Opinion: 9 May diplomacy demonstrates a changing political landscape in the South Caucasus

"Azerbaijan’s non-participation in the military parade in Moscow demonstrates a changing political landscape in the region that profoundly challenges conventional perceptions," writes Farid Mirzali in this op-ed for commonspace.eu. "In fact, the cooling down of relations between Azerbaijan and Russia has been gradually gathering pace since last December when the protests along the Lachin road were launched and Baku started to blame the Russian peacekeeping mission for its failure to fulfill their duties and prevent armed men and weapons from entering Karabakh."

The victory of the USSR over Nazi Germany on 9 May 1945 is a day that has gone down in history, with grand military parades honoring Soviet soldiers becoming a staple of the Russian holiday calendar. In 1995 in Moscow, a big parade was organized to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the victory. Along with a number of leaders from around the world, leaders of the post-Soviet countries also attended the parade as guests for the first time.

In subsequent years, these parades were held annually, and leaders of post-Soviet countries and most major states were invited there as guests. Since 2016, there has been a decrease in the number of leaders attending due to the annexation of Crimea and the war in Ukraine. For subsequent military parades, invitations were only sent to post-Soviet leaders on anniversary dates.

The President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, last attended the 9 May parade as a guest in 2015. Although Russian President Vladimir Putin sent an official invitation to Mr. Aliyev for the military parade held in 2020, he expressed regret that his pre-planned participation in the military parade dedicated to the 75th anniversary of the Victory in Moscow was not possible due to the implementation of quarantine measures in Azerbaijan. Instead, Azerbaijan was represented by the Minister of Defense and 75 servicemen of the Azerbaijani Army. For the same reason, the Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan, did not attend the military parade and instead sent the Minister of Defense to Moscow as a guest.

Azerbaijan's absense in Moscow caused widespread media speculation

After the start of the full-scale Russo-Ukrainian war, no post-Soviet leader participated in the parade held in 2022. The press secretary of the Kremlin, Dmitry Peskov, said that since the parade held in 2023 was not an anniversary date, no special invitations were sent to the leaders of post-Soviet countries. However, the leaders of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Belarus and Armenia rather unexpectedly visited Moscow on this occasion, comfirming their attendence at the last minute. The absence of Azerbaijan among these countries caused widespread speculation in the media.

“President Ilham Aliyev informed the Kremlin that he would not be able to attend the event in Moscow, due to his participation in the celebrations of the 100th anniversary of former president Heydar Aliyev. As a result, Azerbaijan was not represented in the parade,” reported Russian “Channel One”. 

This year, unlike previous years, President Aliyev congratulated Soviet war veterans not from the capital Baku, but from the liberated city of Shusha. This gesture, on one hand, served to emphasize symbolic priorities of the Azerbaijani leadership, and moreover, cannot be unrelated to the rather ugly context surrounding parades in Moscow since recently. Russia’s invasion and occupation of Ukraine made the Kremlin’s narrative of the “sacred war” against Nazism null and void. 

Azerbaijan has repeatedly stated that it doesn’t recognize Russia’s attack on Ukraine and occupation of its territories. As a matter of principle, official Baku offered mediation missions to the parties before and at the beginning of the war. However, this does not mean that Azerbaijan equates the occupying country with the occupied one. Speaking with the Ukrainian expert Aliona Hlyvko at the ADA Conference in 2022, President Aliyev openly declared that he recognizes the territorial integrity of Ukraine and recommended Kyiv to continue fighting until justice is restored. Analysts believe that Baku is thereby demonstrating that Azerbaijan is not under the influence of Russia, that it is conducting an independent policy, and that it has become the main voice in the region after the Second Karabakh War.

This, in turn, suggests that Russia is gradually losing its dominance in the South Caucasus, which has been lately symbolized by its reluctant acceptance of the installation of an Azerbaijani checkpoint on the Lachin road. Unlike President Aliyev though, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan travelled to Moscow one day earlier and was seated in the front to watch the military parade.

Azerbaijan's absense in the 9 May parade demonstrates a changing political landscape in the region

Following the parade, Aliyev met with the President of the European Union, Charles Michel, in Brussels on 14 May, where he conducted negotiations with Nikol Pashinyan mediated by Mr. Michel. Emphasizing that Armenia and Azerbaijan had agreed on recognising each other’s territorial integrity, Charles Michel also stated that the leaders would soon hold another informal one in Chisinau. In parallel with this meeting, there were further ceasefire violations reported on the Azerbaijan-Armenia border, in which the positions of the Azerbaijani Army were fired upon with artillery shells, and one Azerbaijani soldier was killed. 

It should also be noted that during the meetings between the leaders and foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia held in Europe and the United States without a Russian mediation, the ceasefire is regularly violated on the border between the two countries, often resulting in casualties and triggering yet another crisis in the peace process. Despite the statements of support for meetings held to contribute to the peace process from the Western world, official Moscow emphasizes the importance of these meetings being mediated by Russia and accuses the EU and US of escalating the conflict.

Azerbaijan’s non-participation in the military parade in Moscow demonstrates a changing political landscape in the region that profoundly challenges conventional perceptions. In fact, the cooling down of relations between Azerbaijan and Russia has been gradually gathering pace since last December when the protests along the Lachin road were launched and Baku started to blame the Russian peacekeeping mission for its failure to fulfill their duties and prevent armed men and weapons from entering Karabakh.

Meanwhile, the Azerbaijani side also claimed that the road is blocked not by protesters but by the peacekeepers themselves. Moreover, the installation of a proper checkpoint on 23 April by the Azerbaijani side exposed Moscow’s failure on the ground and its growing alienation from both Baku and Yerevan. Indeed, according to some reports, the peacekeepers’ vehicles are now also subject to being checked by Azerbaijani border controllers at the Lachin сheckpoint. 

Finally, it should be noted that the Declaration of Allied Interaction signed by Presidents Aliyev and Putin on 22 February, 2022, in the run-up to the invasion,, has never been ratified by the Azerbaijani Parliament and hence remains little more than a piece of paper. Most probably, by taking part in the military parade on the highest level, Armenia tried to play both sides in the peace process with Azerbaijan, attempting to strengthen its commitment to Russia in the hope that the latter would “punish” Baku for its unwillingness to align with Moscow.

source: Farid Mirzali is a Research Fellow at the Topchubashov Center in Baku, Azerbaijan. He received a bachelor's degree in International Relations from Baku State University in 2019. Then, he obtained his master's degree in Regional Studies in Israel and the Middle East from the Azerbaijan University of Languages. Farid`s areas of interest cover geopolitical issues in the Middle East and Eastern Europe.
photo: Aqorda
The views expressed in opinion pieces and commentaries do not necessarily reflect the position of commonspace.eu or its partners 

Related articles

Editor's choice
News
Council of Europe launches new International Claims Commission for Ukraine

Council of Europe launches new International Claims Commission for Ukraine

Thirty-four countries and the European Union have signed a new convention establishing an International Claims Commission for Ukraine at a diplomatic conference co-hosted by the 46-nation Council of Europe and the Netherlands in the Hague. The diplomatic conference was attended by leaders and high-level representatives from over 50 states, including the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the President of the Republic of Moldova, Maia Sandu, and the Prime Minister of the Netherlands, Dick Schoof.  “Today marks a major step forward in ensuring accountability for Ukraine. The International Claims Commission represents justice and hope for tens of thousands of victims—our determination that those who have suffered will not be forgotten. I call for quick ratifications so we can get the commission rapidly up and running for the people of Ukraine,” said Council of Europe Secretary General Alain Berset. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said: “We expect that every mechanism for compensation from the Register of Damage and Claims Commission to the actual payments – will start working and receive strong and sufficient international support, so that people can truly feel that any kind of damage caused by the war can be compensated. This war, and Russia’s responsibility for it, MUST become a clear example – so that others learn not to choose aggression.” “Accountability is about creating the conditions for peace that endures. And therefore, accountability is a condition of security – today and for the future. But accountability is not only about Ukraine. And it is not only about one aggressor and one victim. Accountability is about Europe. About every country in Europe. It is about whether Europe, as a whole, is willing to defend its peace,” said Maia Sandu, President of the Republic of Moldova, which currently holds the Presidency of the Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers. The Prime Minister of the Netherlands, Dick Schoof, said: “Every day Russia is deliberately bombarding homes, destroying businesses and damaging infrastructure in Ukraine. Russia must compensate Ukraine for the damage caused. That is why we have launched the International Claims Commission for Ukraine and we are honoured to host it.” The International Claims Commission will be the second part of a comprehensive compensation mechanism related to Russia’s war of aggression, building on the existing Register of Damage for Ukraine. The claims commission will be established within the framework of the Council of Europe and will also be open to other countries. The Register of Damage for Ukraine, created in 2023, collects and records compensation claims submitted by individuals, organisations and public bodies in Ukraine. Forty-four states and the European Union have so far joined the Register, which has already received 86,000 claims. The International Claims Commission will review, assess and decide upon claims submitted to the Register of Damage for Ukraine and determine the amount of compensation, if any, which is due in each case. The convention establishing the commission will enter into force once it has been ratified by 25 signatories, as long as sufficient funds have been secured to support its initial work.

Popular

Editor's choice
News
Council of Europe launches new International Claims Commission for Ukraine

Council of Europe launches new International Claims Commission for Ukraine

Thirty-four countries and the European Union have signed a new convention establishing an International Claims Commission for Ukraine at a diplomatic conference co-hosted by the 46-nation Council of Europe and the Netherlands in the Hague. The diplomatic conference was attended by leaders and high-level representatives from over 50 states, including the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the President of the Republic of Moldova, Maia Sandu, and the Prime Minister of the Netherlands, Dick Schoof.  “Today marks a major step forward in ensuring accountability for Ukraine. The International Claims Commission represents justice and hope for tens of thousands of victims—our determination that those who have suffered will not be forgotten. I call for quick ratifications so we can get the commission rapidly up and running for the people of Ukraine,” said Council of Europe Secretary General Alain Berset. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said: “We expect that every mechanism for compensation from the Register of Damage and Claims Commission to the actual payments – will start working and receive strong and sufficient international support, so that people can truly feel that any kind of damage caused by the war can be compensated. This war, and Russia’s responsibility for it, MUST become a clear example – so that others learn not to choose aggression.” “Accountability is about creating the conditions for peace that endures. And therefore, accountability is a condition of security – today and for the future. But accountability is not only about Ukraine. And it is not only about one aggressor and one victim. Accountability is about Europe. About every country in Europe. It is about whether Europe, as a whole, is willing to defend its peace,” said Maia Sandu, President of the Republic of Moldova, which currently holds the Presidency of the Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers. The Prime Minister of the Netherlands, Dick Schoof, said: “Every day Russia is deliberately bombarding homes, destroying businesses and damaging infrastructure in Ukraine. Russia must compensate Ukraine for the damage caused. That is why we have launched the International Claims Commission for Ukraine and we are honoured to host it.” The International Claims Commission will be the second part of a comprehensive compensation mechanism related to Russia’s war of aggression, building on the existing Register of Damage for Ukraine. The claims commission will be established within the framework of the Council of Europe and will also be open to other countries. The Register of Damage for Ukraine, created in 2023, collects and records compensation claims submitted by individuals, organisations and public bodies in Ukraine. Forty-four states and the European Union have so far joined the Register, which has already received 86,000 claims. The International Claims Commission will review, assess and decide upon claims submitted to the Register of Damage for Ukraine and determine the amount of compensation, if any, which is due in each case. The convention establishing the commission will enter into force once it has been ratified by 25 signatories, as long as sufficient funds have been secured to support its initial work.