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Armenia-Azerbaijan: one year after the ceasefire, fighting continues


A year after the Nagorno-Karabakh war, new clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan have occurred

Barely a year after the signing of the ceasefire aimed at ending the second Nagorno-Karabakh war, new major armed clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan have occurred. On November 16, Azerbaijan launched a large-scale offensive in the southern Armenian region of Syunik and only Russia’s mediation made it possible to halt the fighting. As admitted by the Armenian Ministry of Defence, at least two combat positions were lost because of the Azerbaijani offensive, which, according to Baku, was triggered in response to a series of Armenian provocations at the border. Although the human toll of the fighting is still unclear, mainly because the two sides do not like to publicise their losses, the Armenians reported one soldier killed, 13 taken prisoner and 24 missing, while the Azerbaijanis spoke of 7 dead and 10 wounded. As usual, the two states’ versions of what happened differ considerably, but what is certain is that the clashes were not a sporadic event. Rather, the outbreak of violence in recent days is the result of 12 months of continuous tensions.

In a recent interview, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated that in the past year not a single week has passed without violations of the November 9 ceasefire. This means that the conflict never really ended but continued albeit at a low intensity. The only difference since last year is the point of contact between the two armies, which moved further west, passing, after the Azerbaijani victory, from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia’s eastern border. Among the main elements of discord underlying the continuing tensions are the status of Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians, the demarcation of the border between the countries, the presence of Armenian prisoners in Azerbaijan and the issue of sharing minefield maps of the territories conquered by Baku in 2020. In this context, the implementation of the November 9 statement, perceived by Yerevan as completely unilateral and favourable to Baku, is at a standstill. Therefore, it seems likely that Azerbaijan, currently better equipped and more motivated, will continue to shift the confrontation to the military level, thus pushing Yerevan to accept its demands.

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