Category: Southern Caucasus

  • Karabakh War ‘Less Likely After Georgia Debacle’

    Karabakh War ‘Less Likely After Georgia Debacle’

     

     

     

     

     

    By Emil Danielyan

    Georgia’s ill-fated bid to win back South Ossetia will discourage Azerbaijani from attempting to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict by force, President Serzh Sarkisian said on Thursday.

    In a clear reference to Azerbaijan, Sarkisian pointed out that Armenia has repeatedly raised the alarm over “some regional countries” embarking on an “unprecedented” military build-up to prevail in territorial disputes with their neighbors.

    “We believe that the military way of resolving conflicts is futile and that the events in South Ossetia will have a sobering impact on those who still have illusions about forcible solutions,” he told visiting senior defense officials from former Soviet republics making up the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).

    The officials were in Yerevan for a regular meeting of the governing body of the six-nation defense pact. Armenia assumed the CSTO’s rotating presidency during the meeting.

    Sarkisian for the first time publicly drew parallels between the conflicts in Karabakh and South Ossetia and criticized Georgia for its August 8 military assault on the breakaway territory, which triggered a harsh Russian retaliation. “The tragic events in South Ossetia showed that a military response to self-determination movements in the South Caucasus are fraught with serious military and geopolitical consequences,” he said.

    They also underscored the need to settle regional ethnic conflicts on the basis of the principle of nations’ self-determination, added Sarkisian.

  • Turkey and the Caucasus Waiting and watching

    Turkey and the Caucasus Waiting and watching

    Aug 21st 2008 | ANKARA AND YEREVAN
    From The Economist print edition

     

     

    A large NATO country ponders a bigger role in the Caucasus

    AP
    Erdogan plays the Georgian flag

    AT THE Hrazdan stadium in Yerevan, workers are furiously preparing for a special visitor: Turkey’s president, Abdullah Gul. Armenia’s president, Serzh Sarkisian, has invited Mr Gul to a football World Cup qualifier between Turkey and its traditional foe, Armenia, on September 6th.

    If he comes, Mr Gul may pave the way for a new era in the Caucasus. Turkey is the only NATO member in the area, and after the war in Georgia it would like a bigger role. It is the main outlet for westbound Azeri oil and gas and it controls the Bosporus and Dardanelles, through which Russia and other Black Sea countries ship most of their trade. And it has vocal if small minorities from all over the region, including Abkhaz and Ossetians.

    Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has just been to Moscow and Tbilisi to promote a “Caucasus Stability and Co-operation Platform”, a scheme that calls for new methods of crisis management and conflict resolution. The Russians and Georgians made a show of embracing the idea, as have Armenia and Azerbaijan, but few believe that it will go anywhere. That is chiefly because Turkey does not have formal ties with Armenia. In 1993 Turkey sealed its border (though not its air links) with its tiny neighbour after Armenia occupied a chunk of Azerbaijan in a war over Nagorno-Karabakh. But the war in Georgia raises new questions over the wisdom of maintaining a frozen border.

     

    Landlocked and poor, Armenia looks highly vulnerable. Most of its fuel and much of its grain comes through Georgia’s Black Sea ports, which have been paralysed by the war. Russia blew up a key rail bridge this week, wrecking Georgia’s main rail network that also runs to Armenia and Azerbaijan. This disrupted Azerbaijan’s oil exports, already hit by an explosion earlier this month in the Turkish part of the pipeline from Baku to Ceyhan, in Turkey.

    “All of this should point in one direction,” says a Western diplomat in Yerevan: “peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan.” Reconciliation with Armenia would give Azerbaijan an alternative export route for its oil and Armenia the promise of a new lifeline via Turkey. Some Armenians gloat that Russia’s invasion of Georgia kyboshes the chances of Azerbaijan ever retaking Nagorno-Karabakh by force, though others say the two cases are quite different. Russia is not contiguous with Nagorno-Karabakh, nor does it have “peacekeepers” or nationals there.

    Even before the Georgian war, Turkey seemed to understand that isolating Armenia is not making it give up the parts of Azerbaijan that it occupies outside Nagorno-Karabakh. But talking to it might. Indeed, that is what Turkish and Armenian diplomats have secretly done for some months, until news of the talks leaked (probably from an angry Azerbaijan).

    Turkey’s ethnic and religious ties with its Azeri cousins have long weighed heavily in its Caucasus policy. But there is a new worry that a resolution calling the mass slaughter of Armenians by the Ottoman Turks in the 1915 genocide may be passed by America’s Congress after this November’s American elections. This would wreck Turkey’s relations with the United States. If Turkey and Armenia could only become friendlier beforehand, the resolution might then be struck down for good.

    In exchange for better relations, Turkey wants Armenia to stop backing a campaign by its diaspora for genocide recognition and allow a commission of historians to establish “the truth”. Mr Sarkisian has hinted that he is open to this idea, triggering howls of treason from the opposition. The biggest obstacle remains Azerbaijan and its allies in the Turkish army. Mr Erdogan was expected to try to square Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliev, in a visit to Baku this week. Should he fail, Mr Gul may not attend the football match—and a chance for reconciliation may be lost.

  • Nakhchivan: A People’s Heritage, A Pepople’s Pride And A Home Of Beauty

    Nakhchivan: A People’s Heritage, A Pepople’s Pride And A Home Of Beauty

    By Nick Nwolisa, Source: en.iepf-ngo.org

    I visited the Autonomous Republic of Nakhchivan for the first time courtesy of an invitation from a dear friend – Elmira. I made the trip with my wife Lala and our 5 months old son Joel. It was to be my first time to this part of Azerbaijan and same for my wife. The journey of about 1 hour from Baku to Nakhchivan was a smooth fly; from an aerial view, it reveals how on a very fast rate the Azerbaijan capital Baku is developing with a great number of high rising buildings and good road networking. Descending from the plane on arrival in Nakhchivan, we were greeted with the purest serenity of athmosphere; my wife observed how very pure the atmospheric air felt in Nakhchivan as compared to the congested capital Baku. (more…)

  • Dashnaks Vow Protests Against Gul’s Visit

    Dashnaks Vow Protests Against Gul’s Visit

     

     

     

     

     

    By Anush Martirosian

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul will face street protests if he accepts his Armenian counterpart’s invitation to visit Yerevan and watch the upcoming match between the national football teams of the two countries, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) reiterated on Thursday.

    President Serzh Sarkisian extended the invitation to Gul earlier this summer to underscore his desire to improve Armenia’s historically strained relations with Turkey. Ankara offered to engage in a “dialogue” with Yerevan shortly after he took office in April.

    Dashnaktsutyun, which is represented in Sarkisian’s coalition cabinet and has traditionally favored a harder line on Turkey, makes no secret of its disapproval of the invitation. Aghvan Vartanian, a leader of the nationalist party, reaffirmed its plans to stage demonstrations against what would be the first-ever visit to Armenia by a Turkish head of state.

    “If President Gul visits Armenia to watch the game, there will be meetings, protests and calls against Turkey,” Vartanian told a news conference. “But that will not be organized only by Dashnaktsutyun.”

    “We have problems with Turkey and solutions to those problems relate to the future, rather than the past,” he said.

    Vartanian made clear that Sarkisian can not force Dashnaktsutyun to reconsider its plans. “Dashnaktsutyun has always been an independent political force and has expressed its positions on various issues regardless of what others will think,” he said.

    Dashnaktsutyun leaders earlier expressed concern about Sarkisian’s stated readiness to accept, in principle, Turkey’s proposal to form a commission of Turkish and Armenian historians that would jointly examine the mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. They said Turkish recognition of the massacres as genocide is a necessary condition for normalizing bilateral ties.

  • Turkey’s top national security body discusses Caucasus union

    Turkey’s top national security body discusses Caucasus union

    Turkey’s National Security Council (MGK) discussed Thursday the recent situation in the Caucasus after the rise in tension in the region had forced a change in the agenda. New developments in Turkey-Armenia relations were also being discussed. (UPDATED)

    MGK met in Istanbul on Thursday. Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan briefed the council on his recent visits to Russia, Georgia and Azerbaijan, as well as the government’s plans to hold contacts with Armenia on its proposal for forming a Caucasian union.  

    Foreign Minister Ali Babacan informed the council on the Tuesday’s extraordinary NATO meeting in Brussels.  

    The start of the comprehensive talks to end the 44-year division of Cyprus was expected to top the council’s agenda. However the clashes between Russia and Georgia have forced the MGK to change its agenda. The reunification talks in Cyprus would start on Sept. 3. MGK said in its post-meeting statement that the cooperation with Northern Cyprus would continue “in a highly sensitive manner” during the negotiations. 

    The third item on the MGK agenda includes Iraq and Turkey’s fight against PKK terrorism. The council reiterated its commitment in fighting against PKK terrorism. 

    Under this topic, the status of Kirkuk was also discussed in the meeting.  

    TENSION IN CAUCASUS

    Clashes erupted in Caucasus on Aug. 8 when Georgian forces launched an operation to regain control in the breakaway region of South Ossetia. Russia’s harsh military response intensified the clashes and the conflict spread wide into the other breakaway regions in Georgia. 

    Russia and Georgia had signed the peace deal and Moscow vowed to withdraw its troops by Friday. Russia says there could be no talk of territorial integrity of Georgia. 

    The conflict had proved that the political landscape in the region would change. Turkey faces a tough task in ensuring a balance policy for the neighboring region between pro-West Georgia and its energy partner Russia. 

    Turkey had proposed the formation of a Caucasian union to strengthen economic ties between the countries in the region to contribute to the peaceful solution of the problems. 

    Erdogan had visited Georgia, Russia and Azerbaijan, and all of them extended their support to the idea. Turkey also would hold talks with Armenia, a country it does not have diplomatic relations, an attempt welcomed by Yerevan.  

    The new era between Turkey-Armenia relations is expected to be discussed at the MGK meeting. Turkey relaxed its air space quota for Armenia following the Caucasus crisis after Turkish and Armenian diplomats held a couple of rounds of secret talks. 

    President Abdullah Gul was expected to bring up the Armenian invitation to watch a football game between the two countries’ national teams in Yerevan on Sept. 6, however there was no reference to this subject in the post-meeting statement. Gul is yet to decide whether to accept the invitation or not. 

    Thursday’s MGK meeting was the last for the retiring Chief of Staff Gen. Yasar Buyukanit, who would be replaced by Land Forces Commander Ilker Basbug, on Aug. 30.

    Source : Hurriyet

  • CONF.- Azerbaijan-Turkey-US Relationship in Eurasia, Baku, Sept. 17-18

    CONF.- Azerbaijan-Turkey-US Relationship in Eurasia, Baku, Sept. 17-18

    Posted by: Louette Ragusa <atib_projectsadvisor@mac.com>

    Azerbaijan-Turkey-US Relationship in Eurasia: Georgia from the Caucasus,
    Kazakhstan from Central Asia

    Baku, Azerbaijan, September 17-18, 2008

    Azerbaijan Turkey Business Association (ATIB) is one of the most active Business
    Associations in the Region dedicated to furthering economic, social and cultural
    relations between Azerbaijan and Turkey and then between Azerbaijan and other
    countries. ATIB organized the first of its kind trilateral international
    conference entitled “The Azerbaijan-Turkey-US relationship and its Importance
    for Eurasia” in Washington, D.C. December 10, 2007.

    The 2nd Annual International Conference “Azerbaijan-Turkey-US Relationship in
    Eurasia, Georgia from the Caucasus, Kazakhstan from Central Asia,” will be held
    on September 17-18, 2007, we will discuss the cooperative roles of all fives
    countries in furthering the development of Eurasia.

    The conference will bring together representatives from policy realms, academic
    fields, the business community, civil society and members from the government
    of all five countries in an effort to continue to define the importance of the
    trilateral relationship of the initial three countries and the two other
    important players in the region. The conference will discuss:

    Day One:
    * Eurasian Geopolitics: Regional Security
    * Eurasian Geo-economic: Regional Economic Development and Cooperation

    Day Two:
    * Eurasian Geopolitics: Energy Security and
    * Eurasian Geo-economics: Entrepreneurship & Innovation

    The conference is extended to two days so that the panels may be able to
    elaborate on each area of discussion with an extended Q & A Session. These
    panels are intended to be highly interactive where panelists and moderators
    will not deliver speeches from a podium, but will instead be seated around a
    discussion table. This is designed to stimulate open and honest discussion with
    all participants.

    For more information please visit: www.atus.az

    Email: office@atib.az / atib_projectsadvisor@mac.com

    Louette Ragusa
    International Project Advisor
    Azerbaycan-Türkiye Business Association
    Istiglaliyat St. 21 5th Floor Baku AZ 1066 Azerbaijan
    Tel 994 12 449 8882
    Fax 994 12 449 8884
    Cell 994 50 255 0535
    email atib_projectsadvisor@mac.com; lragusa67@mac.com

    US Cell number: 985 869 3012