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Residents of Alma-Ata, Hazakhstan crowd inside a bread shop. Photo by APF Fellow James Rupert |
By the end of lunch, the logic of Gassimovs history, and perhaps of the vodka, had moved him to a vicious conclusion: Well never give up Karabakh
We have chemical weapons. And, if necessary, well destroy Nagorno-Karabakh completely.Then it will be our children who will come back from Baku and populate it once again. There is no other way out.
There is no clear evidence whether Azerbaijan has access to chemical weapons of the former Soviet army. In any case, of all the uncertainties reopened by last years collapse of the Soviet Union, the most immediately dangerous is the welter of conflicts in what was the U.S.S.R.s southwestern corner-the Caucasus region, on the borders of Iran and Turkey. For Americans, the Caucasus is the most confusing of places-one of those gray regions Outside the mainstream of European history that American school textbooks consider our own. But the region cannot be ignored, for it is a small fulcrum that could rock larger neighbors: Russia to the north and Iran and Turkey to the south.
The Caucasus Mountains stretch like a fence between the Caspian and Black Seas-a border region that for centuries was contested by [lie empires of Russia to the north Turkey and Persia to the south. Partly because the tides of armies, colonies and refugees across these mountains and valleys, the region is a patchwork of ethnic groups. Peoples like the Armenians and Azeris-but also smaller groups, such as the Abkhaz, Chechen, Ossetians, Lezghin and Daghestanis have their own cultures, languages and even alphabets.
The conflicts among the Caucasus peoples are of a type. At innumerable placesmaybe in most of the Caucasusat least two of these groups claim the land. Like Fazil Gassimov, they cherish histories that teach that they once ruled this valley or those mountains. Often, each group feels itself a persecuted and endangered minority that needs the land to survive. Each often feels like an offended host who graciously tolerated the other as a guest, despite its own rightful claim to the land, only to have the guest declare sovereign rights. In the past few years, as the Soviet imperial grip on the Caucasus has slackened, two of the Caucasian conflicts have been carried into prolonged civil war: in Nagorno-Karabakh and between the Ossetians and Georgians in South Ossetia. Here, people fight with the mutual fear of extinction that has added years, bloodshed and hatred to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
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Shaumyan residents stand in front of a sports club in the center of town that was destroyed by a Azeri missile attack. Photo by APF Fellow James Rupert |
Fazil Gassimovs history, in which Karabakh was ruled by Turkic khans, is true. But it is a partial truth, for when tides of empire washed in other directions, it was Armenian princes who governed. By the time Transcaucasia came under Russian, and then Soviet, rule, the Armenian and Azeri Turkish populations were scattered and mixed throughout it. When a border was drawn between the two Soviet republics in 1923, Nagorno-Karabakh was given to Azerbaijan-but in the form of an autonomous oblast meant to satisfy the desire of the Armenian majority there for an Armenian, rather than Azeri, identity.
Armenian culture is suffused with a sense of the nation having been victimized.The 1915 massacre of Armenians by the Ottoman Turksan act the Armenians call attempted genocideforced them out of the heart of their traditional homeland, in eastern Turkey, and left them with a Soviet republic the size of Maryland. We have lost so much Naturally, all Armenians want to keep what Armenian land remains, said Griar Arutunian, chief editor of an Armenian news agency in Yerevan.
Because of the centuries of conflict between the Christian Armenians and the Muslim Turks-and especially because of the massacre, in which Armenians say as many as 1.5 million were killeda dislike, even a demonization, of Turks is part of Armenian culture. Most Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh find it impossible to have any belief in the good faith of any Azerbaijani, said Anatoly Shabad, a member of the Russian legislatures human rights committee who has spent months in the territory monitoring the conflict. It is ingrained in them, he said. Armenian women frighten their children with the name of Turks.
In January, among Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakhs capital, Stepanakert, the historical hatreds were sharpened by immediate desperation. The city of 70,000 was covered in snow, yet bad no heating oil, electricity or running water because of Azerbaijans blockade of the territory. Worse were Azeri rocket salvos, which demolished homes and killed residents by night, and sniper attacks that picked off people in the streets by day. Jana Dzhangiriana white-haired grandmother who spent her days fussing over her grandsons, ages five and tworaised her soft voice only to berate the Azeris: They were Turks and theyre still Turks They were. animals and theyll remain animals.Theyre uncivilized. The Armenian characterization of Azeris as uncivilized is often muted to an emphasis on the Armenians own attachment to the Christian and western worlds, in contrast to the Azeris place in the Muslim community.
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Dr. Ashavir Cukassian shows a hospital room, its walls buckled by the blast of an Alazan fired by Azeri forces. Photo by APF Fellow James Rupert |
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Vriej Akopian, a 17 year-old Armenian boy, recovers from bullet wounds suffered in Stepanakert. Photo by APF Fellow James Rupert |
Azeris also share a nonspecific but strong belief that the United States and Europe have been drawn into a conspiracy against them by the influence of the global Armenian diaspora. There is an Armenian governor in California, (former governor) Edward Deukmejian, said Gabil Gusseinov, a political science professor and commentator for Azeri state television, and we know there are Armenians in Congress. Neither Gusseinov nor others cited actions by the West that showed a bias toward Armenia, but declared their case proven by the fact that Armenias new foreign minister, Rafi Hovanissian, is an American citizen and former congressional staffer. Rustamov and other Azeris flatly asserted that western television news reports showing the heavy damage to Stepanakert had really been filmed in the nearby Azeri town of Shusha and had been mislabeled to discredit Azerbaijan.
At an Azeri front-fine guardpost near Agdam, a group of Azeri militiamen, in combat fatigues and with automatic rifles slung over their shoulders, watched one day in March as a French diplomatic convoy returned from Stepanakert. When the trucks halted, grizzled guerrillas pressed to the open window of French Deputy Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner. They had a question: Had the minister seen evidence that Azeri forces were attacking civilians, as the Western press said? Could he truthfully say he had seen any destroyed houses in Stepanakert?
Kouchner gaped in astonishment. I dont want to answer such questions, he said indignantly. But Michel Bonnot, head of the French Foreign Ministrys European section, was more vocal. As the truck lurched forward, he leaned out of his window and shouted back: The city is being destroyed! People are living in basements! Watching the trucks pull away, the guerrillas shook their heads. They knew with certainty that it was the Armenians who killed civilians and shelled houses in this war-not the Azeris. If the French were, saying otherwise, they said, it showed that they had taken the Armenians side.
The belief in conspiracies is linked to the Azeris own demonic image of the Armenians. Numerous Azeris did not hesitate to label Armenians as cunning, sly people who gain advantage by connections and deception. You know, they always lived better than we did, said Rustamov. People always talk about Sumgait, site of the 1988 massacre of Armenians, but they dont understand the way that they (the Azeris) felt. You should have seen how they (the Armenians) lived there.
Azeris say they cannot give up Nagorno-Karabakh because the Armenians would then press other demands. They say they have the right to the western half of Azerbaijan because some people lived there hundreds of years ago, said Capt. Mirsalikh Akhundov, a spokesman for the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry. If they take Karabakh, then theyll want more and more, until theyre right here in Baku, Akhundov said. To an outsider, it may seem an exaggerated fearbut the independence claim by the Armenian government based in Stepanakert includes not only the former Nagorno-Karabakh autonomous oblast, but an Armenian-majority district to the north that always was part of Azerbaijan proper. And there are historical Armenian claims to other parts of Azerbaijan, even if no prominent Armenians are pressing them now. (As are so many others, this part of the conflict is symmetrical; Fazil Gassimov, the Azeri history buff, stresses that the Armenian capital, Yerevan, really is ours. There were khans there, too.)
The last time that the Caucasus was free to pursue its own patterns of life and conflict, it had no modern armies with which to do so, and there were no electronic communications to make its actions so relevant, and therefore dangerous, for neighboring countries. It will never be so easily ignored as it once was.
© 1992 James Rupert