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Battle of Kalbajar

The Battle of Kalbajar[a] took place in March and April 1993, during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War. It resulted in the capture of the Kalbajar District of Azerbaijan by Armenian military forces.

Battle of Kalbajar
Part of the First Nagorno-Karabakh War
DateMarch 27 – April 3, 1993 (1 week)
Location
Result Armenian victory
Belligerents
 Armenia
 Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
 Azerbaijan
Commanders and leaders
Gurgen Dalibaltayan
Samvel Babayan
Monte Melkonian
Surat Huseynov
Shamil Asgarov
"Khan"
Strength
Several hundred troops, including the crew members of tanks and armored fighting vehicles; 701st brigade (Unknown number of infantry and tanks)
Casualties and losses
Minimal[1] 400 servicemen killed (per Azerbaijan)[2]
150+ servicemen captured[3]
~60,000 Azerbaijanis and Kurds displaced[4]
80 civilians taken hostage[5]
Hundreds of civilian deaths[6]

Kalbajar lies outside the contested enclave of the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO). The offensive was the first time Armenian forces from Nagorno-Karabakh had advanced beyond the boundaries of the enclave (besides the capture of Lachin in 1992). Kalbajar District, located between Armenia and the western border of the former NKAO, was composed of several dozen villages and its provincial capital, also named Kalbajar. The Armenian side launched an attack from four directions, including Armenia proper. After initial heavy resistance, the Azerbaijani defence quickly collapsed and the provincial capital fell on April 3, 1993. Armenian forces captured an area of more than 1,900 square kilometres, establishing a second overland link between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.

As a result of the battle, an estimated 60,000 Kurdish and Azerbaijani civilians were displaced.[4] Civilians fled Kalbajar in April through mountains still covered in snow. Refugees reported that hundreds of people froze to death attempting to flee.[6] Azerbaijan made an unsuccessful attempt to recapture the region in winter 1993–1994.

Kalbajar was under the control of the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic until November 25, 2020, when Armenian troops returned the region along with other occupied districts surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaijani control under a ceasefire agreement mediated by Russia, ending the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War.[11]

Background

An autonomous oblast during the Soviet era under the jurisdiction of the Azerbaijan SSR, Nagorno-Karabakh's population was approximately 76% ethnic Armenian. As the Soviet Union's disintegration approached during the late 1980s, the enclave's government expressed its desire to secede and unite with the neighbouring Armenian SSR. By 1991, Armenia and Azerbaijan were independent countries but the nascent Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR) remained internationally unrecognized despite its government's declaration of independence. Small-scale violence had flared up between the two ethnic groups in February 1988 but soon escalated to use of Soviet-built tanks, helicopters, and fighter bombers appropriated by both sides after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

On May 9, 1992, Armenian forces captured the mountain stronghold of Shusha and soon after established a land connection between Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia through Lachin.[12] However, the Armenian side was caught unprepared by an Azerbaijani offensive in the summer of 1992, when Azerbaijani forces captured practically the entire northern part of Nagorno-Karabakh (the former Martakert District), at one point occupying nearly half of the territory of the former NKAO.[13] Armenian forces managed to halt the Azerbaijani advance by October 1992 and began to retake territory in the north by February 1993.[14] Meanwhile, internal divisions plagued the Azerbaijani war effort, with Colonel Surat Huseynov moving his units away from the frontline to Ganja after being dismissed from his posts, leaving Kalbajar particularly vulnerable.[14]

The region of Kalbajar

Kalbajar is a raion surrounded by several canyons and an elevated mountain range known as the Murov Mountains. It is located between Armenia and the western boundary of the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast, and is of significant strategic importance to both sides.[15] Its wartime population of approximately 60,000 was primarily made up of ethnic Azerbaijanis and Kurds.[4] In February-March 1993, Kalbajar was virtually surrounded, wedged between Armenia, Armenian-controlled Lachin District, and the Murov Mountains, the main mountain pass of which (the Omar Pass) is nearly impassable in the winter and early spring. Its main connection to the rest of Azerbaijan, the road to Tartar, passed through Armenian-controlled territory in Martakert Province.[16]

Rationale for its taking

In March 1993, military incursions by Azerbaijani forces and artillery barrages were reported to have been coming from the region, prompting military leaders to announce an offensive against the district.[17] In an interview given in April 1993, General Gurgen Dalibaltyan, who planned the operation, explained that its strategic purpose was to "create a reliable connection between Karabakh and Armenia, since Lachin was in a difficult position, surrounded by enemy forces", while also referring to Kalbajar as "our historical homeland".[18] Speaking in 2020, Serzh Sargsyan, who was a member of the State Defence Committee of the NKR at the time of the battle, stated that the operation to capture Kalbajar was conceived in January 1993 and was aimed at securing the rear of Nagorno-Karabakh and especially Martakert Province, which in Sargsyan's words "was impossible to defend from multiple sides".[19]

One of the most successful Armenian commanders of the conflict and participant in the Battle of Kalbajar, Monte Melkonian, stated that Armenian forces had to take the district in order to suppress Azerbaijani artillery strikes against nearby Armenian villages.[20] However, Melkonian also justified the operation on historical grounds, citing historical Armenian presence in the area. He stated, "This is a historical issue... of course this is historical Armenia... And we'll vindicate that reality [to the Azerbaijanis] with our guns. Unfortunately! It would be nice if the Azerbaijanis would understand that reality is reality, agree and say OK, it's yours, and that's that".[17] Questioned on the possibility of a large expulsion of civilians if the region was captured, Melkonian responded, "A lot of blood has been spilled on both sides... The emotions are high and that isn't conducive to living together in near or medium future".[21]

The battle

Heavy resistance

Defeats in late March already had the Azerbaijani military evacuating civilians out of the region to the northern town of Yevlakh and Azerbaijan's second-largest city, Ganja. The Armenians had assembled a force of several hundred men to enter Kalbajar from four different directions: Melkonian's detachment of tanks and troops from Karabakh would attack from the southeast, one fifty-man unit from the town of Vardenis, Armenia would enter from the west; the third force would attack from the village of Aghdaban in the north, and the primary attacking force would come from the village of Nareshtar.[22] Kalbajar was protected only by a small group of defenders that received no reinforcements; a unit of 200 men attempting to reinforce the district was intercepted and defeated by Samvel Karapetyan's unit.[23][16] A few days before the commencement of the operation, Armenian forces warned the Azerbaijanis in the district of the coming attack.[16]

The battered village of Charektar in Kalbajar had already seen extensive fighting in earlier weeks and was reinforced by both Azerbaijani and foreign Chechen, Afghan and other fighters as the Armenian offensive commenced on March 27. However, instead of launching a simultaneous attack, only the units in Aghdaban and Nareshtar moved out. Melkonian's armoured column did not move out until later on and his units faced tenacious resistance on an embankment of entrenched defences where his forces were forced to retreat.[24] The troops in Vardenis began their assault shortly thereafter but their advance was slowed since they had to trek through the snowy passes of the Murov Mountains.

On March 28, Melkonian's forces resumed their attack on Charektar and an eight-hour battle ensued until his forces were able to break through the defences. They advanced twenty-nine kilometres, reaching the Tartar River on March 31.[17] The stretched out Azerbaijani forces deployed throughout the region were unable to stop their advance. Within another twenty kilometres of his forces' positions was the Kalbajar District's namesake capital, a crucial road intersection that led to Lachin and the village of Zulfugarli. By March 29, Armenian forces encircled the town of Kalbajar. A journalist reported seeing intensive bombardment of Kalbajar, including Grad artillery, originating from Armenia proper.[25]

Melkonian's advance

The following two days saw a massive refugee column of cars and trucks "laden with bundles... bumper to bumper" trudging through the intersection. Melkonian ordered his forces to halt their advance until the remnants of the column dried up in the early afternoon of April 1. Assessing that most refugees had left, he ordered his units to advance and sent a detachment to guard a vital tunnel leading south towards Zulfugarli. While his troops had assumed that most civilians had left Kalbajar, they encountered a GAZ-52 transport truck in the tunnel and, thinking it was a military vehicle, fired and destroyed it with rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles. As they observed the wreck of the vehicle, the troops realized they had taken out a vehicle filled entirely with civilians: twenty-five Kurd and Azerbaijani kolkhoz workers. Four of them, including the driver of the truck and his daughter, were killed. The rest were ordered by Melkonian to be taken to a hospital in Karabakh's capital of Stepanakert; however, as many as eleven of them died.[26]

After the Zulufgarli incident, his forces pushed forward and reached another vital intersection leading to Ganja, fifteen kilometres away from the capital. Civilians in Kalbajar continued to be evacuated by both air and the through the intersection and Melkonian halted his advance by a further forty hours to allow the traffic column to move through. On April 1, his forces issued a radio message to the governor of the region, instructing his forces to leave the capital. An ultimatum was placed until 2 pm of the following day. Identified by his radio codename, "Khan", the governor responded and stated, "We're never going to leave... we'll fight to the end."[27]

Final push

 
Azerbaijani displaced people from Kalbajar

As the deadline passed on April 2, Melkonian's armor entered the intersection and encountered a line of Azerbaijani tanks and infantry. A firefight ensued but lasted for only several minutes as the defence line was soon battered and destroyed. Many of the Azerbaijani forces were ill-prepared for the attack as Melkonian noted when pointing out to their lack of equipment.[28]

By April 3, the Armenian forces had encircled the capital and resistance had weakened. Azerbaijani commander Surat Huseynov and his 709th brigade, which had been tasked to defending the Murov Mountains, had retreated to Ganja after political and military problems began to unravel upon in the battlefield.[23] An account of the war-weariness afflicting the inhabitants of the town was described by Melkonian's elder brother, Markar:

A downcast enemy soldier with a bandaged hand and a burned leg rides up on a donkey and surrenders. An old man in a faded jacket studded with medals from the Great Patriotic War weeps before leaving his home forever. An elderly woman in a black yazma, waving a torn sheet on a stick, greets Monte and Abo [his radio operator] in Azeri Turkish, then suddenly kneels to the ground to kiss Monte's feet. Surprised and awkward, Monte tries to pull back. Yok! he shouts, "No!" He reflexively bends over and brings the woman up by her arm. "What are you doing?" he asks in Anatolian Turkish, "Don't ever do that!"... [Melkonian] found [in the capital] a row of neat but bleak storefronts and a few chickens. The townsfolk... had not bothered to grab the chickens as provisions for the road. The only other sign of life was a BMP idling in the middle of the road through the center of town.[29]

Although his contingent did not reach in time for the fighting, the city's capital was taken. Aside from some farm life, the town had been largely abandoned. With the taking of the region, Armenian forces now held a continuous swath of territory stretching from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia proper, a total of 3,000 square kilometres.[30] In the retreat through the Omar Pass of the Murov mountain range, many Azerbaijani refugees froze to death. With the last helicopters leaving on April 1, they were forced to walk through the heavy snow at freezing temperatures. Nearly 39,000 civilians were processed into the camps at Yevlakh and Dashkasan with as many as 15,000 unaccounted for. Four Azerbaijani Mi-8 helicopters ferrying refugees and wounded out of the conflict zone crashed, the last of which was hit by Armenian forces.[31]

Political ramifications

The offensive provoked international criticism against both the Armenians in Karabakh and the Republic. Vafa Guluzade, the chief adviser to then-president of Azerbaijan, Abulfaz Elchibey, alleged that the region was taken too easily because help arrived from the Russian 128th Regiment (7th Russian Army) stationed in Armenia. This charge was refuted by the operation's commander, Gurgen Dalibaltayan, and others since "Moscow [i.e., the Russian government] was not in total control of Armenian military operations."[32] Armenia's western neighbour, Turkey, halted humanitarian aid coming to through its borders and closed its border with Armenia (the Turkey-Armenia border has remained closed ever since).[33][34] The United States also condemned the offensive, issuing a "sharp rebuke" and sending an accompanying letter to the Armenian government.[30][35][36]

On April 30, 1993, Turkey and Pakistan co-sponsored United Nations Security Council Resolution 822 which called for Armenians in the region to withdraw immediately from Kalbajar and "other recently occupied areas of Azerbaijan". Turkey's President Turgut Özal raised the possibility of military intervention on Azerbaijan's side and set forth on a tour of Turkic former Soviet republics on April 14 (Özal would die of a heart attack just three days later).[34][37] Iran also condemned the offensive since many refugees in Azerbaijan were fleeing south towards its borders.[38] In an attempt to end the hostilities, U.S., Russia and Turkey reiterated the call for the withdrawal of Armenian troops from the Kalbajar region of Azerbaijan on May 6, which would be followed by formal peace talks.[39]

The loss of Kalbajar was a significant blow to the authority of President Abulfaz Elchibey and his party, the Popular Front of Azerbaijan. On April 12, 1993, Elchibey declared a two-month state of emergency in Azerbaijan.[16] Two months later, the rebellious commander Surat Huseynov marched his troops on Baku, prompting Elchibey to flee the city and leading to the rise of Heydar Aliyev to the presidency.[40]

In June 1993, Armenian president Levon Ter-Petrosyan threw his support behind a plan proposed by Russian, the United States and Turkey according to which Armenian forces would withdraw from Kalbajar district in return for security guarantees for Nagorno-Karabakh.[41] Ter-Petrosyan traveled to Stepanakert to persuade the Armenian leadership of Nagorno-Karabakh to agree to the plan, and offered to remain in Stepanakert for 10 days as a hostage to guarantee the realization of the plan.[42] While the Nagorno-Karabakh leadership agreed, they asked for a one-month delay, and the plan was never realized as Azerbaijan fell into chaos and Armenian forces began a counter-offensive.[41]

Notes

  1. ^ Also referred to as the Occupation of Kalbajar (Azerbaijani: Kəlbəcərin işğalı)[7] or the Liberation of Karvachar (Armenian: Քարվաճառի ազատագրում).[8][9][10]

References

  1. ^ De Waal, Thomas. Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War, 212.
  2. ^ "Əzizağa Qənizadə: "Onlar Kəlbəcərdədir, meyitləri gətirilməyib, dəfn edilməyib"". from the original on October 29, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2020.
  3. ^ "ARMENIANS CAPTURE KEY AZERBAIJANI TOWN". washingtonpost.com. Washingtonpost. April 23, 1993. from the original on April 16, 2021. Retrieved February 25, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c Azerbaijan: Seven years of conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh. New York: Human Rights Watch. 1994. pp. 14. ISBN 1-56432-142-8. An estimated 60,000 individuals — equally divided among Kurds and Azeris — lived in Kelbajar province before the offensive. In the space of a week, 60,000 people were forced to flee their homes. Today all are displaced, and Kelbajar stands empty and looted.
  5. ^ Azerbaijan: Seven years of conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh. New York: Human Rights Watch. 1994. p. 24. ISBN 1-56432-142-8. Eighty civilians, however, were taken hostage and sent to Stepanakert to be exchanged for Armenians in Azeri captivity; some 150 soldiers were captured.
  6. ^ a b "Nagorno Karabakh". Human Rights Watch. 1994. from the original on April 22, 2003. Retrieved March 26, 2020. The towns' capture came at staggering human costs, creating 250,000 new Azerbaijani refugees. Civilians fled Kelbajar in April through high mountains still covered with snow. Refugees claimed that hundreds of people froze to death attempting to flee.
  7. ^ "Bu gün Kəlbəcərin işğalı günüdür". TRT Azerbaijan (in Azerbaijani). April 4, 2017. from the original on October 29, 2021. Retrieved November 28, 2020.
  8. ^ «Քարվաճառի ազատագրում» հոդված Հայ զինվոր պարբերականում (#17 (882) 4.05.2011 – 11.05.2011), ։
  9. ^ «Քարվաճառի և Օմարի ազատագրումը» հոդված Հայ զինվոր պարբերականում (#13 (1235) 4.04.2018 - 10.04.2018), ։
  10. ^ «Քարվաճառի ազատագրումը եղավ Արցախյան գոյամարտի բեկումնային հաղթանակներից մեկը» հոդված times.am լրատվական կայքում, ։
  11. ^ "Azerbaijani army enters Kalbajar, region returned by Armenia". Al Jazeera. November 25, 2020. from the original on November 25, 2020. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  12. ^ De Waal. Black Garden, 176–183.
  13. ^ De Waal. Black Garden, 194–196.
  14. ^ a b De Waal. Black Garden, 210–211. "Suret Husseinov’s departure from the front left a gaping hole in one of the most sensitive parts of Azerbaijan’s defenses, the mountains of its largest region, Kelbajar".
  15. ^ De Waal. Black Garden, 211.
  16. ^ a b c d Hakobyan, Tatul (2021). Artsʻakhyan oragir: Kanachʻ u sev [Karabakh Diary: Green and Black]. Yerevan: Lusakn. 234–235.
  17. ^ a b c Melkonian. My Brother's Road, 245.
  18. ^ . Hay Zinvor (in Russian). April 22, 1993. Archived from the original on April 27, 2022.
  19. ^ Պատմության առջև I Փաստավավերագրական ֆիլմ [Before history։ Documentary film] (Television production) (in Armenian). 5 TV Channel. September 20, 2020. Event occurs at 40:36.
  20. ^ Melkonian. My Brother's Road, 244‒245.
  21. ^ Auerbach, Jon. "Martuni, Azerbaijan." The Boston Globe. March 9, 1993, p. 8. Retrieved September 18, 2006.
  22. ^ Melkonian. My Brother's Road, 243–244.
  23. ^ a b De Waal. Black Garden, 211–212.
  24. ^ Melkonian. My Brother's Road, 244.
  25. ^ Azerbaijan: Seven years of conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh. New York: Human Right Watch. 1994. p. 22. ISBN 1-56432-142-8. A journalist in the city at the time observed that the bombardment — especially from Grad Rockets — was fired into Kelbajar city from the west, from inside Armenia.
  26. ^ Melkonian. My Brother's Road, 245–246.
  27. ^ Melkonian. My Brother's Road, 246.
  28. ^ Melkonian. My Brother's Road, 247. A videotape shot during the fighting showed an encounter where an Armenian BMP fired a shell at Azeri troops covering behind a gas tanker. The shell hit the tanker and engulfed several dozen fighters in flames. After the battle ended, the videotape showed the Ganja intersection strewn with dead bodies with Monte pointing down the road, remarking "The farther you go down this road, the more corpses you'll find."
  29. ^ Melkonian. My Brother's Road, 248.
  30. ^ a b Melkonian. My Brother's Road, 249.
  31. ^ "Attacks in Caucasus Bring New Tide of Refugees". The New York Times. Murov Pass, Kalbajar, Azerbaijan. April 7, 1993. from the original on March 16, 2014. Retrieved September 19, 2006.
  32. ^ Hunter. The Transcaucasus in Transition, 88
  33. ^ De Waal. Black Garden, 205, 213.
  34. ^ a b "Turk Says Russia Is Tangled in Caucasus War". The New York Times. April 15, 1993. from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved May 11, 2010.. Özal's reasoning was based on his belief that the Russians had too great a role in the conflict.
  35. ^ . Time. April 19, 1993. Archived from the original on March 9, 2008. Retrieved May 11, 2010.
  36. ^ David Binder (April 7, 1993). "U.S. Rebukes Armenia on New Drive in Caucasus". The New York Times. from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved May 11, 2010.
  37. ^ Melkonian. My Brother's Road, 251–252.
  38. ^ "Iranians Deliver a Warning To Azerbaijan and Armenia". The New York Times. April 13, 1993. from the original on January 17, 2018. Retrieved September 21, 2007.
  39. ^ "Azerbaijan, Armenia take steps toward cease-fire in enclave". Chicago Tribune. May 7, 1993.
  40. ^ De Waal. Black Garden, 214.
  41. ^ a b De Waal. Black Garden, 213.
  42. ^ Hakobyan, Tatul (June 14, 2021). "Լևոն Տեր-Պետրոսյանի այցը Ստեփանակերտ. 14 հունիս, 1993" [Levon Ter-Petrosyan's visit to Stepanakert, 14 June 1993]. ANI Armenian Research Center (in Armenian). from the original on September 9, 2021. Retrieved September 9, 2021.

Bibliography

External links

  • Excerpt on the battle on the NKR website

battle, kalbajar, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, secondary, tertiary, sources, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, templat. This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Battle of Kalbajar news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Battle of Kalbajar a took place in March and April 1993 during the First Nagorno Karabakh War It resulted in the capture of the Kalbajar District of Azerbaijan by Armenian military forces Battle of KalbajarPart of the First Nagorno Karabakh WarDateMarch 27 April 3 1993 1 week LocationKalbajar District AzerbaijanResultArmenian victoryBelligerents Armenia Nagorno Karabakh Republic AzerbaijanCommanders and leadersGurgen Dalibaltayan Samvel Babayan Monte MelkonianSurat Huseynov Shamil Asgarov Khan StrengthSeveral hundred troops including the crew members of tanks and armored fighting vehicles 701st brigade Unknown number of infantry and tanks Casualties and lossesMinimal 1 400 servicemen killed per Azerbaijan 2 150 servicemen captured 3 60 000 Azerbaijanis and Kurds displaced 4 80 civilians taken hostage 5 Hundreds of civilian deaths 6 Kalbajar lies outside the contested enclave of the former Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast NKAO The offensive was the first time Armenian forces from Nagorno Karabakh had advanced beyond the boundaries of the enclave besides the capture of Lachin in 1992 Kalbajar District located between Armenia and the western border of the former NKAO was composed of several dozen villages and its provincial capital also named Kalbajar The Armenian side launched an attack from four directions including Armenia proper After initial heavy resistance the Azerbaijani defence quickly collapsed and the provincial capital fell on April 3 1993 Armenian forces captured an area of more than 1 900 square kilometres establishing a second overland link between Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh As a result of the battle an estimated 60 000 Kurdish and Azerbaijani civilians were displaced 4 Civilians fled Kalbajar in April through mountains still covered in snow Refugees reported that hundreds of people froze to death attempting to flee 6 Azerbaijan made an unsuccessful attempt to recapture the region in winter 1993 1994 Kalbajar was under the control of the self proclaimed Nagorno Karabakh Republic until November 25 2020 when Armenian troops returned the region along with other occupied districts surrounding Nagorno Karabakh to Azerbaijani control under a ceasefire agreement mediated by Russia ending the Second Nagorno Karabakh War 11 Contents 1 Background 2 The region of Kalbajar 2 1 Rationale for its taking 3 The battle 3 1 Heavy resistance 3 2 Melkonian s advance 3 3 Final push 4 Political ramifications 5 Notes 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksBackground EditMain article First Nagorno Karabakh War An autonomous oblast during the Soviet era under the jurisdiction of the Azerbaijan SSR Nagorno Karabakh s population was approximately 76 ethnic Armenian As the Soviet Union s disintegration approached during the late 1980s the enclave s government expressed its desire to secede and unite with the neighbouring Armenian SSR By 1991 Armenia and Azerbaijan were independent countries but the nascent Nagorno Karabakh Republic NKR remained internationally unrecognized despite its government s declaration of independence Small scale violence had flared up between the two ethnic groups in February 1988 but soon escalated to use of Soviet built tanks helicopters and fighter bombers appropriated by both sides after the collapse of the Soviet Union On May 9 1992 Armenian forces captured the mountain stronghold of Shusha and soon after established a land connection between Nagorno Karabakh and Armenia through Lachin 12 However the Armenian side was caught unprepared by an Azerbaijani offensive in the summer of 1992 when Azerbaijani forces captured practically the entire northern part of Nagorno Karabakh the former Martakert District at one point occupying nearly half of the territory of the former NKAO 13 Armenian forces managed to halt the Azerbaijani advance by October 1992 and began to retake territory in the north by February 1993 14 Meanwhile internal divisions plagued the Azerbaijani war effort with Colonel Surat Huseynov moving his units away from the frontline to Ganja after being dismissed from his posts leaving Kalbajar particularly vulnerable 14 The region of Kalbajar EditKalbajar is a raion surrounded by several canyons and an elevated mountain range known as the Murov Mountains It is located between Armenia and the western boundary of the former Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast and is of significant strategic importance to both sides 15 Its wartime population of approximately 60 000 was primarily made up of ethnic Azerbaijanis and Kurds 4 In February March 1993 Kalbajar was virtually surrounded wedged between Armenia Armenian controlled Lachin District and the Murov Mountains the main mountain pass of which the Omar Pass is nearly impassable in the winter and early spring Its main connection to the rest of Azerbaijan the road to Tartar passed through Armenian controlled territory in Martakert Province 16 Rationale for its taking Edit In March 1993 military incursions by Azerbaijani forces and artillery barrages were reported to have been coming from the region prompting military leaders to announce an offensive against the district 17 In an interview given in April 1993 General Gurgen Dalibaltyan who planned the operation explained that its strategic purpose was to create a reliable connection between Karabakh and Armenia since Lachin was in a difficult position surrounded by enemy forces while also referring to Kalbajar as our historical homeland 18 Speaking in 2020 Serzh Sargsyan who was a member of the State Defence Committee of the NKR at the time of the battle stated that the operation to capture Kalbajar was conceived in January 1993 and was aimed at securing the rear of Nagorno Karabakh and especially Martakert Province which in Sargsyan s words was impossible to defend from multiple sides 19 One of the most successful Armenian commanders of the conflict and participant in the Battle of Kalbajar Monte Melkonian stated that Armenian forces had to take the district in order to suppress Azerbaijani artillery strikes against nearby Armenian villages 20 However Melkonian also justified the operation on historical grounds citing historical Armenian presence in the area He stated This is a historical issue of course this is historical Armenia And we ll vindicate that reality to the Azerbaijanis with our guns Unfortunately It would be nice if the Azerbaijanis would understand that reality is reality agree and say OK it s yours and that s that 17 Questioned on the possibility of a large expulsion of civilians if the region was captured Melkonian responded A lot of blood has been spilled on both sides The emotions are high and that isn t conducive to living together in near or medium future 21 The battle EditHeavy resistance Edit Defeats in late March already had the Azerbaijani military evacuating civilians out of the region to the northern town of Yevlakh and Azerbaijan s second largest city Ganja The Armenians had assembled a force of several hundred men to enter Kalbajar from four different directions Melkonian s detachment of tanks and troops from Karabakh would attack from the southeast one fifty man unit from the town of Vardenis Armenia would enter from the west the third force would attack from the village of Aghdaban in the north and the primary attacking force would come from the village of Nareshtar 22 Kalbajar was protected only by a small group of defenders that received no reinforcements a unit of 200 men attempting to reinforce the district was intercepted and defeated by Samvel Karapetyan s unit 23 16 A few days before the commencement of the operation Armenian forces warned the Azerbaijanis in the district of the coming attack 16 The battered village of Charektar in Kalbajar had already seen extensive fighting in earlier weeks and was reinforced by both Azerbaijani and foreign Chechen Afghan and other fighters as the Armenian offensive commenced on March 27 However instead of launching a simultaneous attack only the units in Aghdaban and Nareshtar moved out Melkonian s armoured column did not move out until later on and his units faced tenacious resistance on an embankment of entrenched defences where his forces were forced to retreat 24 The troops in Vardenis began their assault shortly thereafter but their advance was slowed since they had to trek through the snowy passes of the Murov Mountains On March 28 Melkonian s forces resumed their attack on Charektar and an eight hour battle ensued until his forces were able to break through the defences They advanced twenty nine kilometres reaching the Tartar River on March 31 17 The stretched out Azerbaijani forces deployed throughout the region were unable to stop their advance Within another twenty kilometres of his forces positions was the Kalbajar District s namesake capital a crucial road intersection that led to Lachin and the village of Zulfugarli By March 29 Armenian forces encircled the town of Kalbajar A journalist reported seeing intensive bombardment of Kalbajar including Grad artillery originating from Armenia proper 25 Melkonian s advance Edit The following two days saw a massive refugee column of cars and trucks laden with bundles bumper to bumper trudging through the intersection Melkonian ordered his forces to halt their advance until the remnants of the column dried up in the early afternoon of April 1 Assessing that most refugees had left he ordered his units to advance and sent a detachment to guard a vital tunnel leading south towards Zulfugarli While his troops had assumed that most civilians had left Kalbajar they encountered a GAZ 52 transport truck in the tunnel and thinking it was a military vehicle fired and destroyed it with rocket propelled grenades and assault rifles As they observed the wreck of the vehicle the troops realized they had taken out a vehicle filled entirely with civilians twenty five Kurd and Azerbaijani kolkhoz workers Four of them including the driver of the truck and his daughter were killed The rest were ordered by Melkonian to be taken to a hospital in Karabakh s capital of Stepanakert however as many as eleven of them died 26 After the Zulufgarli incident his forces pushed forward and reached another vital intersection leading to Ganja fifteen kilometres away from the capital Civilians in Kalbajar continued to be evacuated by both air and the through the intersection and Melkonian halted his advance by a further forty hours to allow the traffic column to move through On April 1 his forces issued a radio message to the governor of the region instructing his forces to leave the capital An ultimatum was placed until 2 pm of the following day Identified by his radio codename Khan the governor responded and stated We re never going to leave we ll fight to the end 27 Final push Edit Azerbaijani displaced people from Kalbajar As the deadline passed on April 2 Melkonian s armor entered the intersection and encountered a line of Azerbaijani tanks and infantry A firefight ensued but lasted for only several minutes as the defence line was soon battered and destroyed Many of the Azerbaijani forces were ill prepared for the attack as Melkonian noted when pointing out to their lack of equipment 28 By April 3 the Armenian forces had encircled the capital and resistance had weakened Azerbaijani commander Surat Huseynov and his 709th brigade which had been tasked to defending the Murov Mountains had retreated to Ganja after political and military problems began to unravel upon in the battlefield 23 An account of the war weariness afflicting the inhabitants of the town was described by Melkonian s elder brother Markar A downcast enemy soldier with a bandaged hand and a burned leg rides up on a donkey and surrenders An old man in a faded jacket studded with medals from the Great Patriotic War weeps before leaving his home forever An elderly woman in a black yazma waving a torn sheet on a stick greets Monte and Abo his radio operator in Azeri Turkish then suddenly kneels to the ground to kiss Monte s feet Surprised and awkward Monte tries to pull back Yok he shouts No He reflexively bends over and brings the woman up by her arm What are you doing he asks in Anatolian Turkish Don t ever do that Melkonian found in the capital a row of neat but bleak storefronts and a few chickens The townsfolk had not bothered to grab the chickens as provisions for the road The only other sign of life was a BMP idling in the middle of the road through the center of town 29 Although his contingent did not reach in time for the fighting the city s capital was taken Aside from some farm life the town had been largely abandoned With the taking of the region Armenian forces now held a continuous swath of territory stretching from Nagorno Karabakh to Armenia proper a total of 3 000 square kilometres 30 In the retreat through the Omar Pass of the Murov mountain range many Azerbaijani refugees froze to death With the last helicopters leaving on April 1 they were forced to walk through the heavy snow at freezing temperatures Nearly 39 000 civilians were processed into the camps at Yevlakh and Dashkasan with as many as 15 000 unaccounted for Four Azerbaijani Mi 8 helicopters ferrying refugees and wounded out of the conflict zone crashed the last of which was hit by Armenian forces 31 Political ramifications EditThe offensive provoked international criticism against both the Armenians in Karabakh and the Republic Vafa Guluzade the chief adviser to then president of Azerbaijan Abulfaz Elchibey alleged that the region was taken too easily because help arrived from the Russian 128th Regiment 7th Russian Army stationed in Armenia This charge was refuted by the operation s commander Gurgen Dalibaltayan and others since Moscow i e the Russian government was not in total control of Armenian military operations 32 Armenia s western neighbour Turkey halted humanitarian aid coming to through its borders and closed its border with Armenia the Turkey Armenia border has remained closed ever since 33 34 The United States also condemned the offensive issuing a sharp rebuke and sending an accompanying letter to the Armenian government 30 35 36 On April 30 1993 Turkey and Pakistan co sponsored United Nations Security Council Resolution 822 which called for Armenians in the region to withdraw immediately from Kalbajar and other recently occupied areas of Azerbaijan Turkey s President Turgut Ozal raised the possibility of military intervention on Azerbaijan s side and set forth on a tour of Turkic former Soviet republics on April 14 Ozal would die of a heart attack just three days later 34 37 Iran also condemned the offensive since many refugees in Azerbaijan were fleeing south towards its borders 38 In an attempt to end the hostilities U S Russia and Turkey reiterated the call for the withdrawal of Armenian troops from the Kalbajar region of Azerbaijan on May 6 which would be followed by formal peace talks 39 The loss of Kalbajar was a significant blow to the authority of President Abulfaz Elchibey and his party the Popular Front of Azerbaijan On April 12 1993 Elchibey declared a two month state of emergency in Azerbaijan 16 Two months later the rebellious commander Surat Huseynov marched his troops on Baku prompting Elchibey to flee the city and leading to the rise of Heydar Aliyev to the presidency 40 In June 1993 Armenian president Levon Ter Petrosyan threw his support behind a plan proposed by Russian the United States and Turkey according to which Armenian forces would withdraw from Kalbajar district in return for security guarantees for Nagorno Karabakh 41 Ter Petrosyan traveled to Stepanakert to persuade the Armenian leadership of Nagorno Karabakh to agree to the plan and offered to remain in Stepanakert for 10 days as a hostage to guarantee the realization of the plan 42 While the Nagorno Karabakh leadership agreed they asked for a one month delay and the plan was never realized as Azerbaijan fell into chaos and Armenian forces began a counter offensive 41 Notes Edit Also referred to as the Occupation of Kalbajar Azerbaijani Kelbecerin isgali 7 or the Liberation of Karvachar Armenian Քարվաճառի ազատագրում 8 9 10 References Edit De Waal Thomas Black Garden Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War 212 Ezizaga Qenizade Onlar Kelbecerdedir meyitleri getirilmeyib defn edilmeyib Archived from the original on October 29 2021 Retrieved April 29 2020 ARMENIANS CAPTURE KEY AZERBAIJANI TOWN washingtonpost com Washingtonpost April 23 1993 Archived from the original on April 16 2021 Retrieved February 25 2021 a b c Azerbaijan Seven years of conflict in Nagorno Karabakh New York Human Rights Watch 1994 pp 14 ISBN 1 56432 142 8 An estimated 60 000 individuals equally divided among Kurds and Azeris lived in Kelbajar province before the offensive In the space of a week 60 000 people were forced to flee their homes Today all are displaced and Kelbajar stands empty and looted Azerbaijan Seven years of conflict in Nagorno Karabakh New York Human Rights Watch 1994 p 24 ISBN 1 56432 142 8 Eighty civilians however were taken hostage and sent to Stepanakert to be exchanged for Armenians in Azeri captivity some 150 soldiers were captured a b Nagorno Karabakh Human Rights Watch 1994 Archived from the original on April 22 2003 Retrieved March 26 2020 The towns capture came at staggering human costs creating 250 000 new Azerbaijani refugees Civilians fled Kelbajar in April through high mountains still covered with snow Refugees claimed that hundreds of people froze to death attempting to flee Bu gun Kelbecerin isgali gunudur TRT Azerbaijan in Azerbaijani April 4 2017 Archived from the original on October 29 2021 Retrieved November 28 2020 Քարվաճառի ազատագրում հոդված Հայ զինվոր պարբերականում 17 882 4 05 2011 11 05 2011 archived 21 02 2022թ Քարվաճառի և Օմարի ազատագրումը հոդված Հայ զինվոր պարբերականում 13 1235 4 04 2018 10 04 2018 archived 21 02 2022թ Քարվաճառի ազատագրումը եղավ Արցախյան գոյամարտի բեկումնային հաղթանակներից մեկը հոդված times am լրատվական կայքում archived 21 02 2022թ Azerbaijani army enters Kalbajar region returned by Armenia Al Jazeera November 25 2020 Archived from the original on November 25 2020 Retrieved November 27 2020 De Waal Black Garden 176 183 De Waal Black Garden 194 196 a b De Waal Black Garden 210 211 Suret Husseinov s departure from the front left a gaping hole in one of the most sensitive parts of Azerbaijan s defenses the mountains of its largest region Kelbajar De Waal Black Garden 211 a b c d Hakobyan Tatul 2021 Artsʻakhyan oragir Kanachʻ u sev Karabakh Diary Green and Black Yerevan Lusakn 234 235 a b c Melkonian My Brother s Road 245 Vstrecha s generalom Hay Zinvor in Russian April 22 1993 Archived from the original on April 27 2022 Պատմության առջև I Փաստավավերագրական ֆիլմ Before history Documentary film Television production in Armenian 5 TV Channel September 20 2020 Event occurs at 40 36 Melkonian My Brother s Road 244 245 Auerbach Jon Martuni Azerbaijan The Boston Globe March 9 1993 p 8 Retrieved September 18 2006 Melkonian My Brother s Road 243 244 a b De Waal Black Garden 211 212 Melkonian My Brother s Road 244 Azerbaijan Seven years of conflict in Nagorno Karabakh New York Human Right Watch 1994 p 22 ISBN 1 56432 142 8 A journalist in the city at the time observed that the bombardment especially from Grad Rockets was fired into Kelbajar city from the west from inside Armenia Melkonian My Brother s Road 245 246 Melkonian My Brother s Road 246 Melkonian My Brother s Road 247 A videotape shot during the fighting showed an encounter where an Armenian BMP fired a shell at Azeri troops covering behind a gas tanker The shell hit the tanker and engulfed several dozen fighters in flames After the battle ended the videotape showed the Ganja intersection strewn with dead bodies with Monte pointing down the road remarking The farther you go down this road the more corpses you ll find Melkonian My Brother s Road 248 a b Melkonian My Brother s Road 249 Attacks in Caucasus Bring New Tide of Refugees The New York Times Murov Pass Kalbajar Azerbaijan April 7 1993 Archived from the original on March 16 2014 Retrieved September 19 2006 Hunter The Transcaucasus in Transition 88 De Waal Black Garden 205 213 a b Turk Says Russia Is Tangled in Caucasus War The New York Times April 15 1993 Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved May 11 2010 Ozal s reasoning was based on his belief that the Russians had too great a role in the conflict Stirring Bad Blood Time April 19 1993 Archived from the original on March 9 2008 Retrieved May 11 2010 David Binder April 7 1993 U S Rebukes Armenia on New Drive in Caucasus The New York Times Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved May 11 2010 Melkonian My Brother s Road 251 252 Iranians Deliver a Warning To Azerbaijan and Armenia The New York Times April 13 1993 Archived from the original on January 17 2018 Retrieved September 21 2007 Azerbaijan Armenia take steps toward cease fire in enclave Chicago Tribune May 7 1993 De Waal Black Garden 214 a b De Waal Black Garden 213 Hakobyan Tatul June 14 2021 Լևոն Տեր Պետրոսյանի այցը Ստեփանակերտ 14 հունիս 1993 Levon Ter Petrosyan s visit to Stepanakert 14 June 1993 ANI Armenian Research Center in Armenian Archived from the original on September 9 2021 Retrieved September 9 2021 Bibliography EditDe Waal Thomas Black Garden Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War New York New York University Press 2003 ISBN 0 8147 1945 7 Human Rights Watch Helsinki Report Azerbaijan Seven Years of Conflict in Nagorno Karabakh New York Human Rights Watch 1995 ISBN 1 56432 142 8 Hunter Shireen T The Transcaucasus in Transition Nation Building and Conflict Washington D C The Center for Strategic amp International Studies 1994 ISBN 0 89206 247 9 Melkonian Markar My Brother s Road An American s Fateful Journey to Armenia New York I B Tauris 2005 ISBN 1 85043 635 5External links EditExcerpt on the battle on the NKR website Excerpt on the capture of Kalbajar from Embassy of Azerbaijan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Kalbajar amp oldid 1134752360, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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