Today's news brief for #OnlySky involved wading through a lot of contested military intel, especially for Armenia and Azerbaijan, but also for Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. I came in thinking I knew the half of it. I did not!
But that's why it's always important to check initial assumptions at the door. My key takeaways? Civilians will always suffer most. And yet, the global response is also telling: something is shifting in power arrangements here. A region to be watched.
https://onlysky.media/mclark/armenia-azerbaijan-kyrgyzstan-and-tajikistan-the-other-eurasian-wars/
@jurban Now this kind of comment is the CoSo difference in a nutshell. 👌 Just popping into a zoom meeting right now, but absolutely: hard borders always become sites of violence. Easing the pressure comes in many forms - but it *must* be eased if we value human life. Cheers for now! (And thank you! *Great* thought experiment!)
@MLClark
There is a subordinate theme across a few international conflicts: Separated regions.
The land bridge between Armenia and that enclave was one source of recent tensions.
West Bank and Gaza relative to Israel.
Pakistan and Bangladesh relative to India.
West Berlin and West Germany relative to East Germany.
Thought experiment: How would tensions be/have been reduced if there was an unencumbered transit between the separated regions? What if it was a raised highway or a tunnel?