region’s limitations, all of which have played to the former imperial power. Russia prefers these countries to be at odds as it hands Moscow economic and political leverage while stifling solidarity against it.

Should the countries remain at odds, a landlocked Armenia will suffer under the weight of regional isolation. To the west lie the closed border with Turkey and the freight lines to Europe. To the east lie the equally sealed border with Azerbaijan and the gateway to central Asia. Yet the primary rationale for keeping both borders closed has disappeared: the occupation of almost one-fifth of Azerbaijan—according to the UN Security Council—since the 1990s.

As the USSR crumbled, the neighbors fell into conflict over the mixed region of Karabakh. The 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War reversed most of Armenia’s land grab. Since then, Baku has favored open borders and logistics lines. So too has Turkey, who closed its border in solidarity with ally Azerbaijan after the first war. With the status quo altered and some necessary space between the conflict, now there is an opening for change.

Without open borders, the region’s economic potential remains locked. But if open borders and restored rail lines become a reality, Armenia could create the fastest freight line between East Asia and Europe.  An alternative route would also weaken East Asia and Europe’s reliance on Russia. Cooperation in the South Caucasus also fuels greater prosperity and helps the region stand on its own feet.

But there are other barriers to overcome. It is not simply solidarity with Azerbaijan that has structured Turkey’s relations with Armenia, but a contested history. At its core is the killing of 1.5 million ethnic Armenians during World War I. Since then, Armenia has characterized said acts as genocidal but Turkey disputes the label despite recognizing atrocities were committed by the Ottoman empire. It remains a thorny issue between the two nations.

As for Azerbaijan, wounds are still raw in Armenia since the closure of the 2020 war. Being the victor of the 2020 conflict, it may be easy for Baku to talk up renormalization in its wake. Selling a radically different future from the moral puncture of defeat—with former foes establishing trade and diplomatic relations—is another matter.

Given the discontent now playing out within Armenia, the difficulties are clear. Detainees released from Azerbaijan—which the government had lobbied for—were condemned by the speaker of the house as being deserters and traitors, sparking protests from the parents. Many are looking for someone to blame, scapegoats permitted.

Before he became prime ministership, Nikol Pashinyan had championed himself as a reformer following the 2018 protests against a corrupt ruling elite. Those he had toppled led the counter-offense after defeat in the war, staging an unsuccessful coup. They were the militaristic parties that had ruled Armenia for much of its independence and had shunned compromise to resolve the long-frozen conflict. Many were themselves from Karabakh and based their legitimacy—often to deflect from accusations of graft or incompetence—on the struggle for the territory.

Having survived the junta’s unsuccessful coup d’etat, Pashinyan is now talking up cooperation with Armenia’s former enemies. This has again earned him another chorus of traitor. Yet despite the pressure he is experiencing, he must remain steadfast. He won a renewed mandate postwar to chart a different path from the discredited elite of the past: turning away from Russia and toward the West.

If anything, however, Russia’s grip has tightened over Armenia’s sovereignty, with Moscow’s peacekeepers stationed in Karabakh. This growing dependence was neatly delineated by the recent upheaval in Kazakhstan. As part of the Russian-controlled Collective Security Treaty Organization, Pashinyan sent Armenian troops to quell the protests.

This rankled a domestic population who did not see Russia’s sweep to its aid in a time of need. It was also viewed at odds with the prime minister and his supporters’ politics. The Kazakhstan protests his troops helped quell differed little from the 2018 Velvet Revolution that had swept him to power. But power politics prevailed over values. Pashinyan had little choice but to follow orders. Only through breaking Armenia’s dependency on Moscow—through renormalization with Azerbaijan and Turkey—will that change.

The first president of an independent Armenia, Levon Ter-Petrosyan, spoke of compromise following the first Karabakh war to stabilize the region and entrench national sovereignty. He was toppled by the same forces that now threaten Pashinyan. But the current prime minister must hold out. Economic prosperity not only for Armenia, but for the whole region—and then throwing off the Russian yoke—will be the reward.

Colonel (Ret.) Wes Martin has served in law enforcement positions around the world and holds an MBA in International Politics and Business.

https://nationalinterest.org/feature/armenia-could-loosen-russia%E2%80%99s-grip-south-caucasus-199459


Russia Is Worried About Challenges in the Caucasus

FP - Foreign Policy
Jan 14 2022

By Eugene Chausovsky, a nonresident fellow at the Newlines Institute.
Volunteers and reservists take part in a military training course in Yerevan, Armenia, 
on Oct. 22, 2020. KAREN MINASYAN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

The first two weeks of 2022 have been eventful and consequential ones for Russia and its neighbors. Last week, Russia sent troops into Kazakhstan via the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) in response to widespread unrest, while this week Russian officials have been engaged in a series of high-stakes talks with U.S. and NATO officials over Ukraine. However, there is another region that has been overlooked but that may prove to be just as dynamic in the coming weeks and months: the Caucasus.

Already, there has been an uptick in military hostilities between Armenia and Azerbaijan along their shared border in recent days, more than a year after large-scale fighting between the two ceased, just as envoys from Armenia and Turkey held their first round of talks on political normalization in Moscow on Jan. 14. Both of these developments can be seen as ripple effects from the brief war that broke out over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh in late 2020, a conflict that led to the deployment of Russian peacekeeping forces to the region and to a recalibration of the political and security landscape of the area. In turn, the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has served as both a strategic backdrop to, and important precursor of, the events currently unfolding in Ukraine and Kazakhstan.

Russian military deployments in the post-Soviet space may have various causes and motivations, but each has at its root a fairly straightforward objective for Moscow: to entrench its influence as the dominant external power in the region and to prevent or limit the influence of other external powers. For example, in the case of Russia’s intervention in Ukraine in 2014, it was to limit the influence of the West, including the European Union and especially NATO, following a pro-Western revolution in Kyiv. The same was the case for Russia’s intervention in Georgia in 2008, coming just months after Georgian and Ukrainian membership aspirations were recognized by the bloc at the Bucharest summit.

Moscow’s intervention in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in 2020 was intended to stem the tide of territorial losses by Russia’s ally and fellow CSTO member Armenia at the hands of Azerbaijan, which was more independent and not an institutional ally. But the manner and timing of Russia’s intervention also had elements of self-interest, enabling Moscow to maintain ties with both Baku and Yerevan.

Stepping in was meant also to limit the influence of Turkey, whose security support for Azerbaijan via weaponry including TB2 drones proved pivotal in helping the country’s forces break through Armenian defenses. Thus, Russia intervened as a mediator to oversee a cease-fire and transfer of territory in and around Nagorno-Karabakh from Armenia to Azerbaijan, which was painful to accept for Yerevan but at the same time was much less than what Armenian forces would have otherwise likely lost on the battlefield. Armenia and Azerbaijan both agreed to the Moscow-brokered armistice, with its implementation consisting of the deployment of 2,000 Russian peacekeepers in November 2020.

The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict highlighted Russia’s regional power status and Moscow’s continued ability to shape events, but it also revealed that Moscow’s influence has limitations. After all, Russia’s preferred outcome would have been the prewar status quo, but Azerbaijan, along with its own ally in Turkey, was able to forcefully challenge this status quo. This challenge substantially raised the profile of Ankara in the region, with Moscow agreeing to a joint Russian-Turkish monitoring center to oversee the cease-fire implementation and Russia having no choice but to acknowledge the important regional power role played by Turkey.

The year since has also revealed key constraints to Russia’s influence in the region. Despite the presence of Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh, both Armenian and Azerbaijani forces have violated the cease-fire on a periodic and sometimes deadly basis. And Turkey has been able to leverage its increased influence for its own political and economic gains, most notably in its support for Azerbaijan’s regional transport and infrastructure initiatives and its diplomatic outreach to Armenia to resume trade and flights, and to revive the long-dormant process of political normalization.

To be sure, Russia has played an important part in all of these discussions, but Moscow is no longer the only major actor in shaping the geopolitics of the Caucasus. While Russia’s military presence in the region mitigated the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, it has not been enough to prevent eruptions of violence or to bring about a sustainable peace. In the meantime, Turkey has proved its willingness and ability to directly challenge Russia in the region, even as the two countries cooperate in other spheres such as energy and weapons sales. The world is becoming more multipolar, which can serve as both a benefit and a challenge to entrenched powers—including Moscow.

This brings us back to the unfolding events in Ukraine and Kazakhstan. In the Ukrainian case, Russia is still trying to push back against the political, economic, and security influence of the West, while seeking guarantees against the prospects of NATO enlargement it has fought to avoid. In Kazakhstan, Russia is less worried about the West, but it could see its position as the dominant external power giving way to others, including China and perhaps even Turkey. While Russia has established a pragmatic division of labor of sorts with China in Central Asia, Moscow cannot be sure this working arrangement will last forever. And Russia can be even less sure of Turkey’s intentions, considering that the two have been on opposing sides of conflicts in such areas as Syria and Libya, and that Turkish TB2 drones are now being sold to the likes of Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan.

Thus, there is a broader connection between what is happening in the Caucasus and the events that are unfolding in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. The Kremlin finds its dominant power status in the former Soviet periphery being challenged from numerous directions, and Russia’s CSTO deployment in Kazakhstan and its military maneuvers along the Ukrainian border are intended to show that Moscow is both able and willing to use military force to maintain its position as the dominant regional power in the post-Soviet space.

However, such military actions may only take Russia so far, and they have their own risk of blowback. For example, Russia has to consider that its CSTO deployment to Kazakhstan may set a dangerous precedent, as other member states like Armenia are no strangers to mass protests and unrest. For example, if violent demonstrations were to erupt in Armenia in the future, would Russia have to intervene again? And if so, could it be certain such an intervention will succeed? Such questions could become increasingly relevant as Armenia and Azerbaijan continue to stare each other down and Turkey and others look to expand their position in the region. The Caucasus may soon prove to be no less dynamic and consequential than Eastern Europe or Central Asia, both for Russia and the powers with which it contends.

Eugene Chausovsky is a nonresident fellow at the Newlines Institute. Chausovsky previously served as senior Eurasia analyst at the geopolitical analysis firm Stratfor for more than 10 years. His work focuses on political, economic, and security issues pertaining to Russia, Eurasia, and the Middle East.

https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/01/14/russia-csto-caucasus-nagorno-karabakh/