Will Moscow Lead a Historic Reconciliation Between Turkey and Armenia?

Modern Diplomacy
Dec 7 2020
 
 
 
 

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 Dr.Basel Haj Jasem

Russia managed to stop the second Karabakh war after its mediation in completing a historic agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan. After completing the full implementation of the terms of the agreement (among them are “land swaps” or land passages), Moscow will control transportation between Armenia and part of the Karabakh enclave across the territory of Azerbaijan and between Azerbaijan, as well as the enclave of the Azerbaijani Nakhchivan region through the territory of Armenia. Nonetheless, this part of the agreement, in particular, remains incomplete, with the continued closure of the land borders between Armenia and Turkey.

Nikol Pashinyan, Prime Minister of Armenia, believes that abolishing the ban on transport links will completely change the logic of development in the region. In an interview with the Russian TASS agency, he said, commenting on the tripartite statement of agreement, “This is a very important point, and I believe that in the near future we should focus on this point, because when we talk about economic stability not only in Armenia but in the entire region, we must take concrete steps.”

We find that Moscow is currently able to revive the diplomatic agreements which were negotiated between Turkey and Armenia in 2009. Especially the opening of the land borders between the two neighboring countries, with the implementation of many of the terms of the agreement sponsored by Russia between Baku and Yerevan, and its control of the Nakhchivan and Lachin strategic routes. One of the main obstacles to implementing previously signed protocols between Ankara and Yerevan has been removed.

It cannot be ignored how the opening of the land borders will help improve the economic situation, particularly in Armenia and their access to the outside world, and it will also benefit the Turkish regions bordering Armenia, where local people have long wanted to strengthen ties to boost their local economies.

Ankara surprised Baku at the end of 2009 by announcing the beginning of normalization with Armenia, the archenemy of Azerbaijan and Turkey. Azerbaijan denounced that step at that time and considered that this would lead to an increase in tension in the South Caucasus if it were not accompanied by a solution to the crisis in the Nagorno-Karabakh region and the occupied Azerbaijani territories from the Armenian side.

Reviving the Turkish-Armenian process of normalization will have an impact not only on foreign policy and its regional elements for both Turkey and Armenia, but in a new geopolitical equation by all standards. Turkish-Armenian relations outside the borders are more complicated, where most of the Armenian diaspora’s lobbies reject and oppose normalization. This process must be accompanied by dealing with the root causes of the tensions, which should hopefully lead to increased trust between the countries.

The common border between Armenia and Turkey extends 330 km, and diplomatic relations between the two countries have not yet been established. The complex relations between the two neighboring countries are caused by many reasons. The most prominent are the demands of Ankara for Yerevan to settle the conflict with Azerbaijan, do research on the events of 1915 in the archives of other countries in addition to the Turkish and Armenian archives, establish a joint historical committee that includes Turkish and Armenian historians and international experts. Solving the issue through the perspective of “fair memory,” which means, in short, abandoning the one-sided view of history, each side understands what the other has lived and mutual respect for each party’s past memory.

Today it is difficult to believe that Washington and western capitals can mediate the rest of the region’s issues after 28 years of failed experience in settling the Azerbaijani and Armenian conflict. This is related to many factors, as Washington’s tendency towards Armenia comes largely through the desire to pressure Turkey. No less important is the issue of America-Turkey disputes in the Middle East. These were exacerbated after 2013 and the Syrian wars through the support of the administration of former President Barack Obama, the Syrian extension of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) (classified on terrorist lists in NATO and several regional countries), through this threatening the interests of a member state of NATO, in addition to the issue of extradition of Fethullah Gülen residing in the United States. At the same time, Armenia’s cooperation with Russia and Iran is seen as a serious challenge to the United States’ position in the Caucasus.

It is also difficult to view the French diplomatic move on the Caucasus conflict only through the influence of the Armenian lobby in France. Here we notice Macron opposing Ankara in the Mediterranean, as well as the French position on the Turkish-Greek conflict, the complex Cyprus issue, the confrontation in Libya and Paris’ support for separatist terrorism in the Syrian Arab Republic, which threatens the territorial integrity of the Syrian Arab Republic and later will threaten Turkey and other countries, including Russia in the southern and northern Caucasus.

Finally, after Moscow concluded an agreement to end the battles between Azerbaijan and Armenia with a new map of the powers of control different from those that followed the first Karabakh war, it is true that we are not talking about the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, but it also appears to be incomplete, where the land blockage is continuing on the Turkish borders of Armenia. The question is whether Russia has an interest today in completing what it started in Karabakh and opening a new page in relations between Turkey and Armenia? After the second Karabakh war revealed, among many other things, that Armenia’s interests are with Moscow and Ankara, not with Washington and Paris.

From our partner RIAC

 
 

First flight from Russia to Nagorno Karabakh can take place this year – Ria Novosti

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 19:45, 4 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 4, ARMENPRESS. The Republic of Artsakh and the Russian leadership are discussing the issue of opening air communications and the first flight from Russia to the Stepanakert airport can take place in December, ARMENPRESS reports, Ria Novosti informs, citing its sources in Artsakh's administration.

''Now both sides are making efforts for that to happen'', the source told, answering the question if it’s possible that flights at Stepanakert airport restore until the end of the year.

He added that flights for passengers will also take place at the airport.

Human Rights Watch Accuses Azerbaijan of Abusing Armenian POWs

Voice of America
Dec 3 2020
By VOA News
Updated 11:22 AM

Human Rights Watch accused Azerbaijani forces Wednesday of brutalizing some Armenian troops captured in the conflict over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Acts of mistreatment were captured on video and circulated on social media over the past two months, HRW said. Azerbaijan says it will investigate.

The rights group said in a statement the videos show “Azerbaijani captors variously slapping, kicking, and prodding Armenian POWs” and forcing them to “kiss the Azerbaijani flag,” praise Azerbaijan’s president, swear at Armenia’s prime minister “and declare that Nagorno-Karabakh is Azerbaijan.”

HRW official Hugh Williamson said humanitarian law requires that POWs be protected and called on Azerbaijani authorities to immediately end the inhumane treatment.

The number of POWs in custody is unknown but HRW, citing Armenian officials, estimated the number is in the “dozens.”

Ethnic Armenian soldiers sit in a military truck on a road during the withdrawal of troops from the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh, Nov. 19, 2020.

Hikmat Hajiyev, assistant to the president of Azerbaijan, told PBS Newshour that all war crimes committed by Azerbaijani soldiers will be investigated: "We do regret such kind of incidents happened…it is unjustifiable, in no way it can be justified…All of these videos are going to be investigated. And who are guilty, of course, will be brought to justice."

The HRW report acknowledged that some of the prisoners depicted in the videos have since communicated with their families and said they are being treated well, but it said there remain serious grounds for concern about their safety and well-being.

HRW also said Armenia has captured Azerbaijani troops and that it is investigating videos on social media that apparently show Azerbaijani POWs being abused.

Armenia signed a Russian-brokered deal with Azerbaijan on Nov. 9 after six weeks of intense fighting.

The fighting between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted Sept. 27, marking the biggest escalation of the decades-old conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region since a 1994 cease-fire.

The predominantly ethnic Armenian territory declared its independence from Azerbaijan in 1991 during the collapse of the Soviet Union, sparking a war that claimed the lives of as many as 30,000 people before a 1994 cease-fire. That independence, however, is not internationally recognized.

Is This the End of Azerbaijan?

The National Interest
Nov 30 2020
 
 
 
Azeris may celebrate November 10 as the date of their victory over Armenia in the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War but, when the heady days of celebration recede, they may just realize it marks the beginning of the end to true Azeri independence.
 
by Michael Rubin
 
When Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan accepted a ceasefire on Nov. 10, 2020, Azerbaijan president Ilham Aliyev had reason to feel triumphant. He reversed the territorial losses suffered by his father, Azerbaijan’s former president, at the end of the first Nagorno-Karabakh War. He had successfully fooled the United States by committing to diplomacy in exchange for cash and military aid only to then launch a surprise attack to achieve militarily far more than he might have diplomatically. He also cemented his own power: By transforming himself into an indispensable ally for Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Russian president Vladimir Putin, he may calculate that they will preserve his power in Azerbaijan should there be any significant unrest, much as Putin has spared no effort to protect Russian interests by propping up Syrian president Bashar al-Assad.
 
Armenia lost the war and Aliyev won. But Azerbaijan also lost. Azerbaijani flags may fly over Shusha, also known among Armenians as Shushi, and Kalbajar, but Aliyev’s victory comes at the expense of Azerbaijani independence. In order to cement personal power and the likely guarantee that his wife and son will succeed him, Aliyev has sold out Azerbaijani sovereignty.  
 
Russian troops are now in Azerbaijan. In both theory and reality, they are enforcing a ceasefire between Azerbaijan and Armenia, but the re-insertion of Russian forces in the region has also been Putin’s longstanding goal as step-by-step he appears to return all former Soviet states to his fold. Perhaps Aliyev felt confident accepting Russian troops because they cemented the gains he and Turkish forces achieved during the war, but Aliyev forgot that while Russian troops are quick to enter, they seldom exit.
 
The Turks, too, are unlikely to leave Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan’s war aim was Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding Azeri districts, which Armenia had taken in the 1988—1994 war. But Turkey’s motivation was different. Erdogan and the military’s intellectual drivers like Doğu Perinçek have long embraced pan-Turkic ambitions to link Turkey culturally, economically, and politically with Azerbaijan and Turkic states of Central Asia. Driving from Ankara’s Esenboğa Airport into town, visitors pass a roadside mural decorated with the flags of Turkic republics from Azerbaijan to East Turkestan, as pro-independence Chinese Uighurs call it. Armenia, however, is an impediment to Erdoğan’s grand ambitions as it (and Georgia) physically separate Turkey from the Turkic republics. The ceasefire agreement not only reportedly gave Turkey a corridor through Armenian territory (although the mechanisms of that road remains unclear), but Turkey will also send troops to a joint Turkish-Russian monitoring center. Turkish special forces are in Baku, and Turkish F-16 jets remain stationed at Azerbaijani bases. Aliyev may look at Erdoğan as a friend but Erdoğan sees Aliyev as the means to an end.  
 
Finally, there are the Syrian mercenaries. Turkey facilitated their transport into Azerbaijan, and Aliyev welcomed their contribution. Now, however, it is unlikely Aliyev has the ability to force their exit, even if he wanted to do so. Just as Turkey was able to direct the mercenaries’ fire against Armenians, they could just as easily utilize them to target any Azeris who oppose Turkey’s aims.
 
 
Azerbaijan first won independence in 1918, but that lasted a mere twenty-three months as Russian forces moved in on Azerbaijan’s oil-rich territory. The dissolution of the Soviet Union gave Azerbaijan a second chance. The Supreme Council of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic declared Azerbaijan’s independence on Oct. 18, 1991, a move subsequently confirmed by referendum. While this period of independence has lasted considerably longer, the end result is the same: foreign troops on Azeri territory answering not to Baku but rather to the Kremlin and the Ak Saray. Azeris may celebrate Nov. 10 as the date of their victory over Armenia in the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War but, when the heady days of celebration recede, they may just realize it marks the beginning of the end to true Azeri independence and the beginning of the country’s subordination to Russian and Turkish suzerainty.  
 
Michael Rubin is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and a frequent author for the National Interest.
 
 
 
 

MP Samsonyan applies to OSCE Parliamentary Assembly over case of Armenian POWs

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 20:22, 1 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. Member of Parliament from the opposition Bright Armenia faction Ani Samsonyan has applied to Chair of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly’s Third Committee on Democracy, Human Rights and Humanitarian Issues Kyriakos Hadjiyianni over the case of Armenian servicemen who are currently in the Azerbaijani captivity.

“As a member of the Armenian delegation to the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly I have applied to Chair of the Assembly’s Third Committee on Democracy, Human Rights and Humanitarian Issues Kyriakos Hadjiyianni over the issue of our captives”, the lawmaker said on social media, adding that she has also provided the videos showing inhuman treatment against the Armenian POWs.

She expressed hope that the Committee chaired by a Cyprus colleague will examine the issue.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia declares Qarabag FK press officer Nurlan Ibrahimov wanted

Pubic Radio of Armenia
Nov 27 2020

Former press officer of the Azerbaijani club Qarabag FK Nurlan Ibrahimov has been declared wanted, Armenia’s Investigative Committee reports.

The Committee has submitted a motion to the Court of First Instance of Yerevan to use detention as a pretrial measure against him.

Ibrahimov is charged with inciting national, racial or religious hatred (Article 226 of RA Criminal Code), inciting direct and public genocide (Point 1 of the Part 2 of the Article 393.1 of RA Criminal Code), justifying and endorsing genocide and other crimes against peace and security of humanity (Article 373.1 of RA Criminal Code).

On November 26 UEFA banned him from any football-related activity for life an has asked FIFA to extend worldwide the life ban. It will also fine Qarabağ FK €100,000.


CivilNet: Armenia’s Economy Declines Amid War and Pandemic

CIVILNET.AM

22:08

Armenia's economic activity index presented by the country's Statistical Committee shows declines in many sectors compared to the same months in the previous year.

– Armenia's overall economic activity in October 2020 has seen an 8.1% decline compared to October 2019. Economic activity in September 2020 declined by 3% compared to the same month of the previous year.

– Sales and services sector has decreased by 21% this year.

– Industrial production declined by 3%.

– Foreign trade decreased by 19%, with imports decreasing by 26%.

– The only sector that has not seen a decline is the construction sector with a 0.3% increase.

Russia interested in strengthening cooperation with ICRC in Nagorno Karabakh – Lavrov

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 13:32,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has stated that Russia is interested in strengthening the mutual cooperation with the International Committee of Red Cross (ICRC) in Nagorno Karabakh, reports TASS.

“We have received an additional field for mutual partnership, I mean Nagorno Karabakh. A week ago a trilateral statement has been signed by the leaders of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan. A Russian peacekeeping contingent is being deployed there, and we know how active and how long the ICRC has been working in that region. We are interested in strengthening that cooperation which is already developing actively”, Lavrov said at a meeting with ICRC President Peter Maurer.

The Russian FM reminded that Russia and the ICRC are closely cooperating in different regions. “Our contacts are of permanent nature and there are directions for joint work because, unfortunately, the number of humanitarian crises, conflicts is not decreasing in the world”, Lavrov noted.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenian Church strongly condemns vandalization of Ghazanchetsots Church in Shushi by Azerbaijanis

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 19:52,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 14, ARMENPRESS. The Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin (Armenian Church) issued a statement, strongly condemning the vandalization of Holy Savior Cathedral of Ghazanchetsots in Shushi city of Artsakh by Azerbaijanis, ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the Mother See.

''We learned with sorrow that following the joint declaration on ceasefire signed between the Armenian, Russian and Azerbaijani leaders overnight November 10, the Azerbaijanis who entered Artsakh's Shushi city vandalized Holy Savior Cathedral of Ghazanchetsots, leaving their trace on the external and internal walls of the Cathedral.

We strongly condemn the incident, assessing it as an overt act of vandalism and intolerance. Azerbaijan should not be allowed to continue its policy of cultural genocide with Turkish support, which for decades has been carried out in Azerbaijan and Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic of Azerbaijan.

At the same time we call on the international community and the inter-religious and inter-church organizations to voice about that and take appropriate steps to stop such barbaric acts by Azerbaijani authorities in Artsakh against religious-cultural monuments and demonstrations of anti-Armenian moods’', reads the statement.