25/09/23View in Browser

Game over in Karabakh?

By Georgi Gotev | @GeorgiGotev

Now that, after decades of fighting, Azerbaijan has regained full control of the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh, has the wider region become a safer place? Or is the reverse actually true?

As some kind of pragmatic consolation, one might say that Azerbaijan was always going to have the upper hand in the end – and that at least the endgame was not too protracted or more bloody.

Indeed, Azerbaijan, an authoritarian country rich in oil and gas with a population of over 10 million, has become a serious military power, while its rival Armenia, with a population of 2.8 million, is on the economic decline, compounded by political instability.

What has prevented Azerbaijan over decades from asserting its control over Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian-populated region inside its territory, is that Armenia is in a sort-of a military alliance with Russia, as a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO), whose other members are Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan.

Azerbaijan too has an ally. Although there is no military pact between Baku and Ankara, Turkey provided decisive military support in the last Karabakh war in 2020, which improved the Azeri positions, further squeezing the Armenians in Karabakh.

In 2023, the situation is different: Russia is too busy with the full-scale war it started against Ukraine. Moreover, in this war, which has pitted Moscow against the West, Russia needs Turkey, at least as a friend, if not an outright ally. Therefore, for Russia, dropping Armenia was not a problem.

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 The Roundup

Germany’s Social Democratic Party (SPD) will once again announce Katarina Barley as their lead candidate for the 2024 European Parliament elections on Monday afternoon, SPD party sources told Euractiv.

The European approach to building climate-friendly industries is “superior” to the USA’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), German and French economists have argued in a new paper, calling for less panic in the response to the US subsidies.

Experts have welcomed the proposed EU law to hold companies accountable for adverse impacts along their entire value chain, but have also raised concerns about the negative impacts the new due diligence rules could have on economies of the Global South.

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The European Union and Britain need to take urgent action to postpone rules for electric vehicles traded between the bloc and the UK that will trigger 10% tariffs, Europe’s car industry group said on Monday.

France wants to make it harder to access and punish illegal behaviour online, according to a text on securing and regulating the digital environment that lawmakers agreed in committee on Thursday evening.

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  • Commissioner Virginijus Sinkevičius participates in first EU – China High-Level Dialogue on Circular Economy on Tuesday.
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  • Informal meeting of culture ministers Monday-Tuesday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

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