On February 23, 2012, the controversial leader
of Russia’s
Liberal Democratic Party Vladimir Zhirinovsky predicted the possible outbreak
of World War III this summer. According to the former Russian army colonel, as
soon as Syria is annihilated,
a blow will be struck against Iran.
At that point, “Azerbaijan
might take advantage of that state to re-seize Nagorno-Karabakh. The Republic of Armenia
will act in opposition to it, while Turkey
will support Azerbaijan.
That’s how we’ll in summer be caught in a war,” Zhirinovsky explained.
Although the Russian politician is notnew to thiskind of interventions, the
risk that the Caucasus might indeed be the
trigger of a new world war is all but unlikely. Earlier this year, Azerbaijan’s president Ilham Aliyev said Baku is buying up modern weaponry to be able to regain control of the
breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region quickly and with few losses should peace
talks with neighbouring Armenia
fail. Negotiations to end the conflict have been held under the auspices of the
so-called Minsk Group since 1992, but so far results have been inconclusive.
Azerbaijan is a natural ally of Turkey and an adversary of Iran. NATO partner since 1994
through its participation to the Alliance’s
Partnership for Peace program, Baku is also one
of the most geo-strategically important allies of the West in the pipelines war
against Russia,
being both a supporter and a potential supplier of the Washington-backed
Nabucco gas pipeline project. On the other side, Armenia
is a close ally of Russia
and Iran,
both interested in countering Turkish and US influence over the Caspian region.
Given this geopolitical context, to which are
added NATO-Russia tensions over US missile defense plans in Europe and Azerbaijani-Russian disagreementsover the renewalof theGabala radar station lease,
a spike in violence in the Caucasus might indeed trigger a major conflict
between a US-led coalition consisting of Azerbaijan, Turkey and Israel on one
side, and a Sino-Russian bloc including Armenia and Iran on the other side. Nevertheless,
although five of the eight countries involved are de facto nuclear
powers, a World War III between them would not necessarily imply the use of
nuclear weapons.
In fact, a conflict originating from tensions in
the Caucasus-Caspian region would be local in scope, but global in extent and
consequences, being thus able to be considered a world war. Such a
confrontation would have some of the characteristics of the Cold War, being the
result of at least three proxy conflicts (Azerbaijan against Armenia, Iran
against Azerbaijan, Turkey against Iran); nevertheless, given the nuclear
potential of the countries diplomatically involved, it could not last more than
a few days, being decided by both compellence and deterrence strategies fielded
by the United States, Russia and China.
ARMENIAN AND RUSSIAN TANKS DURING A JOINT MILITARY EXERCISE
According to the New York Times, Russian
fighter jets stationed in Armenia
have conducted about 300 training flights since the beginning of 2012,
increasing the number of flying hours by more than 20 percent from last year.
Although Kirill Kiselev, an officer of the press service in the Southern
Military District in Gyumri, assured the “Intensification of flights of Russian
air-unit of N102 military base has been recorded in the framework of combat
training program,” such a hyperactivity of Russian air forces might be a warning
that Moscow could intervene at any moment should a war break out.
Nevertheless, only strong Chinese support can allow Russia to successfully continue
its deterrence
strategy aimed at avoiding US-sponsored military interventions both in the Caucasus (Nagorno-Karabakh) and the Middle East (Syria and Iran). Strong of its 3 million soldiers, who make the People’s Liberation Army
the world’s largest military force, China would in fact be able to wage any kind
of conflict with an overwhelming conventional superiority. Should Beijing gain access to military facilities in countries
such as Kazakhstan and Pakistan, a Western attack on Tehran and its allies would therefore
become an extremelyremotepossibility. In that case,
the setback suffered by the US–Israel axis of having to de facto accept Iran’s
nuclearization would already be, in itself, a victory for the Sino-Russian
bloc, as well a practical realization of what Sun Tzu considered as the “apex
of strategy:” to win a fight without fighting.