Turkey insists on re-igniting war Karabakh by sending soldiers to Azerbaijan
 
 
Turkey is looking for a foothold in the Nagorno-Karabakh
region. This is how Ankara's recent moves appear, as it tries to play a role in
the armistice phase between Armenia and Azerbaijan, just as it played during
the war between the two countries.
This comes in the context of a memorandum sent by the
Turkish presidency to the parliament to approve sending Turkish soldiers to
Azerbaijan after the two warring countries signed a ceasefire agreement
sponsored by Russia.
Meanwhile, the Azerbaijani ambassador to Moscow stated that
Turkey's presence in the South Caucasus region should not frighten anyone,
apparently indicating that Azerbaijan has agreed to the Turkish moves.
“Turkey is a sister country and a strategic ally of
Azerbaijan. Today a new geopolitical situation appears in the South Caucasus.
Turkey is participating on the ground in this process,” Ambassador Polad
Bülbüloğlu said during a press conference held by the international news agency
Rossiya Segodnya.
“Look how the situation is developing. Iran supports the
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan... in the South Caucasus –
Russia, Turkey, Iran and Azerbaijan. This is the formation that exists today.
Therefore, the presence of Turkey should not frighten anyone,” Bülbüloğlu
added.
In turn, the Russian presidency announced that Turkey's
plans to send troops to Azerbaijan comes according to the agreement between
Moscow and Ankara regarding the establishment of a joint monitoring center on
the armistice in the Karabakh region.
But earlier, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov denied
any intention of the presence of Turkish peacekeepers in the region. He made it
clear at the time that the future tasks of Ankara would be limited to technical
observation only, noting that the peacekeeping operation in the region is
carried out exclusively by Russian forces.
However, the relentless Turkish pursuit of a permanent
presence in the South Caucasus region does not stop there, as Ankara exploits
the interlocking demographic to be the gateway to infiltration into this
strategic region.
In this context, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
revealed the Turkish government's intention to keep a number of mercenaries
loyal to it in the Nagorno-Karabakh region who were sent to support Azerbaijan
in the battles against Armenia.
The Syrian Observatory said in a report, “The Turkish
government will keep batches of Syrian fighters in the Karabakh region, despite
the end of the military operations and an agreement reached between Azerbaijan
and Armenia with Russian mediation. But Turkey invokes that these fighters have
their roots from that region; that is, from the Caucasus and other areas,” adding
that the Turkmen fighters are loyal to Ankara.
In a related development, the Syrian Observatory monitored
the arrival of a new batch of mercenary corpses to Syria who were killed
earlier during the military operations in the Karabakh region, including about
30 fighters who died there.
According to the observatory’s statistics, the death toll of
mercenaries since they were thrown into the battles by the Turkish government
at the end of September reached 293 people, including 225 whose bodies were returned
to Syria, while the bodies of the rest are still in Azerbaijan.
It is noteworthy that the number of Syrian fighters who were
transferred to Azerbaijan reached 2,580 mercenaries, while 342 of them returned
after they had given up everything, including their material dues.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


