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Europe’s risky tolerance of tension in the Caucasus

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Published 19 June 2012, updated 20 June 2012

Military tensions have grown in recent weeks between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Charles Tannock argues that the EU should take steps to diffuse the situation.

Charles Tannock is a member of the European Parliament from Britain.

"Almost unnoticed beyond the specialist foreign policy community, there have been around a dozen heavy incidents of exchanges of sniper fire and artillery shelling between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the last two months.

In this time, more than 10 soldiers have been killed, and those foreign policy pundits who still maintain the concept of "frozen conflicts" being dormant affairs that can be safely ignored should know that half of these incidents did not take place in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh itself, but at the recognised international borders between the two states, which are both part of the European Neighbourhood Policy and the EU's Eastern Partnership.

This recent escalation smacks of the rising tensions before the Georgian-Russian war in 2008. After years with numerous smaller incidents, the international community gets used to a certain instability, and while peace negotiations fail due to the lack of political will between the hostile parties, the frequency and gravity of the incidents slowly escalates and in spite of European "calls upon both sides" for restraint, real war actions can suddenly unfold. History appears to be repeating itself, but there are three main differences.

First, among Armenia and Azerbaijan, only Azerbaijan has an interest in mobilising troops at the risk of escalating to an outright actual war. While the situation between Russia and Georgia was more blurred, only Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and his government openly and repeatedly threaten their neighbour with war, whereas Armenia does not and would logically have no such interest.

After decades of discrimination, the majority ethnic Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh sought independence during the fall of the Soviet Union. In 1991, when the young Republic of Azerbaijan used force to restore "order", the independence movement took up arms and with military assistance from Armenia proper they liberated Nagorno-Karabakh and the conflict carried on until the legally still binding cease-fire of Bishkek was signed in 1994.

Azerbaijan claims that these territories are occupied, but since Stalin allocated them in 1921 under Soviet rule (arbitrarily) to Azerbaijan, it has done nothing to convince the local Armenian population of the benefits of Azerbaijani rule. The only time most of the local people in Nagorno-Karabakh have felt to be living without fear of discrimination and with a relative physical security came after 1994, and thus neither Armenia nor the de-facto Nagorno-Karabakh Republic have any interest in the renewed use of force – as they would be fighting for what?

The second current difference is the potential scale of this possible war. It is very different from the Georgian situation in 2008, as Azerbaijan and Armenia could see bombs and rockets fall on their capitals and the large-scale destruction of key places of civilian infrastructure. In Azerbaijan, oil rigs and pipelines, vital to their petrodollar economy, are all within simple artillery range of the Karabakhi army, and Armenian rockets can easily reach the refineries on the Caspian shores near Baku.

These places have been the major vital financial resource for Azerbaijan's large defence budget, which, as President Aliyev proudly proclaimed, exceeds Armenia's total state budget and allows the possibility of "liberating Karabakh in 10 days".

In short, both sides can erase everything positive that has been built up in the past 20 years since independence. Armenia is in a close defence alliance with Russia, while Azerbaijan is supported by its ethnic "brother nation" Turkey.

Iran is at odds with Azerbaijan due to Azeri revanchist and irredentist claims on Iranian soil and fears international peacekeeping troops on its northern border, given its virtual pariah status over the Iranian nuclear quest. Georgia fears Russian troops spreading out in the South Caucasus to aid Armenia. It is most unlikely that such a war would be restricted simply to Karabakh.

Also knowing the complex local geography and huge natural resources, it is impossible to predict whose troops would finally end up exactly where. Only one thing is certain: the human tragedy and economic costs would dwarf anything seen in Europe, at least for the last 20 years since the Balkan wars. To add to further turmoil as the world is facing an economic slump, with the eurozone crisis and US and Chinese growth dampening, the expected collapse of Azerbaijani oil and gas supplies would cause a rapid rise in world-wide crude prices and strangle any green shoots hopes for renewed global economic growth.

The third main difference is the position of Europe. While the EU has traditionally been closer to Georgia than to Russia, the EU desperately seeks a balanced relation with both Armenia and Azerbaijan. After the above mentioned hostile incidents, EU High Representative Catherine Ashton and foreign ministers in the EU's capitals all "called upon both sides" to show restraint, despite clear evidence about which side had started the recent provocation.

Azerbaijani state-controlled media reported that "Azerbaijani armed forces prevented one more provocation of the Armenian army" and that "it was identified that the Armenians were carrying out digging work along the front line" (the internationally recognised state border).

One might assume that the Armenians are allowed to dig on their own territory as much as they like and that "preventing" such a "provocation" with the disproportionate use of artillery fire, as it happened on the 25 April in the Tavoush region, might have sparked an international outcry. And even though ever since the Eurovision song contest (held in Azerbaijan's capital), most of Europe is now better informed about the undemocratic nature of the government in Baku, no Belarus-type EU sanctions have been threatened or even discussed.

The EU today possesses all the instruments necessary to make a difference. If we have learnt anything from the Georgian war of 2008, we must now use them to avert the possibility of the worst horror scenarios occurring in our near eastern neighbourhood.

The EU should clearly threaten sanctions against anyone unilaterally using disproportionate force in this conflict, and we must insist on the removal of snipers and on having EU observers along the line of contact and the state borders. Incidentally, Armenia has already agreed to this.

Before signing the next oil trade treaty with Baku, this should be the EU condition, or we might soon have very different prices to pay for oil and more importantly a tragic human catastrophe in Europe's east with large-scale casualties. In addition, there could be large flows of refugees heading in our direction with all that this might mean in economic terms in terms of additional burdens on our already stretched public resources."

COMMENTS

  • Nice, meny faces of EU......

    By :
    Manumentsi
    - Posted on :
    20/06/2012
  • armenia is in a deep shit with Azerbaijan on the 21st century just because erevan (armenians) can not hold any solid friendship/relationship/partnership with its neighbour although the fact that armenians and their azerbaijani gifted capital Irevan is the grandfathered territory of Irevan khan.

    I would like Armenia to stop hostility and force itself, against its will, to become friends with Azerbaijanis.

    Because, sooner or later the patience will pay the price and those who fight for their real land will win :)))

    By :
    Abizadeyan
    - Posted on :
    20/06/2012
  • @Manumentsi-

    Calling Armenian (“erivan”) would not change the reality-. In a time as Armenia was a neighbor to Roman Empire today’s territory of so called Azerbaijani republic was a province of Armenia- Even the name of “Azerbaijan and Azerbaijani” was not created by Turkish-Ottoman war lord syet!!!!

    Go get your record corrected- Azerbaijani being brainwashed by fascist officials in Baku as did Attatürk with so called modern Turkey. There is a Nazi like anti Armenian propaganda going on in Azerbaijani Republic on the highest state level (compare to one by NAZI Germany against Jewish people- no surprise when fascists Azerbaijani president did declare openly all Armenians around the world as enemy!) . The main reason of such an anti Armenian propaganda is the lack of a Azerbaijani national identity- which is being created by the Azerbaijani presidential order and manipulation and falsification of history of neighboring states!!

    By :
    Our Baku -
    - Posted on :
    20/06/2012
  • Dear Madam / Sir, A thoughtful piece that should guide the EU in its dealings with Armenia, Azerbaijan and the South Caucasus and should also encourage the OSCE to re-double its efforts to find a solution. One does not wish to see another testosterone-filled conflict that throws the region into an unbridled chapter of violence and impacts our own EU borders, relations & interests.

    I hope Dr Tannock will be heard loudly in the political corridors of Brussels. Kind regards, harry:

    By :
    dr harry haynes
    - Posted on :
    20/06/2012
  • The EU should clearly threaten sanctions against anyone unilaterally using disproportionate force in this conflict, and we must insist on the removal of snipers and on having EU observers along the line of contact and the state borders. Incidentally, Armenia has already agreed to this.

    By :
    Aanahit
    - Posted on :
    20/06/2012
  • Laughable claims by "Azeris" when they say Yerevan or Artsakh (Karabakh) is theirs.. "Azeris" a Persian term for the ethnic Iranic population of northern Iran have nothing to do with these turkic speaking impostors, who coined the term "Azerbaijan" in 1918, they were known in the region as simply as Tartars... Armenians are the oldest recorded ethnic group in this region, sumerian, akkadian, persian, roman, greek, arab, and georgian historical primary sources are all testimony to this truth, as well as physical proof of the Ancient Armenian churches, cities, all scattered across what is Armenia, Artsakh and eastern Turkey... Azeris have been brainwashed to such an extent that they actually believe that they are some "ancient" people who are the actual heirs of this territory, this is laughable beyond means, not only do we Armenians have historical primary sources to back us up, and physical proof, we also have genetic proof.. the only thing you turkic tartars have who came to the region in the 13th century A.D. is the brainwashing and vast historic distortion your authors in Azerbaijan and Turkey carry out, you are a shame to the human community. God Bless Armenians, and Armenia, as he has done for thousands of years on this very territory we are in, we shall not be moved, not now, not EVER.

    By :
    Greg
    - Posted on :
    20/06/2012
  • Unlike Abizadeyan's corrupted and revisionist view of history, Karabagh, in addition to Armenia proper has been populated by Armenians for at least 2600 years. In addition, the appearance of Turkic people in the region has only been an affair of about 1000 years. The presence of Turkish speaking populations within historic Armenia is well documented, but that does not make it Turkish or Azeri land...it's as though Turks and Azeris would claim Berlin, Germany as Turkish land because of the majority of the population in certain districts is Turkish speaking. You were in fact, hostile guests in the territories of Armenia, and the current borders only speak of arbitrary Stalinist policy that is not up to international standards. If Armenia truly was an aggressor state, we would have invaded well into Azerbaijan proper, captured Ganja, and now offered the exchange of those territories for negotiating peace. As it stood however, the Armenians of Karabagh stood up for their right for self determination and successfully defended themselves against Azeri aggression. The lands that are currently sought by Azerbaijan are liberated lands that are and have always been historically Armenian, even if some areas within it had Azeri/Turkish speaking populations. The honest truth is that Armenia is prepared for another war, even if we are trying our best to avoid it. Abizadeyan's response is typical of the delusional views that Turkic people hold over areas that are not their own. It's also an indicator of why Armenians, after suffering a Genocide that resulted in the mass deaths of over 1 million of our people, will take history seriously and prevent another occurrence.

    By :
    Armen
    - Posted on :
    20/06/2012
  • Saudi Arabia, Pakistan , Gulf Countries are waiting for Iran to make the mistake and attack Azerbaijan, just then they will occupy Southern Iran and with the help of NATO and Turkey South Azerbaijan with population of over 25 million will be created in Northern Iran. Armenia in deed is in a deep hole.

    By :
    nalbandiyan
    - Posted on :
    21/06/2012
  • I grew up in Turkey. On several occasions by several turks, I was told the following general idea: "we should have finished you Armenians off. We will soon". It never worried me because I thought the times are different and they can't commit another genocide now. I was a fool to think that.

    When the Soviet Union fell apart, turks grabbed the opportunity to accomplish their big agenda. They helped, trained, and armed their azeri brothers to wipe Armenians off the face of the earth.

    They couldn't because the Armenian side, poor as it was, weak as it was ( the devastation of the earthquake among others) defended itself and won. It was a miracle.

    It appears that the turks luck just ran out. Or maybe God heard us this time.

    By :
    Sona
    - Posted on :
    21/06/2012
  • Dear Mr. Tannock,

    It is important to remember that Azerbaijan is a vital supplier of energy resources to EU. While its government might not appear as democratic as British or French but it's moving steadily in the right direction. President Ilham Aliev is genuinely and popularly elected leader. Partnership and good relations between EU and Azerbaijan are for mutual benefits. I would suggest that you visit Azerbaijan to discover for yourself the hospitality of its people. There is no need for comparisons between the last dictatorship in Europe - Belarus and Azerbaijan which is a key partner of EU.

    By :
    edi
    - Posted on :
    21/06/2012
  • The success of Armenian forces in defending Artsakh from Azeri aggression and liberating most of the land had nothing to do with God. Let's not lie to ourselves and assume that an invisible man keeps ignoring our requests until one day, he feels generous enough to grant one. The successes we've had is due to our unity and the dedication of the soldiers, who were fighting for the lives of their families, the land of their ancestors, and ultimately, for their own future. If this god you speak of was so generous, we wouldn't have a sliver of ancient territory that we're still fighting for. We were Armenian before we were Christian, and as pagans we still had a national identity. Look at all the other Christian people within the Byzantine empire that got absorbed into the Ottoman empire and disappeared. What protected us wasn't religion but the occasional moments of national unity and shared tragedy.

    it helps to recognize that most of the current violence is occurring at the internationally recognized boundaries between Armenian and Azerbaijan in the north (which is the reason that Azerbaijan must suffer sanctions and unilateral condemnation...not statements about how both sides have to practice restraint when our side is the one forced to retaliate to keep the current borders secure). Ultimately, when price of oil falls below $30 and greed of the international community becomes a slightly lesser factor, perhaps the tide will turn to the fair acceptance that the aggressor state is Azerbaijan and they corrupt regime along with Turkish support is the only thing keeping them from collapsing into anarchy. Never kid yourselves that modern Turkey, as far as state policy is concerned, is ever generous with Armenia. Time and time again, we are shown that this is not a culture we can trust. Some Turks are indeed aware of the truth, but the sad fact is that there are far too many who are ignorant, and a significant minority of fascists who knowingly wish the end of Armenians. Their cousins in Azerbaijan for the most part are unilateral in their wish for Armenia's destruction and the pan-Turkic dreams of dominance still holds.

    By :
    Armen
    - Posted on :
    21/06/2012
  • The key problem is the following: To make peace, you need the two sides. But one side, Azerbaijan, conditions EVERYTHING on the removal of troops. No confidence unless troops are removed. In Kazan, they argued the same way: Madrid Principles only if first the troops are removed (from Karabakh!!! Not from the surrounding districts). This is insane. If the troops are removed without the other parts of the package, there will be a vacuum of power and security. And this will be filled by either Azerbaijan or Iran or Russia - any of which means war.
    The hearing in the European Parliamnet yesterday has shown: experts said that Azerbaijan is buying offencive weapons until it can bulldoze the whole area (in 0-2 years). They said "the new war is inevitable, as Azerbaijan also refuses any diplomatic solution". Nobody disagreed. Nobody has a solution. Tannock is right!

    By :
    Michael
    - Posted on :
    21/06/2012
  • what a bunch of armenian jokers)
    theres plenty resources in russian, detailed accounts of what happened, reports about russians protecting turkish and kurdish villages during the war, reports about thousands and thousands innocent villagers murdered by armenian gangs during the time when turkish troops were fighting russian. Shame

    And Mr Tannock should educate himself a little before writing anything about the events in the area

    "I have been personally caught up in the Khojali story. In December 2000, while researching my book on the Karabakh conflict, Black Garden, I interviewed Serzh Sarkisian, the man who is now president of Armenia and was then Armenia’s minister of defense. When I asked him about Khojali, he said that “a lot was exaggerated” but he did not deny that Armenians had killed Azerbaijani civilians. He told me: “Before Khojalu, the Azerbaijanis thought that they were joking with us, they thought that the Armenians were people who could not raise their hand against the civilian population. We were able to break that [stereotype]. And that’s what happened"
    http://carnegieendowment.org/2012/02/24/president-interview-and-tragic-anniversary/9vpa

    http://www.biblioclub.ru/book/77699/

    http://www.scribd.com/doc/35113286/ARMENIA-SECRETS-OF-A-“CHRISTIAN”-TERRORIST-STATE

    By :
    Brick
    - Posted on :
    22/06/2012
  • Hey Brick, for one Khojaly, we have thousands of incidents by Azeris and Turks perpetrated against the Armenian people. Granted our military has made its mistakes, but you're equating one mistake with the thousands that have occurred to us over the last few hundred years. The raid of Azeri militias into Armenian villages, the raping and pillaging of the land that was our ancestors, and worst of all, the Genocide perpetrated by the Azeri cousins, of which Azerbaijan has yet to condemn. How dare Azeris talk to Armenians as though they're the victims of genocide, when they equate once incident to the thousands that occurred during a true genocide against the Armenian population. The ethnic term Azeri has only been relevant for a hundred years, before which as someone already pointed out, the people were called tatars or muslims. Azeri ethnic and nationalistic identity only goes back to the early 20th century. Any area where there were any Turkish speaking people Azeris consider their land. That's just silly. Azeris were just roving tribes of pastorialists who happened to settle when the Soviet Union forced a national identity. THis is the truth, regardless of how revisionist history shapes the views of the delusional masses.

    By :
    Armen
    - Posted on :
    22/06/2012
  • Interesting article. Well, I've got a question. Ceasefire is a deal like any other, right? How the hell it is unclear who broke the deal and who start shooting first? This should be kind of obvious from the first glance.

    Or the monitoring system sucks that much that nobody really cares to take normal evidence and go for example to UN court with supporting proof of breaking the deal which is called ceasefire?

    By :
    Tigra
    - Posted on :
    22/06/2012
  • Hey Armen,

    What is your solution? How far in your revisionist lunacy are you prepared to go?

    Let's assume you deported all turks (Azeris, Turkish, Turkmen, Uzbeks and others) back to Mongolia.

    What about natives in both Americas (North and South), New Zealand, Australia? Would not they want their land back? After all in Americas the white settlement is around 400 years old. In New Zealand and Australia is less than 200 years. Send them back to their respective countries, England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, Spain, Portugal?

    What about white Afrikaans speaking South Africans. Send them back to the Netherlands and the UK?

    And in doing so start third world war and wipe out entire human race.

    This is ridiculous. This is insane. This is stupid at best and utterly irresponsible and provocative at worst.

    Remember this. No matter what you cannot and will not be able to wind clock back. No one can. The Turks will always be in Anatolia and Caucasus. Yes we, TURKS are a permanent fixture in Middle East and Asia Minor whether you like it or not. It is a fact and you better to accept it. Here is the tip.

    Turn over the page. Get over it. Learn co-exist with us. Look into future. Get rid of your victim mentality. It drags you down. The world is not interested in your story. Look what happened in France with Sarkozy.

    Let's promote peace, dialogue and friendship. People living in Armenia and Azerbaijan do not want war. The current status-quo only serves interests of corrupt oligarchs and politicians in our countries. It also serves interests of Russia and Iran.

    It is all too easy dribbling lunacy in the comfort of your home in some Western country. It is an entirely different matter of taking up a gun and going to war. Think about your brethren.

    By :
    Jamal Ibrahimov
    - Posted on :
    23/06/2012
  • what about this?

    http://www.hrono.ru/dokum/194_dok/19471223azer.html

    Removal of azeri population from present day Armenian territory and resettlement of "foreign" armenians on these lands went on even during Soviet Era

    By :
    Brick
    - Posted on :
    24/06/2012
  • Jamal, there's nothing revisionist about my statements. They're all factually accurate. I'm not calling for ethnic cleansing or Genocide. You mentioned that I cannot wind the clock back down, and I don't intend on doing that. It's Azerbaijan who wants to wind the clock back to a time when the territories of Armenia were partitioned unjustly by Stalinist forces. The whole world can't turn the clock back to how things used to be, but we can prevent an occurrence of things based on history. You say that I should get rid of my victim mentality, well, it's easy to say it but when there are snipers shooting across my borders at this very moment, and Azeri politicians constantly calling for war...that I do not accept. Nor do I accept the oligarchy situation within my own borders. Ultimately, a just solution would be to stop all the fighting, accept the borders as they are now, with Karabagh as a separate entity, as the people of the region wished it to be, and then move on. If Azerbaijan can accept Karabagh as a sovereign state, I have no problems with working for a successful future. What history has shown however, is we shouldn't be the first to extend the hand of peace, not after 500 years of constantly doing just that only to realize we've been suckered again.

    By :
    Armen
    - Posted on :
    24/06/2012

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