By Eduard Abrahamyan
April 27th, 2016, The CACI Analyst
The recent unprecedented escalation around Nagorno-Karabakh highlighted deep systemic shortcomings in existing international mediation initiatives. The OSCE Minsk Group, dedicated to settling the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia, has become largely irrelevant in the new operational situation. The intense fighting erupted on April 2 and lasted for four days until a Russia-brokered ceasefire between the adversaries was mutually agreed upon on April 5. The fighting put an end to the 22-year-old ceasefire regime, and the security environment of the South Caucasus. The escalation was clearly a consequence of a shift in the military balance of power, consistently fueled by Russia’s distribution of advanced offensive arms to Azerbaijan and the evident impracticability of the Minsk Group.
- NagornoKarabakh conflict
- 4 day war 2016
- Armenia
- Azerbaijan
- South Caucasus
- OSCE Minsk Group
- United States
- France
- Russia
- UN Security Council
- Barack Obama
- Vladimir Putin
- EEU
- CSTO
- Madrid principles
- Kazan agreements
- CIS
- Azerbaijan EEU membership
- OSCE arms embargo