March 10 2021
10/03/2021 Conflicts International Affairs
David Davidian
This article, more-than-a-tweet length, attempts to explain the cause and effect on Armenia of the Azerbaijani offensive against the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh and outlying areas. Identifying the actual topic is a challenge since what transpired last fall in the southern Caucasus has multiple overtones; a US/NATO-Russia rivalry, Turkish-Russian rivalry-cooperation, an Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, staging a Turkish-Iranian conflict, or all of these.
David Davidian
None of us have official government documents, if any exist, nor do we know covert plans and agreements of the players. Thus, we will make our assessments using facts, some a generation old, some the results and effects of events during the past three years, and hard facts on the ground. For the sake of time, we will spare the reader roadmaps used to draw formal hypotheses but will adhere to accepted tenets. Just as there are competing narratives for why the US dropped atomic bombs on Japan, the same is true for the case of the war on Armenia. As such, we state facts, submit hypotheses and ask the hard questions in an attempt to make sense of events in the southern Caucasus region leading up to September 28, 2020, the Azerbaijani offensive, Armenia’s submission, and the end game.
Readers can peruse the Internet and review Armenia’s history and its people from its existence as an ancient empire to a Soviet republic. The decapitating effect of the Turkish genocide of the Armenians during WWI was the most significant social discontinuity in the Armenians’ history, worse than what occurred during the Mongol invasions. Armenians barely had enough critical mass to become a constituent Soviet republic in December 1936. Previously, Armenian, Azerbaijani, and Georgian peoples were constituent members of the Transcaucasian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic, each a federated member. We will pick up on selected events occurring since the fall of the Soviet Union as such incidents directly affect events today. Azerbaijanis lived in Armenia, Armenians lived in Azerbaijan, Georgians generally resided in Georgia. The largest concentration of Armenians in what became the Azerbaijan Republic lived in the Azerbaijani capital of Baku and Nagorno-Karabakh. As the disintegration of the Soviet Union proceeded, rather crude forms of nationalism began to surface. In Georgia, it was Georgia for the Georgians! Armenians and Azerbaijanis exchanged populations with each other. Many Armenians from Baku escaped pogroms with just the clothes on their backs to Russia or as refugees to Western countries. By 1990 fighting between Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, volunteers from Armenia, and the Azerbaijani army became fierce. By May of 1994, an armistice effectively allowed Armenians to exercise sovereignty over Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding regions. Azerbaijan has always claimed Nagorno-Karabakh as an internationally accepted part of the Azerbaijani state.
Armenia’s political scene was characterized by its first president Levon Ter-Petrosyan (LTP), promulgating a philosophy that if a state doesn’t overtly appear militaristic it will not appear to be a threat to its neighbors. While it is laudable that a country is unilaterally friends with its neighbors, such a strategy does not work in the real world. Security must never be subservient to an ideology. Further, during the reign of LTP, oligarchs were allowed to reign free and develop mainly in reaction to seventy years of Soviet rule. It is a “false dilemma” that if communism is evil, liberal democracy and capitalism are good. Worst of all, during first few years of Armenia’s independence, was the dismantling of Soviet military technology, science, and research and development (R&D). This was characterized by the wholesale dumping of the contents of factories and other facilities to neighboring countries like Iran and sold by the ton. This theft was done without any plan or vetting. Privatization vouchers were purchased from an unsuspecting population en masse by the neo-oligarchs. Armenia was emptied of technology and equipment that could have been used in its self-defense or nascent defense industry. Human capital was equally neglected as the disappearance of industries and emigration grew. Until this time, Soviet Armenia’s contribution to Soviet theoretical sciences, technologies, spacecraft control, and IT infrastructure had been larger per capita than most Soviet republics.
Armenia’s current Prime Minister, Nikol Pashinyan, is a disciple of LTP. According to LTP, peace with Azerbaijan is “the main prerequisite for Armenia’s and Karabakh’s security, economic development and improved demographic situation.” LTP’s demagoguery never stated upon whose terms such peace was/is based. Pashinyan’s views include the internationalization of the very southern parts of Armenia.
Armenian’s potential continued to be squandered by every successive government. What passed as Armenian diplomacy was essentially business-related, not policy-related. The demands of the 21st Century and Armenia’s precarious geopolitical location demanded a grand strategy centered on security, not in fulfilling oligarchic egos, as was the case. The Armenian Diaspora was actively shunned based on the widespread attitude that the Diaspora was unwanted competition. This unwritten policy went so far as to question who should be considered a “true” Armenian. This policy parallels that of how Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan were viewed and treated. It was not only the far-flung Armenian Diaspora that was vilified. Armenian refugees from Baku were some of the most highly trained Armenians in the region. Armenians were looked down upon in Azerbaijan, yet these Armenians held professional positions within a repressive environment – an achievement in its own right. It is inexcusable to have demolished such human capital because these Russian-speaking “Baku mafia” refugees would be competing with emerging local Armenian monopolies.
Excuses were always generated as to why such human capital could not be integrated into Armenian society and state-building. The situation in Armenia was like that of Italy before Garibaldi. Given that national security was absent from the public agenda, Armenia plodded along as if it were a Luxembourg in an otherwise tame Europe. The deficiency of a national grand strategy, centered around security, ultimately allowed Azerbaijan to capture much of Nagorno-Karabakh and isolate what remains from Armenia proper. Moreover, this Azerbaijan initiative is not finished, as we shall hypothesize.
Armenia continued along on a status-quo policy with regards to a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. The Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh exercised sovereignty over their affairs, while Azerbaijan claimed this region based on internationally recognized borders as a Soviet state. It made little difference what government was in power since Armenia’s independence for no serious attempts at an indigenous response were made in reply to the increase in Azerbaijan’s procurement of high-technology military equipment, nor regarding their training and military alliance with Turkey. For well over a decade, Turkey was on the path of widening its influence through both soft and hard power. In contrast, for Armenia, buying or otherwise procuring Russian arms was not a policy, but a directive. Since the early 2000s, Turkey became NATO’s attack dog, eventually nipping at Syria’s Assad’s ankles, playing both friend and foe to Russia, and acting as a potential catalyst in the dismantling of the Iranian regime.
The latest government in Armenia was ushered in under a platform of eliminating Armenia’s oligarchs and corruption. Pashinyan’s platform might have been a trendy slogan, but little or nothing was done to retrieve the claimed billions of dollars usurped from Armenia by its own corrupt elements. In fact, Pashinyan’s government’s modus operandi was to go after those entities, either in government or private domains, that had any affiliation with the previous PM, Serge Sargsyan. No attempts were made to ascertain the culpability or competency of those dismissed from imortant positions. Even the game of chess was frowned upon since Sargsyan was a chess advocate. What slowly became clear was that Pashinyan was placing incompetent people in positions of power. While these new appointees may have been otherwise ordinary, well-meaning people, most lacked experience. The Ministries of Education, Health, and Civil Aviation were among those whose inexperience was most evident. In time, Pashinyan began a push to unseat jurists on the Constitutional Court, replacing them with his preferences. At the time, this latter effort of Pashinyan seemed out of place considering all the other issues facing Armenia. Perhaps Pashinyan expected constitutional battles.
The strategic dismissals and appointments ordered by the Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan reached a peak about a year ago. On September 16, 2019, the following two individuals were dismissed.
– National Security Service Chief Artur Vanetsyan
– Chief of Police ValeryOsipyan
In February 2020, the following Major Generals were dismissed:
– Military Police Chief Artur Baghdasaryan
– Army’s Personnel Department Chief Aleksan Aleksanyan
The following announcement was made in June 2020:
– Lieutenant General Onik Gasparyan was appointed as Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces
– Colonel Argishti Kyaramyan was appointed Director of the National Security Service.
– Colonel Vahe Ghazaryan was appointed Chief of Police.
Interestingly, appointing inexperienced individuals to government positions makes it easier for transgressions to take place. It is not as if the Armenian Constitution has multiple levels of checks and balances. When experienced high-ranking military personnel are replaced, with them go years of experience. However, while these dismissals/appointments could be above suspicion, all were performed without transparency. Along such lines, one may ask many questions: Why did Armenia purchase Russian SU-30M military jets without military armaments?
It has been theorized that without losing a “fight,” the Armenian public would never stand for any Armenian government or that of Nagorno-Karabakh to cede land to Azerbaijan. Does this mean that Pashinyan knew the outcome of Fall 2020’s Second Karabakh War in advance? It might. It is not out of the question considering Pashinyan has done nothing to reduce tension within Armenia since the November 9, 2020 “Capitulation.” In stark contrast, he has exacerbated a tenuous situation in Armenia. A few examples include his attempt at firing Onik Gasparyan, Chief of the General Staff less than a month ago; his claim that Armenian-purchased Russian Iskander missles are ineffective military weapons; and his inflammatory public processions surrounded by supporters bussed in from other cities. When scores of high-ranking Armenian military officers demanded he step down, Pashinyan claimed an army coup d’etat was taking place. There was no coup d’etat. When Pashinyan used the term coup d-etat, the Turkish FM came to Pashinyan’s defense. Simply stated, Turkey came to the defense of Armenia because Pashinyan must deliver on the November 9, 2020 “Capitulation.”
The most noteworthy occurrence during and after the Artsakh War is the lack of the required number of Armenian soldiers to secure borders and citizens, especially in the southern third of the country. It is southern Armenia that the Azerbaijani President Aliyev claims as Azerbaijan lands, regardless of being internationally recognized as Armenia. On March 8, 2021, Azerbaijani President Aliyev stated, “Armenia tries to prevent the execution of the Zangazur [the Azerbaijani term for this part of southern Armenia] corridor now. But it will not be able to achieve it. We will make them. We will achieve all our desires, just as we expelled them from our territories.” Other than a direct threat, Aliyev admits to past and future ethnic cleansing of Armenians. See Zangezur on the map below. We read reports daily about villagers who come face to face with Azerbaijani soldiers demanding Armenians relinquish land with no Armenian soldiers present. This lack of border protection is not arbitrary. That is, at a minimum, an army must protect borders. If the army isn’t present, either that army lacks manpower (which is not the case in Armenia), it lacks funding (doubtful if Pashinyan can bring out many hundreds of police to protect his political appearances), or somebody doesn’t want to place soldiers at border positions. The question many ask is why the lack of border security?
Azerbaijani Map showing southern Armenia as part of Greater Azerbaijan