By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Azemedia new logo
  • Home
  • Opinion
  • News
    • Economy
    • Energy
    • Climate and Ecology
  • Diaspora
  • Interview
  • Science
  • Logistics-Transport
  • History
  • Defense
Aze.MediaAze.Media
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • News
  • Economy
  • Climate and Ecology
  • Energy
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Gender
  • Interview
  • Science
  • Logistics-Transport
  • History
  • Defense
  • Karabakh
  • Diaspora
  • Who we are
Follow US
© 2021 Aze.Media – Daily Digest
Aze.Media > Opinion > The case for cooperation and peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan
Opinion

The case for cooperation and peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan

AzeMedia
By AzeMedia Published July 2, 2021 790 Views 9 Min Read
B3 Hajiyev1 c53 0 1747 988 s885x516
Illustration on beginnings of peace between Azerbaijan and Armenia by Alexander Hunter/The Washington Times

This month, Armenia and Azerbaijan took what many must hope shall be our first step in our own detente. Azerbaijan handed over 15 Armenian detainees captured on its territory following the cessation of hostilities in November. In response, Armenia supplied maps of mines it had laid in Azerbaijan, which shall aid clearance operations to make territories safe once again for civilians. Both Armenia and Azerbaijan now know more of one another. Both are now safer. 

With Armenia’s election on Sunday behind us, Azerbaijan stands ready to take the next strides to transfuse trust. We must build upon this diplomatic breakthrough and turn confrontation into collaboration. Because there is much work ahead of us.

This can be shown no more starkly than in the case of the maps so far supplied — which detail the position of 97,000 mines. Yet this is in just one district of the liberated lands of Karabakh. Until further maps are revealed, de-mining will take place blind in seven further districts. Prime Minister Pashinyan himself admitted the maps shared are only a small fraction in Armenia’s possession. Nevertheless, it is progress from the days when Azerbaijan’s request for the maps were dismissed as a ‘fake agenda.’

How many more hundreds of thousands of mines there are remains unknown. Karabakh is believed to be the most intensely mined territory in the world: Over 1.5 billion square metres of explosives were laid across the line of contact that had until recently held since the first Karabakh war in the 1990s — more contaminated than the Demilitarized Zone between North and South Korea. 

Since Azerbaijanis have been able to step into these lands, stories of human tragedy are regularly reported in our domestic press. One hundred forty-four civilians — many Internally Displaced Persons eager to see what remains of their homes after 30 years in exile — have died since the ceasefire. Most recently, two journalists were killed when their truck hit an anti-tank mine planted by retreating Armenian forces.

It is incidents like this that present the most difficult obstacle to peace. Despite the ceasefire agreement signed in Moscow in November, when hostilities were supposed to end, Azerbaijani civilians are still dying. For the grieving loved ones of those civilians killed after the military ceasefire, it can be easily interpreted as a continuation of war by different means. 

Withholding the sole information that can prevent needless deaths in a time of peace thins the line between inaction and complicity: It is not pulling the trigger — but waiting for mines to claim lives of the next victims. 

For Yerevan, the greatest obstacle to peace appears to be Armenians detained in Azerbaijan. They are not prisoners of war (POW), as some in the media have incorrectly suggested. All POWs have been exchanged according to the ceasefire agreement. But those now in detention were apprehended when acting on Azerbaijani soil following this date. It is therefore legitimate to hold them as foreign agents. 

At the same time, we appeal to the Armenian government to reveal the number of maps they are withholding. Knowing more about the other shall help us bridge the distrust that remains between us. Then we can begin addressing one another’s needs from a place of lucidity. 

We may only have started to build trust, but the door is now opening to the more contentious issues that lie ahead — such as delimitation and demarcation of the border and the re-normalization of relations. But incremental confidence-building steps shall generate cycles of cooperation. Through them, our destination will become clearer. 

The reopening of the Zangazur Corridor — a rail and road linking Azerbaijan to Armenia — will open an economic opportunity for both our countries and the wider region. The isolation of Azerbaijan’s exclave Nakhchivan — accessible through Armenia — will end. Armenia’s capital Yerevan can be connected via Azerbaijan by land with Moscow and other capitals. It is a crime against geography that those borders have been closed for the last 30 years.

In this regionwide transformational process we hope the Minsk Group — the mediation body established in 1992 under the co-chairmanship of France, Russia, and the United States — should not be of the past, but part of the future. Through experience and institutional memory, the group can play an important role in building confidence between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the years ahead.  

Today we are offered the chance for stability — with mutual prosperity as corollary. We have the opportunity to know one another, to grow safer and prosper together. Eventually, all of these confidence-building measures may lead us to an ultimate peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan. But instead of peace and cooperation, seeking revanchism could bring another disaster and tragedy.

In Azerbaijan we have always believed that should Armenia pursue peaceful policies with its neighbors, then it can and must benefit from regional cooperation. So, we say, let’s transform the South Caucasus for better, and in peace.

Hikmet Hajiyev is special adviser on foreign affairs to the president of Azerbaijan

Washington Times

 

If you want to contribute and have specific expertise, please contact us at editor@aze.media 

You Might Also Like

Iran’s Caspian signaling and the boundaries of regional alignment

No talks with revanchists: what Armenians will have to pay for

Turkey-Azerbaijan alliance strained by opposing stances on Israel

Caspian escalation raises stakes for Central Asia

Dialogue amid escalation

AzeMedia July 2, 2021 July 2, 2021

New articles

148898 AAfileIranAzerbaijan
Iran’s Caspian signaling and the boundaries of regional alignment
Opinion April 1, 2026
Tumblr 7785d4993072edee15c5f76f97426150 cbc66783
No talks with revanchists: what Armenians will have to pay for
Opinion April 1, 2026
FzXmfsHpncSf7mjEilSDOohDU3PyMoxbiG63JOjQ
ING Group: Azerbaijan’s external economic position remains very strong
News April 1, 2026
69ca6321ec2b869ca6321ec2b9177487132969ca6321ec2b669ca6321ec2b7
Baku Initiative Group calls on UN member states to take practical steps on slavery resolution
News March 30, 2026
7YNXnb05zWpwunxmQWNmwxfqd6tq6osklTkNbHWo
Azerbaijan evacuated over 3,000 people from Iran to date
News March 30, 2026
Bildschirmfoto 2026 03 30 um 11.14.38
Turkey-Azerbaijan alliance strained by opposing stances on Israel
Opinion March 29, 2026
Screenshot
President Ilham Aliyev completely, directionally turned his country around – Steve Witkoff
News March 28, 2026
69c778d12350869c778d123509177468027369c778d12350669c778d123507
Azerbaijani oil price exceeds $124
News March 28, 2026
QJ9m9qaUTjKho4NQMQ4PTfRb7ykBAWVDMnL2UsSf
FAO offers Azerbaijan to develop five-year fisheries development plan
News March 28, 2026
577c9b7a tcxj78bkp11yulvvjs6gr
Türkiye and Azerbaijan sign media cooperation pact at STRATCOM summit
News March 28, 2026

You Might Also Like

148898 AAfileIranAzerbaijan

Iran’s Caspian signaling and the boundaries of regional alignment

April 1, 2026 6 Min Read
Tumblr 7785d4993072edee15c5f76f97426150 cbc66783

No talks with revanchists: what Armenians will have to pay for

April 1, 2026 7 Min Read
Bildschirmfoto 2026 03 30 um 11.14.38

Turkey-Azerbaijan alliance strained by opposing stances on Israel

March 29, 2026 7 Min Read
Image Mar 25 2026 02 25 03 PM

Caspian escalation raises stakes for Central Asia

March 25, 2026 9 Min Read
148898 AAfileIranAzerbaijan

Dialogue amid escalation

March 24, 2026 6 Min Read
Azerbaijan armenia border shootouts scaled e1717316787977 1536x862

Diaspora activism and the limits of external influence in the Armenia–Azerbaijan peace process

March 23, 2026 8 Min Read
655215

The ‘Azerbaijani Way’: Three lessons from Baku to Jerusalem

March 21, 2026 10 Min Read
BneGeneric Caspian Sea ariel

War reaches the Caspian: Central Asia faces growing regional risk

March 20, 2026 9 Min Read

Useful links

426082d1 a9e4 4ac5 95d4 4e84024eb314 pojkz91103g6zqfh8kiacu662b2tn9znit7ssu9ekg
Ab65ed96 2f4a 4220 91ac f70a6daaf659 pojkz67iflcc0wjkp1aencvsa5gq06ogif9cd0dl34
96e40a2b 5fed 4332 83c6 60e4a89fd4d0 pojkz836t9ewo4gue23nscepgx7gfkvx6okbbkasqo
759bde00 a375 4fa1 bedc f8e9580ceeca pq8mvb9kwubqf6bcadpkq5mz16nayr162k3j2084cg
aze-media-logo-ag1

We are a unique political and socio-cultural digest offering exclusive materials, translations from Azerbaijani media, and reprints of articles from around the world about Azerbaijan.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Cookies Policy

Email: editor@aze.media

© 2021 Aze.Media – Daily Digest
aze-media-logo1 aze-media-logo-ag1
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?