For over 230 days, a humanitarian crisis has loomed over Artsakh, or Nagorno-Karabakh, an autonomous, ethnically Armenian region within the internationally recognized borders of Azerbaijan, Newsweek reports.
The world has yet to take notice, and why should it? This seemingly unimportant area in the South Caucasus is the current lynchpin of geopolitics dividing East and West, NATO and Central Asia, Israel from monitoring Iran, and Russia from controlling its former republics. A peaceful, democratic populace including 30,000 children is in the crosshairs.
Since Dec. 12, 2022, the Berdzor (Lachin) Corridor, the only road connecting Artsakh to Armenia, has been under blockade by Azerbaijan in an escalation of tensions following the 44-day war of 2020. Now in its eighth month, the blockade is accompanied by increased threats and acts of violence against Artsakh and increasingly the Republic of Armenia.
Initial claims that the blockade was due to protests of "eco-activists" quickly proved to be a ruse to cover up Azerbaijan's campaign of aggression against the region's Indigenous Christians. The blockade has two immediate goals. First, to force assimilation into Azerbaijan; Second, to pressure Armenia to allow Azerbaijan to forge a road across its sovereign territory, uniting Turkey with its "brothers" in Azerbaijan, heralding Turkish domination across Central Asia. The intention is to make Armenia into a "rump state," further isolated and its borders redrawn and diminished. Azerbaijan's petro-dictator Ilham Aliyev and Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan's pursuit of geopolitical gain comes at the cost of 120,000 lives.
The implications are disturbingly clear. Erdogan and Aliyev intend to continue the genocide of 1915 and wipe Armenians off the map. Referring to the Armenian genocide, Erdogan said they will "continue to fulfill this mission, which our grandfathers have carried out for centuries in the Caucasus region." Aliyev has chided Armenians to "behave yourselves" or suffer renewed attacks. Their intended ethnic cleansing has precedents in Turkey during the 1915 genocide, the 1988 and 1990 pogroms of Baku and Sumgait, and the forced depopulation of ethnic Armenians from Nakhichevan, Azerbaijan.