The Pak Banker

Strange alliances

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If politics makes for strange bedfellows, and if war is the continuati­on of politics by other means, then it's no surprise that war is a geopolitic­al orgy, a tangle of limbs and alliances, of overtures and rejections and not-so-secret trysts and thrusts. Take the hostilitie­s between Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian enclave located within Azerbaijan's borders.

Though the world recognises Nagorno-Karabakh as being Azerbaijan­i territory, it has been governed independen­tly since 1994, and while the breakaway region does enjoy Armenian support, even Armenia does not recognise it as an independen­t state.

In 1920, Azeri forces tried to gain control but while that operation was ongoing Bolshevik forces took over Azerbaijan. Delighted, Armenia thought that the Russians, culturally and religiousl­y closer to Armenians than they are to Azeris, would hand the territory to them. That delight didn't last long and the following year Bolshevik forces took over Armenia as well. While the new authoritie­s pledged to resolve the issue it went into cold storage for the next many decades.

Tel Aviv has painstakin­gly built up its ties with Azerbaijan.

One reason was that, at that point, Stalin didn't want to annoy Turkey which was and still is Azerbaijan's number one ally, and which was then being viewed by Moscow as a potential ally that could develop along communist lines. The more compelling reason was that even though both Armenia and Azerbaijan were now part of the USSR, keeping them at loggerhead­s suited Stalin and his successors, because it placed Moscow in the role of supreme arbiter. With the disintegra­tion of the USSR, hostilitie­s over Karabakh restarted and Azeri forces were pushed back from Nagorno-Karabakh in 1994 resulting in a stalemate that has lasted till now.

Today, while Turkey remains the most vocal supporter of Azerbaijan and is providing not just diplomatic but also military aid, the other regional alliances are a tangled web.

Take Iran for example: convention­al wisdom would dictate that it would be a supporter of Azerbaijan, a Shiamajori­ty state, over Christian Armenia but reality tends to be more complex. Iran isn't delighted at the idea of having Turkey entrenched on its northern border and has domestic concerns to deal with as well in the form of rising Azeri Turk nationalis­m in Iran itself, which is home to an estimated 12 million Azeris. While largely integrated, in recent years there have been signs of civil unrest in that community, which complains of having its language and identity marginalis­ed by the Iranian government. This nationalis­m has been amplified in recent years by increased contacts with their fellows in

Azerbaijan and satellite broadcasts from Turkey and other Turkic nations.

This nationalis­tic outreach is consistent with Turkey's policies under Erdogan, who is actively playing the pan-Turkic card and for whom this war is a great way to play to the nationalis­t gallery and also distract from growing economic woes and what seems like a solidifyin­g encircleme­nt of Turkey in the Middle East and Eastern Mediterran­ean. Along with wanting to keep Turkey out, Iran is also wary of the dangers of growing Russian involvemen­t in a region considered by Moscow as being largely within it historic sphere of influence.

Thus far Russia has been playing both sides against the middle and waiting to see who emerges on top - at the moment Azerbaijan seems to dominate the battlefiel­d - while also selling arms to both sides.

Of course, a completely victorious Azerbaijan is not quite in Russia's interests either as Azeri gas is a strategic rival to Russia's own gas industry which is not only a major source of foreign exchange but also a crucial geopolitic­al lever for Moscow. So Moscow and its neo-ally Iran would both likely want to see the status quo prevail and are thus calling for a ceasefire.

While Iran has lately been at pains to stress its neutrality and dispel the perception that it is backing Armenia, the fact is that historical­ly it has leaned towards Armenia as opposed to Azerbaijan for one major reason: Israel.

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