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Published 21 Apr, 2024 06:57am

Russia quietly leaves Karabakh, ceding its clout ‘for good’

BAKU: When Russian troops deplo­yed to Nagorno-Karabakh four years ago, their task was clear: keep the peace between bitter foes Armenia and Azerbaijan and prevent another war in the volatile region.

But as Azerbaijani forces swept through mountainous Karabakh last September and crushed Armenian separatist forces in a matter of hours, the Russian mission looked lost.

The Kremlin this week quietly confirmed that the peacekeepers were withdrawing, taking with them their weapons and hardware, as well as Russian clout from a region it long considered its own backyard.

“We are witnessing a historic process — Russians are leaving for the first time in two centuries,” independent Azerbaijani analyst Elhan Shahinoglu said. Moscow ruled over the Caucasus region first during the Russian empire and then in the Soviet era. When war broke out between Armenia and Azerbaijan after the USSR’s collapse, Moscow sought to mediate.

Caucasian observers say Moscow is too caught up with its invasion of Ukraine to retain its sway in the region

The Kremlin deployed almost 2,000 troops in 2020 as part of a ceasefire deal that halted six weeks of brutal fighting between the arch-foes over the Karabakh region.

The accord held until the lightning Azerbaijani offensive last September that ignited an exodus of more than 100,000 Armenians from Karabakh and deepened their frustration with Moscow.

Russia ‘betrayed us’

“Along with the Russians leaving Karabakh, the last hope that the population will return home is gone,” said Iveta Margaryan, a 53-year-old trained accountant on the streets of Armenia’s capital. “The Russians have betrayed us,” she added.

Observers of the Caucasus say Russia is too caught up with its invasion of Ukraine to retain its sway in the region. Azerbaijan has recently deepened ties with Turkiye — a close military and political partner with shared cultural ties. And with the pullout from Karabakh, Moscow has further alienated Armenia.

Yerevan has criticised Moscow’s perceived shortfalls, with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan busy forging closer ties with the West. In February, he froze Yerevan’s participation in the Moscow-led Collective Security Treaty Organisation, a defence grouping of several ex-Soviet states.

Yerevan also joined the International Criminal Court (ICC) against Moscow’s wishes — a move that obligates it to arrest Vladimir Putin should he visit Armenia.

The European Union and United States are now leading efforts to broker a peace agreement between the Caucasus foes, with Moscow stuck playing second fiddle.

‘Shattered’ myth

Moscow’s unease over Armenia’s rappro­chement with the West has also become public. The foreign ministry this week deman­ded that Yerevan “disavow” reports it was deepening military ties with Western countries.

France — home to a large Armenian diaspora — has also planted a flag in the region, intensifying its diplomatic backing for Yerevan and providing cutting-edge defensive radars and missiles. “Russia is out, the West is in,” said Azerbaijani political scientist Eldar Namazov.

Published in Dawn, April 21st, 2024

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