Russia's Interventions in Ethnic Conflicts
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Russia's Interventions in Ethnic Conflicts

The Case of Armenia and Azerbaijan

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eBook - ePub

Russia's Interventions in Ethnic Conflicts

The Case of Armenia and Azerbaijan

About this book

This book explores the thirty-year border conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, specifically around the former autonomous republic of Nagorno Karabakh, and shows how Russia is the only winner in this conflict: fighting on both sides, supplying arms to both sides, and acting as the arbiter between the two sides. The author looks at Armenia, Azerbaijan and the separatists from military, political, economic and diplomatic perspectives, and offers insights on how the fighting has influenced society, and vice versa. The book provides an update to the history of the war to include major fighting in 2020, and examines how Russia obtained three military bases and most economic assets in Armenia, while becoming Azerbaijan's major weapons supplier to the tune of six billion dollars. It shows how Russia has tried to sideline the internationally-supported Minsk negotiations in favor of Russia assuming the sole role of arbiter, and argues that even though Russia has submitted a number of ceasefire proposals, it does little to encourage the sides to implement them.

The book includes a discussion of international law, United Nations Resolutions, and rulings by the European Court of Human Rights.

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Information

Year
2020
Print ISBN
9783030595722
eBook ISBN
9783030595739
Ā© The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2021
J. J. CoyleRussia's Interventions in Ethnic Conflictshttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-59573-9_1
Begin Abstract

1. Roots of the Conflict

James J. Coyle1
(1)
Newport Beach, CA, USA
End Abstract

Geography

Inside the Republic of Azerbaijan is a wooded area of approximately 1700 square miles (4400 square kilometers) of jagged mountains and deep valleys. It is known as Nagorno-Karabakh, an interesting title as it mixes both the Russian and Turkish languages. ā€œNagornoā€ is Russian for ā€œmountainous,ā€ and ā€œKarabakhā€ is Turkish for ā€œBlack Garden.ā€ The name captures the nature of the area perfectly. The rich soil of this high garden allows trees to grow so strongly that the forests appear black against the sun.
Nagorno-Karabakh is not contiguous with any other country, surrounded by seven Azerbaijani provinces. The closest international border is the Azerbaijan-Armenia border, approximately 6 miles away across a strip of land known as the Lachin corridor. When the Soviet Union collapsed, there were approximately 200,000 residents there. These were divided between ethnic Armenians (140,000) and ethnic Azerbaijanis (60,000).1 There was also a small smattering of other ethnicities: Russians, Kurds, and Greeks. By contrast, the population of the seven surrounding provinces was almost 100% ethnic Azerbaijani. Within five years (1988–1993), the area became 100% ethnic Armenian as it was captured by Armenian forces. Today Nagorno-Karabakh holds approximately 145,000 inhabitants,2 and the seven surrounding provinces are a depopulated security perimeter. How this happened, and what steps are being taken because of this situation, is the subject of this study.
Azerbaijan itself is one of the three countries that make up the South Caucasus, along with Armenia and Georgia. Azerbaijan is slightly smaller than the state of Maine and is bounded by Russia to the north, Iran to the south, Armenia and Georgia to the west, and the Caspian Sea to the east. A tiny border of about 15 miles connects Turkey with Nakhichevan, an exclave of Azerbaijan separated from the main territory by Armenia.

Demographics

The population of Azerbaijan is mainly Azerbaijani Turkish, but some ethnic minorities—including Armenians—still live in the area under Azerbaijani control. A country of 10 million people, the 2009 census revealed the population to be 91% Azerbaijani, 2% Lezgin, 1.3% Armenian, 1.3% Russian, and numerous other nationalities.3
While Azerbaijani ancestry is mixed, the spoken language points to membership in the Oguz Turkish tribal confederation. This people originated in the Ural-Altay region and migrated west in the ninth thru twelfth centuries. The area had originally been occupied by the Khazar kingdom. In 965, a military treaty was concluded by the Oghuz and the Russian prince Svyatoslav that led to the destruction of the Khazar state, which had been a rival of ancient Rus.4 Other groups that may have added to the Azerbaijan ethnic mix are Albanian Caucasians and Iranians. These groups would have an even longer historical residency in Azerbaijan, assimilating into the newly-arrived Turkish population eight to nine centuries ago. By the fourteenth century, the majority of the population of Nagorno Karabakh was Azerbaijani ruled by a small Armenian elite. This situation continued until the eighteenth century, when the elite destroyed itself through infighting. In Karabakh, an ethnic Azerbaijani leader Panah Ali Khan founded an independent Khanate that would survive until Russia conquered the area in 1805.5
The second ethnic group in Nagorno Karabakh is the Armenians, also with long historical ties to the Caucasus region. In Nagorno-Karabakh, however, Armenians are relatively recent arrivals. They trace their origins in the area to the 1828 Treaty of Turkmenchay. This treaty ended the Russian-Persian War of 1826–1828. One part of the treaty guaranteed the Russian protection of ethnic Armenians who left the Persian empire. Many of these people came to the Nagorno-Karabakh area. Many of the Armenians in Yerevan also date their arrival from this period: 8249 Armenian families (approximately 50,000 people) moved from Iran into the governates of Yerevan, Karabakh, and Shamakhi.6 The influx of Armenians was supplemented by the 1829 Treaty of Adrianople which allowed Armenian migration from the Ottoman Empire. This influx into the Caucasus continued through the next century, primarily from Ottoman lands.
The inclusion of resettlement in the treaty of Turkmenchay may have been the result of secret negotiations between Armenian Archbishop Nerses and Russian Infantry General Paskevich on the one side, and Czar Nicholas I on the other. According to a nineteenth-century Russian historian, the original text of the treaty had no provision for the resettlement of Armenians. After several secret messages from Armenian representatives to the Czar, however, the Russians agreed to including the provision. The Armenian intent was to create the basis for an independent Armenian kingdom.7 As Commander of the Caucasus Corps, General Paskevich was in charge of the resettlement. He wanted the Armenians settled in the current Republic of Armenia but, when informed that the area could not accommodate additional settlers, Paskevich approved them being sent to Karabakh.8
Before the treaty, there were few Armenians. In a census performed by the Czar’s representatives in 1805, only 8% of the population of Karabakh and the surrounding regions were Armenian.9 After the treaty, however, things changed. According to Paskevich, ā€œOn March 9, 1828, the last Russian army left Tabriz … According to the Turkmenchay Treaty, Armenians moved from different villages to Karabakh.ā€10
Another Russian author of the period wrote, ā€œWe started the imperial policy in Transcaucasia by the placement of other peoples, not of the Russian population here. In the 1828–1830s, we move 40,000 Armenians from Iran and 84,000 Armenians from Turkey and deported them to the provinces of Yelizavetpol and Irevan … where the Armenian population were in minority. The mountainous part of the Yelizavetpol province (the mountainous part of Karabakh) and the shores of Lake Goycha are inhabited by Armenian displaced persons…The number of displaced and unofficially displaced were more than 200,000 people…As a result of this relocation, more than 1 million of the 1.3 million Armenians living in the Transcaucasia in the early 20th century were not ā€˜indigenous people of the region’, but were transferred by us.ā€11
According to quotations posted publicly by the government of Azerbaijan in the town of Terter, the Armenian historian B. Ishkhanyan reported on the Armenian arrival into the area. ā€œAs for the Armenians living in the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, some of them were ancient aboriginal Albanian tribes, who maintained Christianity. The other part of the population consists of refugees fleeing Iran and Turkey and finding asylum in Azerbaijani lands. Armenians have come to different parts of the Caucasus region only in the last centuries.ā€12 Another Russian historian, writing in 1930, stated, ā€œKarabakh has never belonged to Armenian cultural centers.ā€13 To mark their arrival in the area, in 1978 the Armenian community in the town of Maragha (on the outskirts of Nagorno-Karabakh) built a monument commemorating the 150th anniversary of their arrival in the area.
The treaty of Turkmanchay did not deal only with the area of modern Azerbaijan, but also with Iranian Azerbaijan. While the Russians seized control of the area north of the Aras (Araxes) river, an annex to the treaty said that if the Shah of Iran did not pay an indemnity of twenty million silver rubles within six months Russia would also claim Iranian Azerbaijan. The Iranian court could not pay the funds, and the British provided the funds to stop Russian expansion.14
In 1834, the Czar issued an imperial decree establishing the Armenian oblast, even though only 20% of the population in the area was Armenian. In Karabakh during the same time period, there were 19,000 Armenians and 35,000 Muslims according to Russian census figures. By 1871, there were 878,000 ā€œTatarsā€ and 292,000 Armenians in the Elizavetpol guberniia; there were 465,000 ā€œTatarsā€ and 52,000 Armenians in the Baku guberniia. By 1888, however, Muslims had become the minority in Erivan guberniia, 211,000–286,000 Armenians.15 From these figures, it would appear that by 1888 Armenians were in the majority within the borders of the modern Republic of Armenia, and their numbers continued to grow in other parts of the Caucasus. The growth of the figures establishes, however, that this majority is a relatively modern phenomenon.
With the growth in population came a growth in intercommunal violence. The first such eruption was in Baku, starting on 6 ...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Front Matter
  3. 1.Ā Roots of the Conflict
  4. 2.Ā The Military Face of a Frozen Conflict
  5. 3.Ā The Politics of Frozen Conflict
  6. 4.Ā The Economics of Frozen Conflict
  7. 5.Ā Diplomacy Surrounding Frozen Conflict
  8. 6.Ā Final Thoughts
  9. Back Matter

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