CAUCASUS, FRANCE, HYBRID WARS, IRAN, RUSSIA, TURKEY, UNITED STATES
France Challenges Russian Peacekeeping In Caucasus
Written by M. K.
BHADRAKUMAR on 23/11/2020
More in Caucasus:
·
Nagorno-Karabakh: Victory Of London And Ankara, Defeat Of
Soros And The Armenians24/11/2020
·
Should Armenia’s Pashinyan Be Overthrown Or Remain In
Power?21/11/2020
·
Historical Undercurrents In Nagorno-Karabakh19/11/2020
The trilateral agreement on November 10
between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia over Nagorno-Karabakh is leading to a
geopolitical struggle in the Caucasus. So long as Armenia and Azerbaijan were
ferociously fighting, the great game lurked in the shade.
But no sooner than the seven-week
old conflict reached a climax — capture of Shusha by
Azeri forces and Armenia facing imminent rout — Moscow stepped in to mediate a
truce in real time.
The speed with which Russian
President Vladimir Putin moved and his hands-on role in knocking the Armenian
and Azeri heads together through night-long negotiations was absolutely
stunning. It took the region and the international community by surprise.
Putin’s mediation inevitably led to
Russian peacekeeping. By the time the world came to know of the truce in the
wee hours of November 10, Russian military contingents were already en route to
Nagorno-Karabakh.
The French President Emmanuel Macron
has egg on his face. He had fancied himself to be the charioteer in the
Caucasus ever since conflict erupted in late September. Of course, the Armenian
Diaspora in France constitutes an influential constituency in French politics.
On November 7, Macron had called
Putin and discussed the
“ongoing large-scale hostilities” in Nagorno-Karabakh and reached a “mutual
commitment to continued coordinated mediation efforts by Russia
and France, including as part of the OSCE Minsk Group.”
Next he knew, as he woke up at
Elysee Palace three days later, was that Russian peacekeeping forces were
landing in Nagorno-Karabakh. And, to rub salt into Macron’s bruised ego, it was
only six days thereafter that Putin remembered to call Macron (on November 16)
— “considering that Russia and France are co-chairs of the OSCE
Minsk Group,” as the Kremlin readout put it.
Putin filled in Macron with the flow
of events and informed Macron that “the general situation
in the region has stabilised.” Here was Macron, all dressed up and
raring to perform a high octane diplomatic role in the Caucasus when Putin called
him to say the war got over a week ago and it was time now to turn to the
unappetising residual issues concerning “urgent humanitarian issues, including
returning refugees to their permanent homes, ensuring normal living
conditions for the population, restoring the infrastructure,
and preserving Christian temples and monasteries.”
Macron couldn’t take it anymore. The
French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian was ordered to urge Moscow publicly
that it should clear up the “ambiguities” over the ceasefire, notably regarding
the role of Turkey and foreign fighters. He told the
French National Assembly, “We must remove the ambiguities over refugees, the
delimitation of the ceasefire, the presence of Turkey, the return of fighters
and on the start of negotiations on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh.”
To be sure, France coordinated with
the US (both are co-chairs of the Minsk Group). Within hours of the French FM’s
statement, the US State Department waded into the topic. While welcoming the
cessation of hostilities, the US statement ignored
Moscow’s mediatory role. It said,
A Russian
peacekeeper patrols at checkpoint outside Askeran, Nagorno-Karabakh, November
19, 2020
“Ending the recent fighting is only
the first step toward achieving a peaceful, negotiated settlement of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. We urge the sides to re-engage as soon as
possible with the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
Minsk Group Co-Chairs to pursue a lasting and sustainable political solution to
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict based on the Helsinki Final Act principles of the
non-use or threat of force, territorial integrity, and the self-determination
and equal rights of peoples. As a Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, the
United States remains fully engaged in this effort.”
Plainly put, both France and the US
insist that Russia cannot act unilaterally but only through the Minsk Group. On
November 19, the French presidency called for international supervision to
implement the cease-fire. “We want the Minsk Group to play its role in defining
the surveillance (of the cease-fire),” an official in Macron’s office said.
The French official rebuked the
Kremlin: “We understand that the Russians are talking to the Turks regarding a
possible formula, which we don’t want, that would replicate the Astana process
(on Syria) to divide their roles in this sensitive region. We can’t have on one
side Minsk (Group) and the other Astana (process on Syria). At one point the
Russians have to make a choice.”
Clearly, France (and the US) fear
that that Russia and Turkey have cut a
deal to keep out Western powers from future peace talks.
Indeed, the Astana forum enabled Russia and Turkey to discuss between
themselves how to handle the Syrian conflict and marginalised the Western
powers. To add insult to injury, like in Syria, Russia also has a deal with
Turkey on the deployment of the latter’s military personnel in Azerbaijan.
The western expectation was that
Russia and Turkey would fall out over Nagorno-Karabakh, but the opposite has
happened. They have blocked the western powers from getting involved. Both
Turkey and Russia have strained relations with the US; Macron and Turkish President
Recep Erdogan are confronting each other on multiple fronts ranging from Libya
to Syria to France’s predicament with “Islamist terrorism”. Recently, Erdogan
proposed psychiatric counselling for Macron.
Putin and Erdogan would have a
congruence of interest to cement the November 10 peace deal before the Joe
Biden presidency sails into view. Biden has harshly referred to Erdogan and
Putin. In the final analysis, though, Nagorno-Karabakh highlights a serious
fracture in the western alliance system: one NATO power (Turkey) has aligned
with the alliance’s existential enemy (Russia) to humiliate and marginalise two
major allies (the US and France). The Minsk Group consists of two other NATO
members also — Germany and Italy.
Russia and Turkey are unlikely to get
back into the Minsk Group. Neither country wants the western powers to get a
habitation in Caucasus. Russia, perhaps, has more to lose than Turkey, since
Azerbaijan and Georgia also border North Caucasus, a volatile region
with majority Muslim population, and Azerbaijan is also a littoral state of the
Caspian Sea, where Moscow is determined to preserve security primacy and
constrain other external powers that can impede its influence, especially the
US and NATO.
In Georgia, the US has consolidated
a strategic presence. The US is committed to helping Georgia deepen its
Euro-Atlantic ties and supports Georgia’s NATO aspirations. Curiously, in
a signal to Moscow,
the outgoing US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo visited Georgia on November 18.
At the end of the day, Russia-Turkey
coordination in Nagorno-Karabakh remains tactical. But it is with Iran that
Russia a robust understanding over Nagorno-Karabakh. The November 10 peace
accord is based on Iran’s peace plan and Tehran feels gratified that Moscow
opted for the “Astana format”.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Javad Zarif
is travelling to Moscow and Baku on
November 23-24. Iran is well placed to supplement Russian diplomacy to give
traction to the peace agreement, since it has friendly ties with both Armenia
and Azerbaijan (and Georgia.) Reports suggest that western powers have been
hyperactive in Baku and Yerevan to subvert the peace plan.
Source: The Indian Punchline
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