BAKU: Turkey, Armenia And Azerbaijan: Where Next? – ANALYTICS

TURKEY, ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN: WHERE NEXT? – ANALYTICS

APA

Oct 19 2009
Azerbaijan

By Alexander Jackson, Caucasian Review of International Affairs
exclusively for APA

The signing of the Turkish-Armenian protocols in Geneva on October
10 was viewed as a success, with only the awkward matter of ratifying
the protocols in the parliaments preventing the opening of the ‘last
closed border in Europe’. There has been little consideration of the
implications of the protocol signing.

The Turkish-Armenian thaw has the potential to seriously disturb the
political dynamics of the South Caucasus. Both Armenian President Serzh
Sarkisian and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan have made
serious gambles on the thaw, and the consequences may be unpredictable.

President Sarkisian’s challenge is domestic. Although the diaspora
continue to oppose reconciliation, the more serious risk comes from
the political opposition: ex-President Levon Ter-Petrosian’s Armenian
National Congress (ANC), the nationalist Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (ARF), and the Heritage Party.

The opposition cannot challenge the ratification in parliament, since
the ruling coalition dominates the legislature. Any challenge would
have to be made, as so often in Armenian politics, on the streets.

Anything could happen in such a volatile context, and a violent
revolution is not unforeseeable if a cycle of escalation begins.

However, the government has calculated that the mutual distrust
between the three opposition parties will prevent them from unifying
to challenge the protocols. The ARF loathes Levon Ter-Petrosian,
who banned them in 1994 during his presidency: a speaker at a recent
ARF rally spent much of his speech attacking Mr Ter-Petrosian rather
than the government (RFE/RL, October 16). Both the ARF and Heritage
fear that Mr Ter-Petrosian’s opposition to the government is tactical.

Despite recent calls by the ANC for President Sarkisian to resign,
the other parties suspect that the ex-President supports the thaw
and simply seeks to gain power (Tert.am, October 14).

The ARF, apparently playing a long game, are not calling for the
President’s resignation – yet. They are calling for a popular movement
to develop, allying with Heritage, and are insisting that their
struggle will be fought through constitutional and legal means. This
seems to be a tactical move to prevent alienating ordinary Armenians
through revolutionary rhetoric.

Unless the ARF-Heritage movement can ally with the popular Mr
Ter-Petrosian, they will not be able to generate sufficient support
for a broad anti-government movement. Factional infighting will allow
the government to sit tight and push the protocols through parliament.

However, opposition to the protocols will grow as time passes –
and there is no guarantee that they will be ratified soon.

This is because of Turkey’s challenge: reconciling public statements
about the need for progress on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with
its clear desire to ratify the protocols. The ruling AKP party had
apparently gambled that they could force concessions from Armenia in
the run-up to the signing ceremony. The linkage of the Turkish-Armenian
thaw and progress on Nagorno-Karabakh had been explicitly made by
the Turkish government, which insisted that one could not take place
without the other (Today.az, October 12). But time is running out,
and there has been no agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Until an agreement is made, ratifying the protocols would be seen
by Azerbaijan, and by many Turks, as a serious betrayal. Intensive
lobbying by Azerbaijani political groups in Turkey is creating serious
momentum against ratification. President Sargsyan seems to be betting
that under the pressure from the West (US President Obama already
had a lengthy phone call with President Gul and sent an invitation
to Prime Minister Erdogan to visit US on Oct. 29, Today’s Zaman)
Turkey will be obliged to ratify the protocols regardless of progress
on Nagorno-Karabakh.

Azerbaijan is making its fury increasingly clear. An ominous warning
from the Foreign Ministry that the signing "calls into question
the architecture of regional peace and security" was followed by a
statement from President Aliyev that "the war is not over yet" and
that "no problem in the region – political, diplomatic, economic,
energy, transport – can be solved without Azerbaijan’s participation"
(APA, October 17).

The significance of this statement was made clear in the same cabinet
meeting, when President Aliyev launched a scathing attack on Turkey’s
"unacceptable" price demands for the sale and transit of Azerbaijan’s
gas (RFE/RL, October 17). He said that selling gas to Turkey at a
third of the market price was illogical, and threatened to prioritise
gas sales to Russia. Just days earlier, Azerbaijan signed a deal with
Russia’s Gazprom (UPI, October 16). The contract formalised agreements
made earlier in the year and which envisions the sale of 500 million
m3 of Azerbaijan’s gas to Gazprom in 2010.

Clearly, Baku is threatening to cease cooperating with Turkey on oil
and gas transit, crippling its plans to become a regional energy hub.

This could also be a fatal blow to the Nabucco project to bring
Eurasian gas to the heart of Europe. Bypassing Turkey, Azerbaijan
could send its gas to Russia, to Georgia’s Black Sea ports (and on
to Europe), or to Iran, as was contemplated by President Aliyev in
the same meeting. Any or all of these options would reduce the need
for Nabucco.

More significantly, they would reduce Azerbaijan’s ties to the West.

The Georgian option, the only route which would continue to link Baku
with Europe, is impractical and costly. Sending gas to either Russia
or Iran would tie Azerbaijan into a close relationship with those
states. In particular, Moscow would be eager to reassert influence
in the South Caucasus as its alliance with Yerevan loses focus. The
EU, and the US, would lose traction in Azerbaijan even as they gain
it in Armenia. For the purposes of energy security and geopolitics,
this would be a questionable trade.

The next few months will be fraught with difficulties, as regional
states attempt to untangle the Caucasian knot. If Turkey ratifies the
protocols without progress on Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan will almost
certainly suspend their alliance. Military tensions between Armenia
and Azerbaijan will rise. Nabucco will become even less likely and
Western influence in the Caspian region will decrease even further.

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