The Azerbaijani-Armenian Conflict Over The Karabakh Region And The International Position On It (1988-1994).

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Mntsser Hasan Dherib

Abstract

The Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict over the Karabakh region constituted one of the important problems in Asia. The conflict broke out between two newly independent states that did not possess the components of modern states that would support them in that conflict. They were suffering from clear economic and political problems, so that conflict constituted a stumbling block to the economic development of the two countries during That period, and the conflict posed a great danger to the region because it was based on religious foundations and foundations, but that conflict did not begin in the years of its outbreak in 1988, but rather since the 1920s, when the Soviet Union annexed the Karabakh region to Azerbaijan, and rejected any level for the conflict or giving the right to decide. The fate of the Armenians in Karabakh belongs to the people, even though they constitute the majority compared to the Muslims.


The conflict broke out between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 1988 and reached its peak after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, as the two countries entered into an open war that continued until 1994, when Russia succeeded in bringing together the conflict, declaring a ceasefire, and deploying United Nations forces in the region, but that did not end the conflict. A final picture. Indeed, this conflict has continued to exist until today, and the possibility of it erupting at any moment exists.

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Mntsser Hasan Dherib

Department of History, College of Education for Human Sciences, Al-Muthanna University, Iraq