In conversation with Dr Walsh: Shifting sands of Eurasia [VIDEO]
By Orkhan Amashov
In an exclusive interview with Azernews, Dr Patrick Walsh, an Irish
historian, shared his reflections on a wide range of issues of
complex nature, centred around Azerbaijan’s foreign policy in the
context of the shifting sands of the Eurasian region.
Our long-awaited conversation took place on 27 July. The departure
point was the current war in Ukraine, the narratives used by the
conflicting sides, and the intricate dynamics of Western-Russian
relations.
Then we smoothly moved to the South Caucasus. Dr Walsh availed us
of his informed views on the multilayered Baku-Moscow discourse,
the implications of the Moscow Declaration, the situation involving
the mandate of the Russian peacekeepers temporarily stationed in
Karabakh, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's predicament,
the fundamental obstacles towards achieving a conclusive peace
deal, and the prospects for wider regional cooperation, with a
particular emphasis on the Zangazur mega project.
We also discussed the specific nature of the role played by Baku,
in the light of the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed
between Azerbaijan and the EU on 18 July, in terms of Europe's
drive to diversify its energy supplies and routes. The eminent
Irishman explained the policy choices of President Aliyev and
expounded on his statesmanship.
Dr Walsh, despite being on holiday on the day of the interview, was
very generous with his time, and when, during the Zoom
conversation, the link to which is provided at the end of this
unexpurgated script, we experienced technical issues, he was
patient and did his best to deal with the questions as extensively
as was possible under time constraints.
Dr Walsh has recently finalised his book on the 44-day War, which
will be published in the near future:
Q: Hello, Pat. Great to see you. Long time no see. How have
you been?
A: I am very well. Thank you, Orkhan. Enjoying the summer as usual.
Having a bit of a holiday. Good to have a bit of a break
really.
Q: You are mostly in Belfast, as far as I
understand.
A: I actually live in Northland (County Antrim), which is just not
far from Belfast, about 60-70 kilometres, it is on the north coast,
I am about 20 miles from Scotland, very furthest north-east tip of
the island.
Q: By the way, I very much liked Rudyard Kipling’s
‘Puzzler’ you sent me a couple of days ago.
A: I think Kipling had a great insight into the British state and I
think that the British state has certainly maintained a lot of the
aspects that it had in the past despite its transition..... There
are still elements of the old oligarchic-aristocracy which built
the Empire and obviously established the state over centuries. I
think that wisdom is still within the British state and you could
probably see it during the Brexit process.
Q: The spirit of Rule Britannia is still there, albeit not
on the same scale.
A: No, not on the same scale. It is a reduced version perhaps.
Ukraine: civilisational cleft
Q. First of all, thank you very much for your kind agreement to
speak to us. It is a great honour and privilege. You are a very
well-known and highly-respected person in Azerbaijan. I suggest we
construct our conversation in the following way. The most important
situation in the world today is the crisis in Ukraine. There will
be a couple of questions on that. However, the bulk of our
conversation will focus on the ongoing Azerbaijani-Armenian peace
process, the Zangazur corridor, prospects for a peace treaty, the
constant vacillations of Pashinyan’s government and many other
related issues. To conclude, I hope our audience will be happy for
me to ask one small question on the Tory leadership race.
I have been following you for many years. My understanding is that
you believe this economic war and campaign mounted against Russia
by Europe is resolutely unwise and, in fact, counterproductive. In
one of our conversations, you stated that eventually there will be
no total winner; the West will be able to weaken Russia, Ukraine
will probably be truncated, losing effective control of its Eastern
provinces and what remains of Ukraine will be inclined towards the
West. That will be the ultimate ‘ongoing ultimate’ conclusion of
this military campaign. Could you shed some light on these
issues?
A: Thank you again, Orkhan. It is my pleasure to talk to you today.
It is a real pleasure. I think you have summarised my position very
well. A few months ago, I re-read Samuel Huntington’s famous ‘Clash
of Civilisations'. The first time I read it I did not know his
remarks about Ukraine. It was very perceptive.
It was written around 1992, maybe a bit later. That was the time
the Soviet Union was collapsing. This was an open discussion of the
American ruling political elite as to what should be done. Very
much like Lenin’s question known as ‘what should be done’. He had a
section on Ukraine which was very interesting. He had the theory,
to which I subscribe, that there was a civilisational cleft going
all the way through Eurasia, let us say, between Eastern and
Western Europe, he would describe it as Central and Eastern
Europe.
Essentially, on one side, you have the Western Christian world, on
the other side, you have the Orthodox and Muslim world. He noticed
the cleft was around all the way through Ukraine. It was unusual,
for most of the other countries, it did not run through them, but
it ran through Ukraine.
What he said at the time, which was 30 years ago, was that there was a possibility that Ukraine could develop a really good independent national state; if it needed to be Western-oriented, it needed to shed its Eastern provinces. He went a bit deeper. His insight is essential that Ukraine was a balancing state within itself, it needed to keep a good balance. I think it maintained that balance until around 2013-14.
What really unbalanced it was, first of all, the EU offer, which put Ukraine into a bit of a position of having to choose between Russia and the EU. Of course, we know there are other aspects, we know that the Americans got involved... Victorian Newland made her famous remark, which I won't repeat here, but it was along the lines of 'fteu'.
Then there was the Maidan coup against the government, and obviously, the people in the East, Donbas people, reacted. When you look at the electoral map of Ukraine in that period, we see a great division, you see a Russian-oriented East and a Western-oriented West. Ukrainian nationalism began in the West - the areas of the Polish-Lithuanian rule. We could describe it as two nations trying to become one nation in an independent state. The problem is it got unbalanced in 2013-14 and started the trajectory towards the current situation.
Some people say to me 'what don't you say it was really a
Russian invasion'. Russians, as we know, call it a 'special
military operation'. I do not see that. The process started around
that time, and there has been an ongoing war since, which is about
eight years. John Mearsheimer, a famous professor, who really
advanced this theory around about 2013-14.
I wrote an article about his evaluation, subscribing to his view,
that this was a dangerous situation and could well be tragic for
Ukraine in the longer term. That is really my position that nobody
is going to win out of this. I think the West or certain people in
the West were intent on luring Russia into the Eastern Ukraine,
with the objective of bleeding them dry. The old Afghan-Soviet war
is a model for these people.
Unfortunately, Ukraine is not Afghanistan. It is a much more
important thing for Russia, which means essentially that the
conflict is going to be a qualitatively greater conflict than
anything we have seen in the past. The real problem with Ukraine is
that I see it as an existential crisis for Russia. I am not saying
they are right or wrong, but if you read Putin's statements made
over the years, you see it is a red line. He has made it very very
clear.
The Americans were not blundering, they needed to score. My
calculation was that Russia would fight till the end, they would
fight it as Russia itself was invaded. No, there was an
expeditionary force - around 230 people. There is a reserve to come
if necessary.
The West has, however, invested so much in Ukraine, morally,
politically and economically. It is almost becoming an existential
crisis for Washington. Particularly, before the mid-term, which
Biden has to fight. I am worried about this period before the
mid-term up to November. I can only see an escalation. This is a
conflict in which I cannot see a negotiated settlement coming in
the near future. If we do not have a negotiated settlement, we have
an escalation. And, we know where this escalation could go in the
long run. This is a very serious situation. This is my position
with regard to Ukraine.
Q: How do you envision Ukrainian sovereignty at the end of
the process? There is an assumption that Ukraine will lose its
Eastern provinces, one way or another. It is probable that, in the
eyes of international law, Crimea, Donbas and Luhansk will always
be Ukrainian, but, ultimately, Ukraine will be truncated. What is
your take on this dichotomy between what international law says and
the reality of the situation?
A: There is certainly a dichotomy, as you call it, between what
international law says and the reality in a sense. All states do
override international law, if they see it as a necessity to do so.
We see it here in Northern Ireland, where the British state claims
extraordinary circumstances to override the Northern Irish Protocol
they have signed with the EU. So, this is not an unusual thing in
international affairs at all. The US did it in relation to
Iraq.
I have recently become aware that Russians did go to China and
asked what their position was before the war. They came across with
the same thing; the Chinese advanced the same argument that they
respected international law, but they would review the situation
according to the necessity of the reality. That is what is
essentially happening.
The West knew right from the start - you see it in the articles
right across the Western media and from important people of the
American administration - that Crime was lost to Russia, unless
Ukraine could win it back militarily in some way.
Donbas would have been an autonomous part of Ukraine, if the Minsk
Two agreement had been ratified. That is another story. I have been
writing about it the last few weeks. It is very mysterious what
happened to Minsk Two. If you look at what is happening now,
essentially, the Russians will take what they are sitting on. They
are going to take all that area down to the Black Sea, Kherson
including, they may advance towards the Western territories...
What I have been hearing is that they will make an offer to Kyiv in
the next months or so. That offer would be that 'you accept the
status quo and we will go further'. I think that is what is going
to happen. The other issue - a lot has been made up in the West...
The ordinances that the West supplies and the Russians need to
neutralise them. The Russians, at the end of the day, are probably
thinking they will be facing a long-term bombardment over the line
of contact - a little bit like the Karabakh situation. The question
is how they are going to neutralise long-range artillery. The only
way seems to be through missile strikes or actually taking more
territory.
There are some people of the belief that three possible outcomes of
the war are these. Ukraine is to lose 20 percent of its territory,
or 40 percent or even the whole territory. I do not know what the
will in the Kremlin is. I do not know what their military
capability is. Probably, it is sufficient to do it. Whether they
will judge it politically sensible to be done, whether it is worth
doing are the things I do not know.
The bottomline is this: the longer Ukraine fights, the more the
West supplies Ukraine, the more Ukraine is going to suffer, and the
more territories it is probably going to lose. That is how I see
this at the present moment. It is a very difficult situation for
Kyiv, because while making an actual agreement, it will probably
run up to Washington, but also strong elements within Ukraine are
going to oppose a negotiated settlement at this point in time.
This is why, I think, the situation is so tragic. And it is very
difficult to escape from it.
Putin's world
Q: Paul Goble, former advisor to the US Secretary of State, told me
that this war is not going to end in the foreseeable future, and
probably will continue until President Putin is no longer in power.
What are the main qualities that could sustain the Russian
President in light of the existential crisis engendered by the
Russia-West confrontation? Where do you see him at the end of the
journey?
A: I certainly think this is the prime objective of the Western
interest in Ukraine, as an instrument of geopolitics. This is to
unseat Putin. You can see the Western view of Putin from the books
written, if you read between the lines. There has been a specific
view of him since 2005 or 2006. Any book that has been written
about Putin over the past years essentially says the same thing ..
.Well, the Russian view is that - I do not think people would argue
with this - Russia became a failed state in the 90s, lost its
superpower status, it was fragmenting and it was a pretty bad place
to live.
Actually, the good example of how bad it was is that the eastern
Ukrainian provinces and Crimea voted or decided to stay in Ukraine,
despite being unhappy with certain policies. Despite how bad the
situation was, they would have preferred to stay in Ukraine than
join Russia. Ukraine was probably, or potentially, a better place
to live, or certain people advertised it as such, than Russia was
in the 90s.
This has changed the landscape, Russia has been revived under
Putin, whatever people might think of him, he revived Russia, gave
it a new sense of purpose, he put oligarchs under a leash, they
have a certain role, of course, but they have been told to stay out
of politics, they can keep their ill-gotten gains, so to speak, but
they have been shackled.
Generally, Russia has been elevated, certainly not to the level of
what it was during the Soviet Union, but it certainly resurrected
itself, and there has been a Russian resurgence. I think a lot of
Russians see a lot of self-respect as a result of it. These all to
the good of Putin.
Of course, there are strong pro-Western elements in Russia, who
would have really liked Russia to become a normal Western society.
These are the people who oppose Putin. Countries go till the end or
fragmented or governments are overthrown.
I think the first scenario is happening in Russia. Probably, we
will get to it later on in the discussion, there are a lot of
geopolitical elements accelerating in the background as a result of
Ukraine. This is changing the balance in Russia between the more
pro-Europe, we would call them liberals or liberal-democrats, and
the more Eurasian, we call them more authoritarian, traditional
Russian governing elements.
I cannot see Putin being overthrown, short of a military disaster
in Ukraine. I do not see a sign of it at present. At the beginning
of the war, there were quite a few Russian blunders, probably for
the first two or three weeks, but afterwards the Russians seem to
have learned what they are doing and started to do it in a more
effective fashion, or in a more business-like way. I cannot see it,
unless the West escalates the war in an unanticipated way.
Q: Quite beside the point, I am a strong believer in the
independence of the British judiciary. I am firm in my belief that
it is immune to political influences. There was a very famous case
of Berezovsky vs Abramovich in 2012. As you know, Berezovsky was a
key figure during the Yeltsin era, and Abramovich was (or still is)
one of the most powerful oligarchs of Putin's time. Berezovsky, a
critic of Putin from 2000 onwards, claimed that Putin changed the
course of Russia's development towards the wrong direction. Some in
Europe agreed with his assessment, whereas others did not. When he
was saying that either Putin would go, or Russia would collapse, I
recall that very few members of the British establishment took his
warning seriously enough.
I am sure Lady Justice Gloster's judgement on Berezovsky had no
political reasoning, but was a mere articulation of the legal part
of the story. Nonetheless, I cannot help but wonder what the result
of this case would have been, had it not occurred in 2012, but in
2022, given the political credentials of the contesting sides.
Perhaps the result would have not been different, but one wonders
how the public would have reacted. It was a case between a Putin
critic and his protege. Do you have any thoughts on
this?
A: Britain's relations with Russian oligarchs are interesting.
Abramovich, once a great owner of Chelsea, was immensely popular
with the club supporters.
On the whole, it is a bit difficult one to answer. Obviously,
the political landscape has completely changed, and it always gets
changed when there is a strong moral war being fought. Ukraine is
probably the most moral war since 1914. With all these attitudes
towards Russian culture or other moments, I can only see people
being against Abramovich. The public certainly would not have been
supportive of him.
As to the suggestion that Russia will collapse, there is always an
alternative that Putin will stay and Russia is going to revive.
That is essentially what has happened so far. America did not
perceive quickly that Russia would revive. It has been engaged,
until now, in courting China. It was building up the Chinese state.
In fact, the British were doing the same under the Cameron-Osborne
government.
What happened was that Putin and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping
got together and formed a sort of a more concrete alliance,
shadowing the old Nixon strategy of the 1970s which was to divide
Russia and China. This has been a big implication geopolitically as
well. And I guess it will come up later on in our discussion. It
has been a huge change in the geopolitical landscape. There is no
comparison to this since the start of the Cold War probably.
Q: So, we have Russia extremely busy in Ukraine. To
smoothly move onto the topic of Azerbaijan, how do you evaluate the
impact of the Russian preoccupation in Ukraine on the ongoing
Azerbaijani-Armenian peace process and the situation involving its
peacekeepers stationed in Karabakh? I have heard some people say
that this may constitute an opportune moment for Azerbaijan to
limit the Russian influence in the truncated former
Nagorno-Karabakh. What is your take?
A: This is a big question. I would answer it in a series of chunks.
Let me first think about Russia. I think what Putin did prior to
the Special Military Operation, or the war, whatever one may like
to call it, was that he went to secure his back. He went around all
his allies and neighbours, his good neighbours, and asked them what
they wanted on the basis that he could not have them as enemies. Or
on the basis that he could not have them as troublemakers, as he,
as you are saying, was concentrating on Ukraine. The big talk was
Xi Jinping at the Olympics. Possibly, Xi said "hold off till the
Olympic Games are over".
Obviously, there was no specific arrangement on that. A whole series of things has happened since that has thrown a light upon this. More specifically, Russia has the Moscow Declaration on the Allied Interaction with Azerbaijan, which I will look at in a moment.
I just want to look at the context first. For instance, the
Ashgabat Caspian Summit. This is going on periodically, but it had
a greater importance this year. There Putin was securing the
Caspian. Then we have the Tehran Summit. So, a whole series of
developments. Putin was smoothing over, if to use the term from
Erdogan's first time, to have zero problems with neighbours. This,
what I think, is what Russia has been doing during this period. It
has been making some concessions, whether substantial or not, that
I do not know.
Just to get more to Azerbaijan, Article 1 of the Allied Interaction
is interesting. It promises mutual respect for independence, state
sovereignty, territorial integrity and the inviolability of the
state borders as well as adherence to the principle of
non-interference in internal affairs and peaceful settlements of
disputes.
This seems to be a good concession - a formal concession that
Azerbaijan has won from Russia. At the time when they issued this
Allied Interaction document, it was a day or two before the
military operation in Ukraine. People were a bit shocked at it, I
saw some of the reaction on social media, that may not be
representative, but still.
When you look at this, you see what a big prize this is to get a
declaration like this. Whether they twist some of these words in
the future, particularly the last paragraph on peaceful settlement
of disputes, whether they will use it from the perspective of the
Armenian separatists, that I do not know. However, on the surface,
it looks like a good concession from Russia in a time of
difficulty.
The Irish used to say that England's difficulty is Ireland's
opportunity. It may be that Azerbaijan is taking a lead from the
Irish playbook. So, Russia's difficulty is Azerbaijan's
opportunity. It looks on the surface like this. This is one aspect
of it. Would you like to continue to discuss it further, or do you
feel you have to ask a more specific question?
Moment of decision: After Shusha
Q: In one of your articles, you mentioned that human history is
littered with total victories. But they are not durable victories,
as real victories are sensible ones. I am probably misquoting you,
but I believe that was the gist. In November 2020, certain segments
of Azerbaijani society argued that Azerbaijan would have to keep
fighting until the end. Certain sectors of Azerbaijani society
asked why we did not resume full control over that particular part
of our sovereign territory. I remember your comments praising
President Aliyev's vision and calling the arrangement a sensible
one. My sensibility was that you firmly believed President Aliyev
followed the right trajectory. My question is that, on a more
specific level, could you please delineate why you believe the
President followed the correct path and outline the danger of the
Russian peacekeepers staying in Karabakh beyond 2025. Its only
legal basis is the 10 November trilateral declaration, without its
mandate or exact functions being stipulated.
A: That is a very interesting question, Orkhan. I have written a
book on the 44-day War. Should be soon published in the next few
months. What really surprised me was when I re-read the book to
check details and indexes and so on was the following. I wrote it
at the time of the war and just after the war. What surprised me
was the amount of space I gave to the problem of Russia.
The 20 percent of the book is about the problem President Aliyev
had in trying to second-guess what Russia would do at certain
points of the war. This was the big problem. The military operation
was obviously a very efficient one, successful and well-prepared.
The big geo-strategic issue in the war was whether Russia would
intervene or what stage it would intervene.
This question can never be answered. In my opinion, stopping after
Shusha was undoubtedly a good decision. I looked at it and thought
that when you have to think of opponents - probably one would think
of Russians as opponents in this situation, although it facilitated
a ceasefire arrangement at the same time, just like the way Turkiye
and Russia are opponents who also collaborate - you need to
empathise with them. You cannot just have an idea of them being an
evil force who wants to crush you.
Ireland would have the same relationship with Britain. We would
have to live with Britain. Ireland has had a problematic history
with Britain, as Azerbaijan has had a problematic history with
Russia. Ireland has to live with Britain and Azerbaijan has to live
with Russia.
So, at this point, I think when you look at the potential reasons
substantiating a hypothetical Russian intervention in the conflict,
we have this unfortunate incident of a Russian helicopter being
shot down. Putin did not react in an aggressive way inhe did when
Turkiye shut down a Russian helicopter.
What was really worrying was that in the case of an Azerbaijani
movement towards Khankendi, there would have possibly been
substantial Armenian resistance and there could have been civilian
casualties, there would have been pictures of Armenians fleeing.
These were quite possible.
Most of the Karabakh War, which was a pure military confrontation,
took place on a military ground. Although Armenians fired missiles
at Azerbaijani civilian populated areas, Azerbaijan conducted a
pure military operation. Azerbaijani did not have to assault any
large centres where the Armenian population was present, as
Russians are doing in Ukraine.
This becomes very problematic. Even in the West, there might have
been calls for Western intervention. My estimation is that, there
would have been some Russian nationalists who would have liked to
help Armenians. I do not think Putin is a Russian nationalist. He
is a defender of the Russian state. He looks after the Russian
national interest. He is not one of those crazy Russian
nationalists you occasionally see in the Russian Duma, some of whom
are very pro-Armenian.
So, Putin had probably had pressure on him about intervening. If
there had been a humanitarian disaster, as sometimes called in the
West, not quite to the intention of the Azerbaijani Army, but
perhaps somehow manufactured by the Armenian side, Russia might
have been very much prone to either directly militarily intervening
in such a way as the West intervened in Ukraine, by supplying very
dangerous weapons for Armenians, which could have been used from
the territory of Armenia against Azerbaijani forces in Kalbajar, if
they had moved to Kalbajar, or Lachin, or wherever easily
strikeable.
I think the war was concluded in such a way that ended on a very
good high point for Azerbaijan. Not only that it attained the
occupied territories without bloodshed, the great advantage to all
this is that the most important thing that happens in these years,
up until 2025 when Russians could be requested to leave, is this
reconstruction In Karabakh.
Resources must be put into repopulating Karabakh, building
infrastructure, etc. This task must be taken in chunks, it has to
be taken in steps. It is really a big task. You can correct me if I
am wrong, now we only have the first cohort of people going to
Aghdam. It has been taking a long time, nearly two year since the
end of the war to get back to these territories.
We don't really know whether people will move back in large
amounts. They have been away for so long, they have established
lives in other places, a lot of people may have died. This is going
to be a tough task. Instead of taking on Armenia and Russia at that
time, I think this was the right decision to make.
The second part of your question sort of infers this. It infers
that if the Russians do not leave in 2025, then this is a wrong
decision. I do not agree with that. We do not know whether the
Russians are going to leave in 2025 or not. On paper, it looks like
they should. This Allied Declaration seems to suggest that they are
going to respect this. It is very difficult to know.
What are the Russian objectives in the South Caucasus? Obviously,
it is to maintain some form of influence. But it is also to keep
the West out. That is their primary objective. The problem that the
Russians have, if we try to empathise with them, sometimes we say
they played Armenians and Azerbaijanis off against each other,
which is undoubtedly the case, most states do this 'divide and
conquer' thing, we will see some other problematic aspects.
Armenians are more likely to jump to the West than Azerbaijan is.
It has sizable diasporas in France and the US. Initially, the EU',
and, in a sense, the Western interest in the South Caucasus prior
to the Ukrainian war, was directed mainly at Yerevan. I think they
are trying to prize Armenia away from Russia.
This presents a problem for Russia as far as how they try to
balance interests in Armenia to prevent this. There are a lot of
complex layers that will go into this Russian decision. I am sure
if the Russians want to stay, they will make up some excuse about
instability and things of that kind. I am not sure what
Azerbaijan's objective will be in a five-year time and will they
agree to extend the agreement for another 5-year period. That might
depend on how effective reconstruction and repopulation measures
will be.
Zangazur Corridor: Difficulties and
prospects
Q: Russia is perceived with a great deal of scepticism
across the post-Soviet space. The perception is that when Russians
come as peacekeepers, it is not intended for them to leave once
volatile situations are done and dusted, but to stay as long as
possible. In our case, the trilateral declaration is a ceasefire
deal, and manifestly not a peace treaty. I have been informed that
Azerbaijan has been mindful to ensure that this peacekeeping
contingent is not given treaty-based legitimacy. Baku's policy is
to focus on the temporality of their presence, the term not being
used regularly by Russia in the manner adopted by Azerbaijan. My
feeling is that Baku does not want to agree to any arrangement that
would have give it semi-permanence. The chemistry between
Presidents Aliyev and Putin is also important.
One of the most important residues from the 2020 deal is the
concept of the Zangazur Corridor. The term 'corridor' is not used
in the trilateral declaration. Baku's argument is that, although
the term is not used, in substance, unimpeded and unrestricted
access - that Armenia is obligated, under the declaration, to
provide - is akin to the provision on the Lachin Corridor. Armenia
has extraterritoriality concerns, because that portion of the land
is to be maintained, not by Armenia's security forces, but by the
Russian Border Guard. How can Azerbaijan and Armenia work out a
compromise construct that will give Baku what it wants and ensure
that Yerevan's concerns are placated?
A: I think it can be done. I have read about the concerns over the
past few weeks. I have noticed two things. You can possibly correct
me on this. There are different interpretations. Obviously, Armenia
does not like the idea of Azerbaijan constructing a corridor or
anybody constructing a corridor across their territory. We are
talking about the extraterritorial corridor. They also worried it
would cut them off from Iran. Some people have suggested that it
could be constructed across Iranian territory. I am not certain if
that is true or not. I have seen comments that it could go right
along the border. There is also previous infrastructure there
already, railway tracks and so on.
It can be done. But we have to empathise with the opponent or the
enemy, hopefully this will change in the future. Their concerns are
that this corridor blocks them off, or takes chunks of Zangazur
from Armenia. It could be done by involving wider parties, such as
Russia and Iran. Some assurances could be given that some road and
railway linkages could be lifted off the ground and on bridges
roads can be constructed beneath it, as permitted by the geography
of the place and geology of the rivers. There must be some
infrastructural possibility.
It has to be sold to Armenia as an opportunity for them, as a trade
opportunity. The negatives and obstructions can only be overcome,
if they see a possibility of economic positives that will give
people jobs, livelihoods, prosperity within Armenia.
If that can be done in conjunction and collaboration with the whole
region, this will undermine obstructionist elements that obviously
persist in Armenia this time. This is the only way it can be done.
But it can be done.
Art of hypocrisy
Q: There are times when delusional political ambitions
and necessities outweigh economic advantages, and that is one of
the problems of modern Armenia. I have been following Pashinyan
very closely over the years. There have been occasions that he took
plausible measures, but he has been vacillating.
The next topic I want to ask you about is Iran, in light of the MoU
signed in March this year. That document envisages the connection
between the Eastern Zangazur region of Azerbaijan with its
Nakhchivan exclave, via Iranian territory, which some people say is
aimed at placating Tehran's concerns over the Zangazur project.
It seems that Azerbaijan's foreign policy design prioritises good
relations with all its big three neighbours - Turkiye, Russia and
Iran - as a foundation of stability. There has recently been a
meeting in Tehran between the three leaders. How will the
consolidation between these three actors, taking into account
Azerbaijan's interests, affect American clout in the wider
region?
A: You have raised a number of issues here. Let us start with
Pashinyan. We appreciate his predicament. He lost the war and
remained in power. The logic of his situation is to proceed with
the agreement, but he has to do it carefully and slowly. I have
been a fierce critic of him in the past, but I do appreciate his
difficult situation. He is probably proceeding in a zig-zag way,
which is often done by statesmen.
He may prove to be a good statesman in the end. But that is playing
itself out, we will see how it goes. The second part of your
question is probably more important, in a sense. it is possible
with the involvement of other actors, some problems of today will
not be made irrelevant, but they will be overrode by other
considerations.
If there can be regional cooperation and collaboration,
particularly, on economic matters, then perhaps things may move on.
I agree with your point that quite often political ambitions
override economic factors. I agree with you completely on that.
Only way you can get economics eroding political opposition is by
showing benefits and demonstrating them to the Armenian people.
Things should proceed forward, even if other aspects of the peace
process are stalled.
To get back to the point, the relationship between Iran, Turkiye
and Russia is very important. It is developing as a result of a
number of factors. Certain aspects of the US administration's past
behaviour of pushing Turkiye are to be taken into account. It is
obvious that Turkiye is looking eastwards in a greater way, partly
because of economic developments, partly because of political
antagonism towards the West.
You may call it a sidebar. I have looked at something Biden said
during the war, I have looked at its website. He described the
Karabakh War in 2020 'as a humanitarian disaster for the
Armenians'. He said that "the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh have
suffered too much and they needed their security protected", and he
called for "stopping of the advance of Azerbaijani troops into
Nagorno-Karabakh". That is what he put on his website when he was
campaigning against Trump.
Obviously, you have got the situation in which you recognise the
so-called Armenian genocide. This is deeply hypocritical and it is
seen as deeply hypocritical in Azerbaijan. For instance, he is
supporting these separatists in Karabakh and he is lending American
weapons to bomb separatists in Donbas. This is so hypocritical.
I think the Americans are on the back foot in the South Caucasus
and have been so for quite a long time with the OSCE and its
failure, its inability to do anything. And then the pull of the
Armenian diaspora in the US and France... We can see all sorts of
resolutions put through in Congress during the Karabakh War.
Obviously, Azerbaijan should look at and say this is hypocritical
and conclude that "they see us second to Armenians and but they
come to us when they want energy". This looks terrible.
Q: I recall Richard Hoagland, former US Co-Chair of the
OSCE Minsk Group, you and myself being interviewed on the
resolution of the French Senate recognising the so-called illegal
and unrecognised ‘NKR’. There was a very interesting moment and I
believe we were in concurrence. The Senate adopted an utterly
outrageous and appalling decision, leading the French Foreign
Ministry to state that France, as a state, was neutral, the
decision had no bearing on its stance and reiterating that it was
committed to the beleaguered OSCE Minsk Group process. The question
begged to be answered as to how France could have claimed fairness
and neutrality, given that the Senate, the upper house of the
legislative body, had adopted such a resolution. At that moment, I
realised the role of France was over in relation to the Karabakh
issue. Your remarks on Biden have made me recall that
episode.
A: True. Matthew Bryza, I think, is a very good friend of
Azerbaijan, and, obviously, he wants to promote progressive
American actions in the region, which is applaudable. He believes
the EU should start demining and reconstruction. This is great.
There is nothing wrong with this at all. The problem lies in the
question if there is another agenda. We will get on to that.
Energy war and Azerbaijan
Q: What are your thoughts on the historic MoU signed between the EU
and Azerbaijan on 18 July? Some details emerged prior to the
signing. The key considerations include the importance of investing
in existing infrastructure, the potential increase in exported
volumes to Europe and climate change objectives. How critical is
the document regarding Azerbaijan's augmented role and clout in
maintaining Europe's energy security?
A: I think I have mentioned it earlier: Europe's difficulty is
Azerbaijan's opportunity. It is most certainly a good chance to
exercise some leverage over Europe after a period of time that
Europe has not been so beneficial to Azerbaijan in relation to the
things like the conflict in Karabakh.
Certainly, it can only be for the good that Azerbaijan is helping
Europe in sorting out its problem. It is a good piece of
statesmanship to utilise the resources to bring about a greater
influence in the West. Indian geopolitical writer M.K. Bhadrakumar
saw this phenomenon slightly differently. He said "Europe was
engaged in a synchronised US-EU-NATO move in the Caucasus targeting
Azerbaijan with a view to undermine Russia's consolidation in the
Black Sea and the Caspian Sea Region".
There may be a geopolitical aspect behind Europe and the US wider
agenda. But it does not take away the fact that it is a good
opportunity to help out neighbours and should be availed upon for
the benefits accrued to Azerbaijan. The positive should be grasped
while recognising there might be another agenda behind it and
exercising statesmanship and statesmanlike position towards any
other agenda that possibly might be there.
Q: Azerbaijan is currently sending 10 bcm per annum to
Europe via the westernmost section of the Southern Gas Corridor
(SGC), namely the Trans-Anatolian Pipeline (TAP). Russia, prior to
the sanctions, sent 148 bcm per annum. The new MoU envisages
doubling the current export volume to 20 bcm. Nevertheless,
Europe's needs are greater and Azerbaijan cannot replace Russian
gas. Some believe that, for the EU, it is more about keeping
Azerbaijan close to itself and political considerations
overwhelmingly dominate its energy ties with Baku. What is your
take?
A: The EU is not going to replace Russian energy resources with
Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan can supply 4 percent - potentially in the
next few years - of Europe's gas needs. Whereas the Russians do
currently supply something between 40 and 60 percent, depending on
what you actually believe in.
You are perfectly correct. Azerbaijan is helping out, but it cannot
meaningfully reduce the EU's dependence on Russian gas. There is a
political agenda behind this. In a sense, Europe is waking up to
the geopolitical importance of the long-neglected South Caucasus,
and to that of Azerbaijan, trying to get some belated influence.
The EU soft power - I think this is what is really behind it. And
the Europeans are suddenly becoming like, .... we will help you
with the peace process and demining. The crisis focused their minds
on the failings of the past. Let us put it that way.
Q: Do you believe the desire to move to green energy was
slightly premature, undermining the EU's energy security in the
short term? Secondly, even if you have excellent relations with
your supplier, predominantly relying on one supplier is unwise. How
honest is Europe in its determination to rid itself of Russian gas
dominance? Is it something that happened within a short space of
time? Or is it something which is part of a longer-term project
simply accelerated within a short time scale?
A: You are certainly correct. Angela Merkel, for instance. She has
been criticised, many times since the war, of Germany remaining
particularly too dependent on Russian energy. In a sense, there was
a logic to this policy, because it gave Germany and other parts of
Europe cheap energy, which lowered the competitive cost of
production. So, there was a lot to be said about it.
What was possibly a little bit more problematic was Merkel's policy
of closing down nuclear stations in Germany. We can see presently
France not having the same amount of energy problems as Germany,
because of having a stronger nuclear programme. The green lobby is
very strong in Germany and it is actually in government now. It
exerted influence in the past, and of course, with the green
energy, the interesting thing is that, what it actually did was to
make Germany more dependent on Russian fossil fuels. This was an
ironic twist to this.
As to the second part of your question, in 2014, I read an article
on whether Europe was too dependent on Russian gas. This has been
going on for some time. At least, eight or nine years. The argument
back then was that Russia needs its energy customers more than we
need it. The conclusion was that we did not need to do much about
that, as it would hurt Russia more than Europe. Now it has been
shown as a very false argument. As we see now, we are getting
rationing in Europe for gas. There has also been a massive spiking
in gas prices this morning. I think it has gone up by 10 percent.
Alarm bells are ringing all over Europe.
Europe is in a funny position. It says to Russia that 'you are
using energy as a weapon against us'. I find this very strange. You
cannot say we don't want your energy today or in the future, but we
are supplying your enemies and killing your soldiers. This is not a
very logical argument.
Aliyev's art of statesmanship
Q. I will return to the Moscow Declaration, signed in February
between Azerbaijan and Russia. The moment was critical, of course.
That declaration has important energy provisions. Azerbaijan has
always downplayed any energy competition between Baku and Moscow on
the basis that the volumes are incomparable. Plus, President Aliyev
declared myriad times that, in those areas where competition could
theoretically occur, this would be obviated by Baku and Moscow.
Simultaneously, Azerbaijan plays its own role in Europe's energy
diversification. President Ilham Aliyev's manoeuvrability is of
special import. His ability to balance competing considerations is
noteworthy. In one of your articles, you have stated that the
shifting sands of Eurasia require a great deal of statesmanship
from the actors involved. How do you see President Ilham Aliyev's
diplomacy in that context?
A: That is certainly true. I totally agree with that. What he is
saying in this energy debate is very incisive. Some people suggest,
for instance, this a transformative event and suddenly Azerbaijan
is rescuing Europe. Of course, President Aliyev knows this is not
actually true. What Azerbaijan is doing is helping out Europe in a
corner.
In order to understand why this is very important geopolitically,
it is important to distinguishes two separate things; it gives
Azerbaijan a temporary leverage over Europe, it does not in the
long term. Essentially, Europe would have to stump up a lot of
costs for transportation, infrastructure and the developments, but
also 4 percent does not replace 45 or 60 percent. This is a limited
amount of leverage. Azerbaijan cannot take a position of saying
that all things will be rosy in the garden between us and Europe in
the future. Baku cannot afford doing that, it still needs to
balance other interests.
On the wider question and on the general balance sheet in the
Caucasus, the only way of assessing Azerbaijan’s performance is
assessing it against its neighbours. Firstly, we look at Armenia.
Due to its territorial expansionism and due to the fact that it is
a dysfunctional state and it neglected itself as a state, it has
become terribly dependent on Moscow. It is essentially a dependency
of Russia. Some Armenians would like to take Russian passports. It
is that bad really. What was all that independence that they gained
after the collapse of the Soviet Union for, if they cannot exercise
it as a functional sovereign state?
Secondly, if you look at Georgia, it had its problems. Initially,
they followed the Azerbaijani road under Shevarnadze and
Saakashvili. In 2008, they ran into the problem when there was a
feeling ‘let us try NATO club’. NATO did not take their back, as
they did with Ukraine. And they were defeated very quickly which
led to a territorial loss. Now they are re-dependent on Moscow
economically. Also, there is a disdain of the West which is not
very happy with them and side-lined them for EU membership. So,
Georgia is not in a good position.
And, if you look at Ukraine, it is obviously a tragedy. They have
lost 20 percent of their territory, a bit like the loss of Karabakh
in the early 1990s. The Ukrainians have suffered a disaster.
Looking at Azerbaijan for comparison, wise and balancing
statesmanship and stable leadership over the years have paid great
dividends. It regained territories, it is an economic powerhouse,
it is a geopolitical pivot, it is negotiating with more powerful
nations and forming relationships with them. There is nothing that
could be said negative about Azerbaijani leadership over the last
couple of decades.
I agree with Swante Cornell about Azerbaijan’s role as a leading
force in the South Caucasus. One thing that comes out of this
actually is what I call a very significant factor during the Second
Karabakh War. Azerbaijan actually gained geopolitically against
Russia, because it established itself as an independent and strong
country with a strong economy that Russia had to respect.
For Russia, losing Azerbaijan as a good neighbour is worse than
losing Armenia. I think it played a big role in the lack of Russian
intervention during the war. Putin, at the end of the day, respects
strength, he does not respect weakness. He will walk all over the
people who are weak. If he can get away with it, he will do it. But
to lose Azerbaijan as a good neighbour, which Azerbaijan
essentially is, would be a high price for Russia to pay.
I think a lot of people underestimated this geopolitical factor
during the war, even pro-Russian Armenians. They did not understand
Putin. I think this is very important to acknowledge that strength
comes from strength.
Peacekeepers: Subtle game
Q: I would like to draw your attention to the Russian military
contingent and specifically to the issues related to the duration
of the ‘peacekeeping’ mandate and other matters. There is
scepticism in Azerbaijan in the light of Russian policy regarding
other post-Soviet illegal breakaway entities. The Kremlin has
employed the policy of granting Russian passports to inhabitants of
those unrecognised regimes and then intervened on humanitarian
grounds on the misleading basis of protecting its citizens. How
worried should Azerbaijan be about this practice, given the current
state of affairs in Karabakh?
A: It is undoubtedly true that Russia will play this card. The
question is how will it play it. When we look at this situation
from the guise of the Armenians in the rump of the former
Nagorno-Karabakh, the question of the unification with Armenia,
‘Miatsum’, or whatever they call it, is just out of the question
now. It will not happen. They don’t have the military means to do
it. They will not negotiate it.
They may be thinking to themselves that the only thing that can
preserve them is through becoming part of Russia. That will deny
the Azerbaijanis taking over the territory, that is, from their
point of view. That is what they might try. And Russia? Will they
play this card? They will certainly play this card to get some
concessions from Azerbaijan. Will they play the card to the end, in
other words, would they go through with it? Here, I think the
declaration on the Allied Interaction (signed on 22 February) seems
to suggest they are not going to do this.
That document talks about territorial integrity, inviolability of
state borders, etc. That is why this was a good concession. Of
course, this does not mean Russians will not use it. This is a
bargaining chip and this is what they have been doing all the time.
They may look for some other concessions Azerbaijan has to give
them. Difficult to say what that would be. That will depend on
Russia’s needs, its security interests, for instance. It might form
the basis of some other concessions that they look for from
Azerbaijan. Such a concession might not be connected with Karabakh,
but might be connected with the overall Azerbaijani state. This is
a possibility.
Q: In 2025, six months prior to the expiration of the
mandate of the Russian peacekeepers, when Azerbaijan will be able
to exercise its veto, bargaining chips will be decisive. It is
difficult to determine what Baku must offer to Russia to make them
leave. Alternatively, it may be within Azerbaijan’s best interests
to ensure that they do not depart at this juncture. The
circumstances are shrouded in obscurity. Of course, the next policy
decision is mere speculation. You have mentioned ‘Miatsum’. There
is a discrepancy between the resources of Armenia and their
gargantuan and bombastic ambitions, and some intelligent Armenians,
who cannot be accused of lacking intellectual calibre, seem to
think in the same vein.
A: It is Armenia’s weak spot. It is ludicrous. Their ambitions are
a way beyond their means to achieve them. That is essentially it.
Even when we go back in history, we find that when Lloyd George let
them down, so to speak, and he handed over the problem of Armenia,
the same issue was there. Of course, the Armenians had contributed
to the Allied war effort against the destruction of the Ottoman
Empire and suddenly they became a problem. George Lloyd was a very
effective politician.
Q: By the way, thank you for recently reminding me the
origins of the 1922 Committee, which was related to Lloyd George’s
removal.
A: Exactly. The purpose of that committee was to get rid of Lloyd
George. The first thing he said was that Britain discovered these
Armenians had had a ridiculous ambition. And he passed on the
problem to President Wilson, who also failed to solve it. So, this
is the thing. So, Armenians did not seem to realise these, they
live in a myopic world bound by their own horizon, having no
empathy for anybody else.
The most important quality of the statesman is to have empathy for
opponents, for enemies and to see what they are going to do. But
they don’t have this. Perhaps, it can only develop with a shock or
a disaster such as the Second Karabakh War. Well, let us hope it
does develop. There are of course large numbers of Armenians who
just want to live in a functional state, earn their living, have a
job and have a reasonable amount of prosperity.
Turkmen gas to Europe
Q: Turkmen gas is very important. Turkmenistan has the fourth
largest gas resources in the world. The problem lies with the means
of its delivery to Europe. This should be via Azerbaijan, if Russia
is to be obviated. The mega Trans-Caspian gas pipeline seems to
have been shelved. How do you see the role of Turkmen gas in the
EU’s energy diversification and the benefits that could be accrued
to Azerbaijan in the light of such a design?
A: Pepe Escobar, a long-serving geopolitical writer, looked at it;
he examined Azerbaijan, and dismissed the possibility of Baku
replacing Russian gas. He believes that Azerbaijan’s role could be
even more important as a transit hub for energy and that is
possibly true.
The issue is going to be who is going to fund this infrastructure and super-structural projects. Essentially, it is Europe that needs this gas, if it is going to be done in a really big way. And I don’t think Europe will have this money after the Ukrainian war, after the economic disasters and the lack of cheap energy in the future.
Who is going to have this money? China, for instance, could be a big funder of these infrastructure projects in the future. What is there for them? It might take the place of big regional settlements where investment comes from China, which is integrating a whole load of regions, including Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, Iran, Central Asian countries, etc, etc. Such a design could be within the best interests of the Eurasian project, so to speak. It could occur. But I cannot see Europe’s interests in it.
For Azerbaijan’s interest, it would be beneficial perhaps. I
simply think economics goes against Europeans pulling the money
into their pockets and funding such a project. It is more likely to
be a Eurasian project in the long run.
Tory leadership race
Q: There is a project proposed by the US-based Trans-Caspian
Resources envisaging a shorter pipeline. However, it remains
unclear as to where the money will come from.
On a final note, my last question is going to be about the Tory
leadership race. Boris Johnson’s decision to resign is, I think, a
great loss to the Conservative party, and ultimately a victory for
Labour. I believe history has an uncanny propensity to distinguish
substantial matters from trivialities and I believe, in the
fullness of time, the substance will prevail. Boris has a grand
persona and character, being capable of realising the seemingly
impossible.
Now we have Sunak vs Truss. The latter is regarded as Boris
Continuity. My feeling is that, although within the parliamentary
Tory party, Sunak has greater support, when it goes to the
membership, Borisian sentiments will prevail and Truss will take
the glittering prize. What is your take on this?
A: I agree with a lot of what you have said, Orkhan. I think
Johnson was overthrown on trivial matters. Somebody may say those
were not trivial things. Some of the things that were regarded
trivial in the past now has been erected to substantial things,
which none of those things were. The Tory rank and file now regret
the demise of Boris Johnson. Probably if they could have changed
their minds, they would probably do it.
So, we have two candidates, Rishi Sunak, the former Chancellor, and
Liz Truss, the Foreign Secretary. Yes, Rishi Sunak wielded the
knife, and, of course, he is going to pay a heavy price amongst the
membership.
To me, Liz Truss has more political ability than Rishi Sunak, who
seems to be performing particularly poorly in his presentations. He
was the Chancellor and is now too tied up to the rather unpopular
policies of taxation, unpopular amongst the Tory rank and file. He
will pay the price for that too.
Boris has actually put a knife into Sunak himself in the final
PMQs, where he made references to certain things he thought the
next leadership should do. It was like writing a job description
for a candidate you want to take your job. That is what he did.
I see Truss winning the election amongst the members. But she is
not a Johnson. That is the problem for her. That is why she might
struggle to win an election. Johnson was essentially a maverick. He
had an appeal amongst the ordinary people of England, particularly.
Liz Truss won't have the same I think. Johnson was a
Macmillian-type Tory. Just remember the old Tory patronage system.
'One nation Tory' was the word for him.
Truss is positioning herself as a Thatcherite, which is not what
Johnson was. Margaret Thatcher has a lot of kudos in Tory circles.
She is also very unpopular amongst the large section of people in
England as well. So, this may not win an election. And, possibly,
Boris will come back after the election and we will be glad to have
him back.
Q: Boris Johnson has surmounted myriad impossibilities. He
was Mayor of London for two terms; his major achievement was that
he won in London, a Labour-inclined city, not because he was a
Tory, but because he was Boris. He made Brexit possible, and
achieved a landslide victory. Am I right to conclude that you
believe the project 'Return Boris' is not unfounded?
A: It is a possibility. It is not very usual in British politics
that ex-PMs make a comeback. But I think in this case, as is the
case with Donald Trump, there is a possibility. In Trump's case,
the disasters of Biden's Presidency make his return possible. In
this case, the potential disasters of the next year or so make it
possible. Anybody will struggle to pull the UK out of this
situation it has got itself into, and, I think, Boris could have
another "inning", to put it in English cricket terminology.
Q: Pat, thank you very much for your time. I am more than
grateful. Time is flying and stands still for no man. I would love
this conversation to continue ad infinitum preferably, in Dublin or
Belfast, which I am sure will happen very soon.
A: Thank you, Orkhan. Delighted. Looking forward to our further
conversations.
----
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