Karabakh conflict map courtesy of the Council on Foreign Relations.
Karabakh conflict map courtesy of the Council on Foreign Relations.

The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) has published its Preventive Priorities Survey: 2018, once again classifying the Karabakh conflict as being of low priority for the United States, while also describing its status as “worsening.”

In an analysis published in September, former U.S. envoy for Karabakh Carey Cavanaugh and CFR’s Center for Preventive Action director Paul Stares argued that “talks later this year between President Serzh Sargsyan and President Ilham Aliyev can reduce the likelihood of renewed armed conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.” Cavanaugh and Stares also called for relaunch of Armenian-Azerbaijan track II contacts that have been mostly suspended in recent years.

Writing in February, Cavanaugh warned that there was a high likelihood of a serious escalation in fighting and urged the mediators to press for implementation of 2016 agreements on cease-fire strengthening mechanisms and consider imposing sanctions for violations of cease-fire.

While security mechanisms have not been implemented and threat of escalation is ever present, Aliyev’s as well as Sargsyan’s preference for a pause in military activities along the Line of Contact, notably seen since in reduction in tensions since August 2017, have made current diplomatic roundpossible.