June 13, 2016
Mainstream political thought in today’s world is predominantly shaped by liberalism, endorsed by the majority of philosophers, thinkers, political experts, social activists and public advocates. It is undeniable that since the Second World War—and especially since the end of the Cold War—the international community has made great progress in terms of promoting and protecting human rights and dignity, peace and peaceful coexistence, international justice, and equality. Two of the major pillars of liberalism (liberty and equality) are associated with the freedom of nations from imperial domination.
The twentieth century was characterized by both the rise of liberal thought and the collapse of many empires. At the end of the last century, many ethnic groups obtained independent statehood—especially after the demise of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia. Other ethnic groups within newly independent countries pressed for their freedom as well. The international community faced a dilemma: how to address and cope with the rising number of independent, separatist or irredentist movements. In 1992, the United Nations Secretary General already warned in An Agenda for Peace that “new assertions of nationalism and sovereignty [had sprung] up, and the cohesion of States [was] threatened by ethnic, religious, social, cultural or linguistic strife.” Boutros Boutros-Ghali emphasized that “if every ethnic, religious or linguistic group claimed statehood, there would be no limit to fragmentation, and peace, security and economic well-being for all would become ever more difficult to achieve.”
The world nevertheless witnessed the emergence of new states born out of bloody struggle for independence: Eritrea, Kosovo and South Sudan. In the former Soviet Union, separatist movements in Azerbaijan, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine that were supported by Russia made further claims to independent statehood. In the case of Azerbaijan, there was a direct Armenian occupation; in other cases, there was a mixture of indirect support from third countries and so-called hybrid wars. While Russia itself had to cope with separatism in Chechnya and opposed the idea of independence for Kosovo, Moscow promoted independence for Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia, and annexed Crimea while appealing to the idea of ethnic kinship.
Metta Spencer in Separatism: Democracy and Disintegration, having emphasized numerous problems and catastrophic consequences of separatist movements such as deaths, refugees and destruction, opined that in the era of economic integration “the most urgent emerging political issues must be handled at the transnational level and that local issues will continue to diminish in relative importance” as “states are losing much of their sovereignty and . . . ethnic communities therefore are pursuing false dreams in demanding statehood.”
The international community still faces separatist claims in many parts of the world. Some acquire notable attention, such as the Tibetan independence movement. This case represents a mixture of ethnic and religious strife. As Buddhism became popular in the West, especially in the 1960s–1980s, celebrities such as Richard Gere helped to promote the Tibetan movement. Many liberals advocated for Tibetan freedom, resorting to liberal tenets against the background of communist China. Popular among liberals, Buddhism was an important element for defending the cause of a peaceful religion against the atheist state. Little attention was paid when Buddhist monks and radicals attacked, burned and killed Muslims in Sri Lanka and Myanmar. Although the Dalai Lama condemned these attacks, overall the voice of peace-loving Buddhist activists and celebrities was not heard strongly enough to halt the violence.
The recent violence between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan has drawn media attention to the simmering conflict that began in 1988. Many liberally inclined newspapers reported on the conflict as being between Azerbaijan and so-called Nagorno-Karabakh local separatists. As a matter of fact, the conflict began in February 1988 by Armenian nationalists under a slogan of unification with Armenia (miatsum in Armenian). As Yerevan failed to obtain the Azerbaijani territory from Soviet Moscow after the collapse of the USSR, the tactic was changed and Armenian nationalists pressed for self-determination for their brethren in Nagorno-Karabakh. This move was aimed at garnering more sympathy from liberals in post-Soviet Russia and around the world. The demand to include the Nagorno-Karabakh region as part of Armenia had been already supported by many Soviet liberals such as Andrei Sakharov (whose wife Elena Bonner was an ethnic Armenian) and others. BBC blogger Artem Krechetnikov has observedthat the revision of the Soviet borders threatened the Soviet existence; this is why the Communist authorities supported Azerbaijan, while liberals supported Armenia. However, this division reflected neither the nature of the conflict nor its legal and moral dilemmas.
The conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh has historical roots. Both sides argue about historical evidence, but from the legal point of view this region belongs to Azerbaijan—as affirmed by UN Security Council resolutions and many other international organizations. The Armenian majority formed in Nagorno-Karabakh only after the Russian conquest in the region during the first part of the nineteenth century; at this time, the czarist authorities implemented a massive Armenian resettlement policy to strengthen the Christian presence and counter the influence of the Ottoman and Persian empires. While it is not at the core of the conflict, the religious factor nevertheless was used by the Armenian diaspora around the world to attract the Western media in particular to its side. Orientalism, the concept advanced by renowned scholar Edward Said, helps to understand what American scholar Thomas Ambrosiotermed “a highly permissive or tolerant international environment,” which allowed the Armenian “annexation of some 15 percent of Azerbaijani territories.” Edward Said defined “Orientalism” as an imperial Western tradition shaped by bias towards Asia and the Muslim world. Stemming from this (mis)perception, Western empires advanced the idea of a “civilizing mission,” a concept that was advanced by many contemporary liberals. As Indian scholar Dipesh Chakrabarty put it, “it is, in fact, one of the ironies of British history that the British became political liberals at home at the same time as they became imperialists abroad.”
The well-established Armenian diaspora, through celebrities like Charles Aznavour and Kim Kardashian or recruits such as Amal Clooney, can easily deliver stories to the global media. In contrast, the Azerbaijani diaspora is very young and inexperienced. Baku’s lobbying effort, dubbed “caviar diplomacy,” has been rejected by Western liberals as the governmental effort of an oil power. The American media picks up the story about oil money used for lobbying, and completely ignores the millions spent by California’s powerful Armenian community to elect officials. As American scholars John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt point out, “the disproportionate influence of small but focused interest groups increases even more when opposing groups are weak or nonexistent, because politicians have to accommodate only one set of interests and the public is likely to hear only one side of the story.” Armenians have a longer and stronger presence, to say nothing of their Christian ties. Ultimately, it would be hard to overcome the Orientalist bias of the Western media.
In addition to the religious dimension, Armenian historians (and subsequently Western historians) claimed that Nagorno-Karabakh was “given” to Azerbaijan by Josef Stalin. This claim aimed to demonize the whole territorial arrangement by “bad guys” such as Stalin. As a matter of fact, Soviet archival documents indicate that in July 1921 Soviet authorities decided to retain (in Russian ostavit’) the mountainous part of Karabakh in Azerbaijan. That means that Karabakh already belonged to Azerbaijan. Besides, Stalin in 1921 was not the sole decisionmaker that he would later become in the 1930s.
The skillfully designed narrative about the history of Nagorno-Karabakh by Armenian scholars targeted the liberal and Orientalist sentiments of majority of Western policymakers, experts and public advocates. Thus, freedom for Nagorno-Karabakh was seen as a push for liberation from the Muslim and Stalinist yoke.
The reality on the ground was different from the “liberal movement.” Renowned Western scholar and expert on the Middle East, Robert Fisk, stressed in a recent article in the Independent that blaming Stalin for the Armenia-Azerbaijan war has nothing to do with the modern conflict. He points out further that Armenian fighters are indeed criminals, involved in massacring Azerbaijani civilians. Human Rights Watch has reported that the Khojaly massacre, committed by Armenian troops in February 1992, was “the largest massacre to date in the conflict.” The conflict produced civilian victims on both sides (although disproportionately high numbers of those killed and forced to become refugees were from Azerbaijan), but Western media paid much more attention to those on the Armenian side.
The high number of casualties among conscripts of the Republic of Armenia during the recent clashes of April 2–5, 2016, attests to the fact that Armenia is the major occupying power on the territory of Azerbaijan. Yet the BBC and other news agencies have tended to report about clashes between Azerbaijan and so-called Nagorno-Karabakh forces.
While the West unequivocally supports the resolution of the conflict in Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine on the basis of their territorial integrity, it has hypocritically suggested a different approach for the Armenian-Azerbaijani case, based on a so-called “negotiated solution,” that implies the possible secession of occupied Nagorno-Karabakh from Azerbaijan.
As mentioned earlier, for the twenty-five years since the Cold War, new states have emerged on the global map. Western countries favored the creation and secession of several states, such as Eritrea and South Sudan. However, the creation of new states has not improved the situation in terms of the liberties and freedoms of people living there. Before the Syrian conflict, the highest number of refugees in Germany were from Kosovo.
In the Middle East, the idea of independence for the Kurds attracts many supporters among Western politicians. What we see, though, that the situation in Iraq’s Kurdish region both in terms of security and human rights is not better than in the rest of the country.
Despite this, a myth is developing that the creation of new states will solve the problems that the people have been experiencing under current state arrangements. Economic hardships and the lack of good governance definitely have an impact on ethnic tension. However, the solution is not about making new borders but rather about creating conditions for central government to function properly and ensure the safety and freedoms of various ethnic groups living together. The solution is coexistence and cooperation—not the building of new borders and walls. Liberals around the world should strive for this vision of the globalized world.
Farid Shafiyev is Azerbaijan’s ambassador to the Czech Republic.
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