Stereotypes and the “image of the enemy” in Azerbaijan

Arif Yunusov, Institute of Peace and Democracy of Azerbaijan

One of the factors hindering the settlement of the Karabakh conflict is the numerous stereotypes and myths in the Armenian-Azerbaijani relations. On the one hand, their occurrence and wide distribution is essentially objective, because they are a natural result of all modern conflicts, especially for the ones on ethnic or religious grounds. At the same time, the emergence of certain myths and stereotypes is often based on subjective factors associated with the history of the construction of the national state.

Azerbaijan and the Azerbaijani society are a characteristic example of such a process. On the one hand, Azerbaijan is a classic example of a bordering country and a kind of crossroads between the East and the West, Islam and Christianity. At the same time, Azerbaijanis are a divided people and not only territorially do they divide into southerners (Iranian) and northerners (after the Russian-Iranian wars at the beginning of the 19th century), but also on Shiites and Sunnis. But most importantly, in the 20th century Azerbaijan had two starts for building a nation state: in 1918-1920 and after 1991. In both cases, the process of building a national state was carried out not after a long struggle for independence, but as a result of the circumstances: in the first case after the fall of the Russian Empire, and in the second – after the collapse of the USSR. And each time during the construction of the national state, Azerbaijan and the Azerbaijani society went through severe trials – a war over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh (the term “Nagorno-Karabakh” itself was born in 1919, as a result of this confrontation) with neighboring Armenia, which also created its own nation state at this time. And each time the country and society incurred human and territorial losses.

Meanwhile, both times the divided people faced the issue of unity. And nothing unites people more than war and loss. War takes sacrifice, that is, heroes and martyrs. But these tragedies and losses make it possible to unite the nation and declare as strangers those who remain outside its borders. As Ernest Renan remarked at the end of the 19th century, “common suffering unites more than common joys. For collective national memory, mourning is more important than triumph: mourning imposes obligations, mourning brings about common efforts.” (1) All this is especially characteristic of the 20th century – the time of widespread creation of nation-states and the struggle for the territory considered to be one’s own, the time of mass ethnic cleansings and genocides on the planet. All these tragedies and losses in the struggle for the creation of a national state brought about “vicious circle of defining enemies and making victims,” as stated by Omer Bartov, that is – the desire to define your nation as a victim, which is not only a sign of sorrow and shame, but also an appropriate status and honor (2). At the same time, the logic of the struggle for the construction of a nation state and development against the background of a struggle with neighbors and rivalry for international community’s sympathy required to flaunt national victims and the grief caused by the tragedy.

With regard to Azerbaijan and the Azerbaijani society, it should be noted that a few years before the collapse of the Russian Empire, there appeared the first national political parties (Musavat, Gummat), there appeared a layer of intelligentsia that raised the question of ethnic identity. However, a significant part of the population was far from these processes, their thinking remained at the level of the usual Muslim “ummah” (community of believers), with its low level of national identity perception.
In such a situation, after the collapse of the Russian Empire and during the process of creating a nation state in March 1918, bloody events took place in Baku when the Bolsheviks, along with the Dashnaks (from the point of view of Azerbaijanis – Russians and Armenians) organized massacres in the city and killed at least 12 thousand Azerbaijanis. If “judged by the number of victims, the March events were one of the most terrible episodes in the course of the Russian revolution.” (3)

Entering Baku in September 1918, the Turkish and Azerbaijani forces launched a massacre, killing at least 9,000 Armenians. Then the mutual pogroms of the parties followed in the city of Shusha in Karabakh, and it was during this period that the first myths and images of enemies arose. At the same time, each side focused on its own victims and losses, while at the same time whitewashing its own bloody actions.

On the year of the first anniversary of the March events (March 31, 1919), the leaders of the first sovereign Republic of Azerbaijan decided to combine religious feelings with ethnic ones and as a result, for many Shiite Azerbaijanis, the March events became the “new Ashura” (4) and a kind of “civil Maharram” (5). By the way, not so much was this a day of religious mourning, as that of national unity, when the victims (Shahids (martyrs)(6) fell for the people. That is when the victims of the March events were reburied in a cemetery, opened for this special purpose in the Nagorny Park in Baku.

In the Soviet period, the Communists tried to get rid of all this and delete all this from the memory of Azerbaijanis. March events began to be interpreted as the “counter-revolutionary revolt of the Musavatists,” the cemetery in the Nagorny Park was destroyed, and a new park and the restaurant “Friendship of Peoples” were erected in its place. And now the pantheon to the heroes and victims hosted the 26 Baku commissars, and a monument to them was erected in the center of Baku, as evidence to the internationalism of the new government. That is, the new authorities hastened to create their own “place of sorrow” and worship new heroes and victims of the struggle, where schoolchildren were regularly taken to and flowers were laid.

It is true that Communists did not achieve their goals completely. Azerbaijanis kept the memory of those March events. As a result, the park, let alone the Friendship of Peoples restaurant, was not a favorite place for Azerbaijanis to visit and stroll. Many, especially among the young, did not even know the reason for the ban, but they knew from their parents that this place was haram. (7)

However, the Soviet period succeeded in something the leaders of the first Azerbaijani Republic failed in. Moscow retained the territory of the republic and even some national symbols. But most importantly, the policy of “indigenization” was carried out in the USSR, which in fact meant attention to local human resources in the state and party apparatus. In addition, attention was paid to the development of science and culture. As a result, in Azerbaijan, on the eve of the collapse of the USSR, there was a significantly large scientific and creative intelligentsia. But most importantly, after 70 years of the Soviet policy of atheism and the fight against religion, the main factor for the Azerbaijani society now was not the Islamic factor, but the national one.

In such circumstances, the situation of 70 years ago was getting repeated: again, against the backdrop of the rapid collapse of the USSR, there was an urgent need to think about creating an independent republic. And again, the war with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh, again bloody and violent interethnic clashes and cleansings, and again the emergence of a vicious circle of identifying enemies and creating victims.
For many objective and subjective reasons, at that time, Armenian nationalism was much more active than its Azerbaijani counterpart. In addition to the conflict with the Azerbaijanis and the losses suffered in 1918-1920, Armenians in 1915 experienced much more terrible losses in the Ottoman Empire, and this became a real national disaster for them. Besides, in the Soviet times, starting from 1965, Armenians were allowed to hold mass demonstrations and hold a Commemoration Day of the victims of 1915 on every April 24. Since 1967, Armenia has had a monument for this occasion, that is, its own place of sorrow and worship for universal unity. There was also an image of an external enemy in the person of Turks. And all this was replicated in textbooks, books on history, and films. That is, the propaganda component played its very significant role in clearly defining the image of the enemy and uniting the nation around its victims. Finally, Armenians were also allowed communication with the Diaspora, albeit with some restrictions. All this contributed to the organization and solidarity of Armenians at the initial stage of the Karabakh conflict. Indeed, for Armenians, Azerbaijanis were the same Turks, and therefore, the Karabakh conflict was for Armenians a kind of continuation of what happened to them in the Ottoman Empire seven decades ago.

Azerbaijanis did not have all of this, and therefore, at the initial stage of the Karabakh conflict, they were not united, their actions were often spontaneous and were a response to the actions of the Armenians. Although the memory of the March events of 1918 was preserved among a certain part of the population and these events were even openly spoken and written about in the late 1980s, still in the Azerbaijani society there was not yet a symbol of sorrow and a clearly defined image of the enemy. The society remembered that in the 1970s conflicts with Armenians periodically arose in Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Region, which, however, were quickly resolved by the authorities. And therefore there was a strong belief that these were just accidental and occasional misunderstandings, which would be resolved if not by the republican, then the central Soviet power in Moscow. Even the first refugees from Armenia that appeared and the Sumgayit pogroms did not change the views of Azerbaijanis – the events that took place were viewed through the prism of “perestroika” declared by Gorbachev and the struggle for democracy in the USSR, and not as the beginning of an ethnic conflict with the Armenians.

It seems paradoxical, but the Popular Front Party of Azerbaijan (PFP), created in 1988, initially also declared the idea of the struggle for democracy and did not advocate independence and the creation of a nation state.

Back then many in Azerbaijan did not understand why, in connection with Karabakh, Armenians and many in the USSR and in the West raised the topic of the genocide and the role of Turkey. Even more annoying was the fact that the Karabakh problem was considered through a religious prism outside Azerbaijan, as the supposedly historical struggle of “Christian Armenia” with “Muslim Azerbaijan”. A survey conducted in 1990 in Azerbaijan showed that only about 3% of the population believed that the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over Karabakh had religious grounds. (8)

But very soon the situation changed. The influx of Azerbaijani refugees from Armenia, and then from Karabakh, were like an avalanche, which sharply radicalized public views. The theme of democratization and “perestroika” was swept aside, the Karabakh conflict with Armenians came to the fore, which sharply strengthened the factor of ethnicity. A multitude of publications on the history of Karabakh and Armenian-Azerbaijani relations began to appear. The propaganda and ideology of the struggle against Armenian ethnic separatism quickly established themselves within the context of the conflict.

Soon, the Popular Front was also forced to take a different position, a more nationalistic one. And against the backdrop of the rapid collapse of the USSR, it had to start to think about the need to create an independent state.

The turning point came after January 20, 1990, which was marked in the history of Azerbaijan under the name of “Black January” (Azerb. Gara Yanvar). The funeral of citizens killed during the entry of Soviet troops into Baku seemed to have returned the Azerbaijani society to the distant March of 1919, when there was the first action of the civilian Maharram of Azerbaijanis. Again, the society gave victims who were buried in the same place as the victims of the 1919 March events. Of course, the restaurant opened in Soviet times was closed down, and the park was turned not just into a cemetery, but into the Alley of Martyrs (Azeri. Shehidler Khiyabani).

At the same time, the society has not particularly voiced and still does not voice any questions about the victims of the pogroms against Armenian in Baku, which took place literally a week before January 20. In accordance with the laws of ethnic conflict, it is important to commemorate their victims.

Thus, Azerbaijanis created their “place of sorrow” and worship of new heroes and victims of the struggle, which is annually visited by hundreds of thousands of Baku residents and residents of other regions in the republic on January 20. At first it was a place of sorrow and worship for the victims of the struggle against the Soviet regime for the creation of a nation state. The monument to the 26 Baku commissars, as the last symbol of Soviet power, was destroyed, too. When in 1992-1994 large-scale military operations were underway in Karabakh, those who fell in the battles with the Armenians also began to be buried on Shehidler Khiyabani. At this moment in time, this place became not only a symbol of the struggle for the independence of Azerbaijan, but also a place of worship for the dead martyrs in the struggle for the territorial integrity of the country.

It is noteworthy that those who died in the Second World War, including the famous Heroes of the Soviet Union, were not perceived as martyrs and were buried in the Alley of Honorable Burial created in the Soviet times (azerb. Fahri Hiyaban) along with famous figures of science and culture, as well as politicians and statesmen of Azerbaijan.

But the tragic events in Khojaly in February 1992, when 613 people were brutally killed, including 63 children, 106 women and 70 old people, played a major role in the problem of the Karabakh conflict and the creation of numerous stereotypes and the “enemy image”. After all, Black January was a symbol of the struggle against the Soviet power. And although those who died in the Karabakh war were also buried in Shehidler Khiyabani, in the public mind this place was still associated more with the struggle against the Soviet government for the creation of an independent nation state than with the war against Armenians. The Khojaly tragedy occurred already in the post-Soviet period, and although parts of the former Soviet and now Russian army participated in the massacre of the peaceful Azerbaijani population, only Armenians were seen as the culprits as perceived by the collective consciousness of the Azerbaijani society.

At the same time, although the Karabakh war was in full swing, and Armenians had already clearly taken the place of the main enemy for Azerbaijanis, too little time had still passed from the beginning of the conflict, and the propaganda machine was not fully developed. Therefore, for some time, even after the Khojaly tragedy, the more liberal views and attitudes towards the “image of the enemy” prevailed in the society. A typical example for that time: in the fall of 1992, a meeting of experts was held in the President’s Office to determine how to describe the bloody events that occurred in Khojaly in the media and official propaganda outlets? Different terms were proposed: “carnage”, “pogrom”, “massacre”, “tragedy”. Suddenly, someone suggested qualifying the events in Khojaly as genocide. This proposal was harshly rejected, because then in the public consciousness and understanding of Azerbaijanis this word bore a humiliating connotation – “you are being killed, but you are not resisting”. Therefore, we stopped at the term “tragedy” (fajia in Azerbaijani).

Moreover, in public opinion, as well as during the investigation process in that period, the main emphasis was laid on the search for those, responsible for the tragedy from the Azerbaijani side. That is, there was no doubt in the society that it was the Armenians who carried out the massacre in Khojaly. But it was also necessary to find those from the Azerbaijani side, for whose, albeit indirect, fault, the Armenians staged this massacre. It was then about the fault of President Ayaz Mutallibov and a number of field commanders who did not fulfill their duties and did not come to the aid of the Khojaly residents.

With the advent of Heydar Aliyev to power in 1993, a new stage began in the history of the creation of stereotypes and images of the enemy in Azerbaijan. The war was lost, a large part of the territory was occupied, hundreds of thousands of refugees, not only from Armenia, but from their own territories, became refugees within the country. The society was overwhelmed by frustration, depression, and doom. The former identity and attitude towards oneself and the world around was destroyed.

The ruling elite set itself the task of justifying its presence in power and the choice of foreign policy allies, as well as enemies. It was necessary to provide all this with an appropriate ideology, culture and educational discourse. The new national ideology being constructed was set up to represent the Azerbaijani people as a victim of constant attacks by insidious neighbors, primarily Armenians. The defeats were explained not only by the multiplicity of enemies, but also by the lack of unity. But it was pointed out that the Azerbaijani people never gave up and courageously fought against changing the geopolitical map in favor of the Christian world. In this picture of the world, it was the past that gave an answer for the present: “we have always been oppressed, but we have never stopped fighting.” (9) And therefore, the difficult period of defeat and loss of Karabakh would necessarily be replaced by a triumphal victory.

In the framework of the new national ideology, first of all, a new policy for creating and managing historical memory was needed to explain the reasons for the defeat in the Karabakh conflict and the unification of the people around the authorities and personally H. Aliyev, who alone could save the nation and save the state, as well as return Karabakh. Accordingly, speaking out against the policy of the authorities was regarded as a desire to defeat one’s own people or a call to humble themselves and abandon their former greatness. It is no coincidence that the most popular motto that was repeated everywhere and at all festive events in Azerbaijan was: “Homeland is indivisible, martyrs are immortal!” (Vatan bolyunmyaz, martyr olmyaz! in Azerbaijani). In fact, it was about reformatting the nation.

As a result, according to Heydar Aliyev’s instructions, from the second half of the 1990s, Azerbaijan began to carry out relevant programs on “patriotic education of citizens in the spirit of love for the homeland and the need to fight against enemies”, as the programs read. And first of all, they began to rewrite history books, as well as publish new school history textbooks, which were designed to “educate patriots who could separate” themselves “from” the others “and were ready, if necessary, to take part in another conflict.” (10)

The policy of creating the “image of the enemy” in the person of Armenians took on a purposeful and large-scale character. This image of the “historical enemy” of the Azerbaijani people has become the main symbol in school history textbooks, starting from the 5th grade! (11) That is, the younger generation should know clearly, ever since childhood, who is the main enemy of the people! Moreover, all possible negative epithets (“bandits”, “aggressors”, “killers”, “insidious”, “hypocritical”, etc.) are used in school textbooks regarding Armenians. And if we add hundreds of publications in the press and television programs about the role of Armenians in the history of Azerbaijan to these school textbooks and history books, it becomes clear that brainwashing is comprehensive.

Paradoxically, the new authorities in Azerbaijan have largely borrowed the example of … the Armenian propaganda! More precisely, anti-Turkish propaganda and the numerous myths, fears and stereotypes among Armenians about Turks. As a result of this long-term propaganda, the Armenian population, reading books on the history of the Armenian people or publications about the Turks and Turkey, often sincerely believe that for centuries the Turks did nothing but kill Armenians or dream about killing them.

In fact, Heydar Aliyev began the process of “Armenization” of the Azerbaijani society and soon the Azerbaijani started “crying for their lost lands”, the words “genocide”, “long-suffering Azerbaijani people”, etc. became fashionable.

Previous disagreements about how to name the Khojaly tragedy in the media belonged to the past. At the initiative of Heydar Aliyev, in February 1994, a special meeting with the participation of the public was held in the parliament, dedicated to the discussion of the Khojaly tragedy. At the end, on March 1, 1994, Heydar Aliyev issued a decree declaring February 26 as “the Day of the Khojaly genocide and national mourning”. Three years later, on February 25, 1997, Heydar Aliyev signed a decree announcing the “minute of silence in memory of the victims of the Khojaly genocide” throughout Azerbaijan at 5 pm on every February 26.

Thus, along with the Black January 20th, another nationwide day of mourning and sorrow for victims was established. But the laws of ethnic conflict and propaganda fight demanded to bridge the present also with the past, to show that Armenians were centuries-old enemies who only cared for killing Azerbaijanis in the name of creating their own “Great Armenia”. And the March 1918 events were best suited for this. As a result, on March 26, 1998, a Decree was issued by Heydar Aliyev, according to which from then on they began to celebrate March 31 as “The Day of the Genocide of Azerbaijanis” (Azarbadzhanlylaryn soigyrymy gunu in Azerbaijani) in Azerbaijan and in the Azerbaijani Diaspora.

So the program to create national days of mourning and sorrow was completed, meant to unite the nation against the historical enemy in the person of Armenians. At the same time, a very effective succession of dates to commemorate the tragic events in the history of the Azerbaijani people was designed: January 20 – “Day of National Mourning” for the victims of the Soviet power (“Black January”), a month later February 26 – “Day of Khojaly genocide and national mourning”, a month later March 31 – the “Day of the genocide of Azerbaijanis.” That is, for three consecutive months, Azerbaijanis should have their sorrowful days of mourning. And all this is widely publicized and promoted, including abroad. And only then, in April, the turn of Armenians begins to have their own day of sorrow and mourning for the victims of 1915.

Under Ilham Aliyev, this policy continued. The memorial complex in memory of the victims of Black January, nevertheless, did not play a big role in the propaganda about the struggle against Armenians – the historical enemy. A separate monument was needed for the victims of Armenian atrocities, which was to play a special role for the Azerbaijani society. And on February 26, 2008, the official opening of the monument to the victims of Khojaly called “The Cry of the Mother” (Ana Harayi in Azerbaijani) took place, and the President, the representatives of the diplomatic corps and hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis make a solemn procession to that monument annually.

Now, Azerbaijan had it all – their commemorations and mourning and sorrow dates and the monuments to the victims, hundreds of thousands of people solemnly marched to. Thus, the policy of forming the image of the “historical enemy of the nation” in the person of Armenians was fully completed.

The process of the “Armenization” of Azerbaijanis began to bear fruit very quickly. In the propaganda campaign, Armenians and Azerbaijanis began to behave like Siamese twins – each of the two justified their actions in every possible way and focused on their own victims, and saw only evil in the actions of the opposite side. Armenians focused on the pogroms in Sumgait and Baku and completely denied the pogroms of Azerbaijanis in Armenia and their guilt in Khojaly, and considered this to be the work of Azerbaijanis. In turn, Azerbaijanis focused all attention on Khojaly and denied their guilt in the above pogroms, putting the blame for these pogroms on Armenians only. Moreover, a propaganda competition started very soon – each side regularly and joyfully reported as a major “historical” victory that the parliament of a country or a state in a country adopted an appropriate resolution on “its” genocide. If at the beginning of the Karabakh conflict the Azerbaijani society did not understand why the events of 1915 were associated with them, now Azerbaijanis began to react to the actions of Armenians or anyone else towards Turks and Turkey in 1915 more painfully than Turks themselves.

To raise patriotism, and in fact militaristic feelings, both sides began to actively use new technologies and develop computer war games for young people. Azerbaijani programmers created a series of games for young people called “Under Occupation.” In response, their Armenian counterparts created “Hi Zinvor” – the first online game for a mobile phone. As a result, every day thousands of young Azerbaijanis and Armenians are already virtually fighting each other with the help of these and other software games.(12)

Moreover, each party does not see itself from aside and denies the presence of phobias, assures that it is more tolerant than the other. Meanwhile, the only difference is that Azerbaijanis are the losing side, they are not satisfied with the outcome of the war and the current status quo, and therefore they have more phobias and militarism.

Under Ilham Aliyev, Armenophobia was raised to even greater heights and in many ways has become an ordinary thing. Sometimes it looks like a racist theater of the absurd. On the one hand, the authorities, and many ordinary people following them would talk about 30 thousand Armenians, supposedly quietly living in Baku (13), who, they say, are fine and have no problems. This does not stop even the pro-government media from simultaneously recognizing that many Armenians are trying to hide their nationality in Azerbaijan, are forced to change their names and surnames, and introduce themselves as Russian or Jewish (14). At the same time, journalists from pro-government media do not think about a logical question: why are Armenians who have no problems while living in Azerbaijan forced to change their names and surnames and why do they have to introduce themselves as Russian or Jewish?

Many years of Armenophobia has led to the fact that in Azerbaijan the nationality term “Armenian” has almost become synonymous with “enemy” and causes only negative emotions among respectable Azerbaijanis. In the recent years, government media outlets have launched a real “witch hunt” campaign, using the ethnonym “Armenian” as an indictment. Political opponents or anyone in or out of the country who disagree with the policy of the Azerbaijani authorities are labeled Armenian. Even a slight and cautious criticism of the policy led by the ruling regime in the field of human rights causes official Baku’s hysteria. The critics are immediately labeled “Armenian” or “sold to the Armenian lobby.”

But if outside the republic such an inadequate reaction of the authorities is perceived with irony and as evidence of paranoia, the attitude is different in the republic. To have Armenian origin or even family ties with Armenians is becoming increasingly dangerous in Azerbaijan year by year. This can lead to dismissal from work or harassment. Azerbaijani pro-government media have long been full of calls to dismiss not only Armenians, but also those who are related to Armenians (have an Armenian mother, grandmother or spouse), because “Armenians are worse than animals.” (15) A statement about someone’s Armenian origin in general can be perceived as an insult and lead to a trial (16).

People simply do not see themselves from outside and sincerely do not understand that their words would be perceived as racism in any other civilized country, and they themselves would face trial and respective punishment. Frankly, racist discourse regularly appears in the press, inciting ethnic and religious discord. So, in March 2017, Nizameddin Shamsizade, professor at a leading state university in the country made a public statement in an interview without a shade of doubt: “People born from mixed marriages always think wrongly. But a man with pure genes and blood is always pure for the nation.” (17) It would never occur to him and those who believe him that this rhetoric about pure blood and genes as an indispensable condition for making right decisions and moral and ethical purity exactly repeats the rhetoric of German and Italian fascists in the 30-40s of the last century.

To understand the current situation in Azerbaijan, it would be useful to quote the characteristic and notorious “case of Ramil Safarov”, who killed an Armenian officer, his peer Gurgen Margaryan at a NATO training event in Budapest (Hungary) in 2004. Initially, both President Ilham Aliyev and the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry were cautious in assessing the incident and even expressed condolences to the family of the murdered Armenian officer. But then, as the power of Ilham Aliyev and the anti-Armenian rhetoric of the authorities strengthened, their attitude towards this fact and Ramil Safarov’s character began to change, as the latter was already becoming an element of the anti-Armenian propagandistic struggle. As a result, very soon, he began to turn from a murderer, first, into a victim, whose relatives died as a result of the Karabakh conflict, and then into a hero of the war against the worst enemy of the nation! After that, the authorities began to make all possible efforts to release and return R. Safarov to his homeland and achieved their goal: in August 2012, Hungary extradited R. Safarov to Azerbaijan. Immediately upon his return to Baku, R. Safarov, instead of serving his sentence, according to the assurances of the Azerbaijani authorities, was pardoned and released by a presidential decree! Moreover, he was promoted: from senior lieutenant immediately to lieutenant colonel (currently colonel), he was presented with an apartment and paid an officer’s salary for all 8 years in prison. Following this, the authorities launched a nationwide campaign to glorify R. Safarov’s image.

Certainly, the growing dissatisfaction with the outcome of the war and the futility of many years of negotiations could not but strengthen radicalization in the Azerbaijani society. And numerous opinion polls constantly showed a tendency for the growth of radicalism in the Azerbaijani society in the recent years. Opinion polls conducted in 2001-2012 showed that in Azerbaijan the number of supporters of a military solution to the conflict was growing steadily. Over this period, this number grew from about 35-40 percent to 60-65 percent (18). The number of those who believe in the victory of the Azerbaijani army in the event of the resumption of hostilities is growing steadily. These sentiments increased even more after the April battles in 2016, which, thanks to propaganda, were perceived in Azerbaijan as a major victory.

Surveys also show that the vast majority of Azerbaijanis and Armenians – up to 90 percent – consider the other party an enemy of their country. Moreover, while Armenians within the range of 50-60 percent feel “hatred”, “rage” and “contempt” towards Azerbaijanis, the same figures for Azerbaijanis range from 70 to 80 percent, that is, the negative feelings are stronger.

The picture is fairly clear with regard to other friends and foes, too. As was to be expected, Turkey (approximately 70-80 percent of the respondents) is number one among the countries perceived to be friendly to Azerbaijan, followed by others by a large margin in all polls. The USA and Georgia constantly occupy the following positions. These three countries take the lion’s share of the respondents’ votes, clearly showing to whom the sympathies of the population of Azerbaijan belong.

As expected, Armenia was called the most hostile state to Azerbaijan. It is followed by Russia and Iran (19).

Thus, a quarter century after the ceasefire and the achievement of truce in the Karabakh conflict, the positions of the parties not only have failed to come closer and get softer, but on the contrary, have led to a situation that is even more radical and harsher. During this time, both sides have completed the formation of the “vicious circle for defining the enemy.” Each side has a clear memory of its victims, forgetting or avoiding the thought that they themselves committed violence. Both sides are at an impasse in the conflict. And so far there is no hint that the parties intend to change the situation and begin to try to understand the pain and suffering of the other side.

In this regard, it is appropriate to recall the famous Armenian writer Hrant Matevosyan, who in one of his interviews sadly remarked: “So far, my word is only the word of an Armenian, and it does not equally include the words and thoughts of Azerbaijanis and Turks. So far, the merger is not working. Maybe it is yet to come?” (20) And indeed, realizing the pain and suffering of each side, their thoughts and psychology, you can try to stop this “vicious circle of defining the enemy” and find a compromise.


1. Эрнест Ренан. Что такое нация? – Собрание сочинений в 12-ти томах. Пер. с франц. под редакцией В.Н. Михайловского. – Киев, 1902, Том 6, с. 102.
2. Omer Bartov. Mirrors of Destruction: War, Genocide and Modern Identity. – Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000, p. 91.
3. Майкл Смит. Память об утратах и азербайджанское общество. Пер. с англ. О. Фидиной. – Сборник «Азербайджан и Россия: общества и государства». Под ред. Д.Е.Фурман. – Москва, 2001, с.95.
4. Ashura – a mourning religious ritual among Shiites during the commemoration service for Shiite martyrs.
5. Makharram (variants – Mukharram, Magherram,) – a sacred month for Muslims, especially for the Shiites, who in this period mourning for Imam Hussein, martyred in 680
6. Shahids – Martyrs in Islam who die for faith.
7. Haram – actions and deed that are most sinful and  prohibited in Islam.
8. More details in: Ариф Юнусов. Ислам в Азербайджане. – Баку, 2004, с. 196.
9. Сабир Ахундов. Наш геноцид. Историческая политика и школьное образование в Азербайджане. – https://www.opendemocracy.net/ru/nash-genocid/

10. Ильхам Аббасов, Сергей Румянцев. Способы увековечить прошлое: анализ образов других в учебниках истории Азербайджана. – Сборник «Современные учебники истории на Южном Кавказе». Под ред. Любоша Веселего. – Прага: «Ассоциация международных вопросов», 2009, с.34.
11. More details in: Ариф Юнусов. Мифы и образы «врага» в исторической науке и учебниках по истории независимого Азербайджана. – http://amudarya.gei.de/fileadmin/_amudarya/bs/ay.pdf

12. Лилит Аракелян, Ника Мусави, Седа Мурадян. Как в Армении и в Азербайджане играют в
войну. – https://jam-news.net/как-в-армении-и-в-азербайджане-играют-в/?lang=ru
13. In fact, according to 2009 census in Azerbaijan, expect Nagorno Karabakh, there were 183 registered Armenians, of which 104 were in the capital. In the vast majority of cases, these were elderly people, members of mixed families.
14. How many Armenians live in Azerbaijan?
http://www.1news.az/society/20151030025627115.html

15. In: Шок: армяне создали в Азербайджане сеть. – http://www.dia.az/print:page,1,9448-eok-azzhrbaycanda-ermzhndlzhr-ezhbzh… (in Azerbaijani); Егяна Рзаханова. Азербайджанская певица: «Угнавший мою машину преступник имеет армянские корни». – http://vesti.az/news/87629/; «Мать Ильгара Рагимова была армянкой». –  http://haqqin.az/news/3983; Бабушка Гюляр Ахмедовой армянка… – http://olaylar.az/news/ru/15133 и др.
16. В Баку сотрудник дорожной полиции обратился в суд из-за слова «армянин». –     http://ru.oxu.az/society/54016?fb_comment_id=803907369648241_80430235627…
17. Низамаддин Шамсизаде. B жилах шаха Исмаила текла христианская кровь. –  http://publika.az/news/maraqlitarix/189900.html (in Azerbaijani).

18. In: Ариф Юнусов. Азербайджан в начале XXI века: конфликты и потенциальные угрозы. – Баку, 2007, с. 26-30. The results of other opinion polls can be found here: Возможности урегулирования Карабахского конфликта. Результаты социологических исследований и мониторинга средств массовой информации (2001-2003). – Баку, 2004; Армения и Азербайджан на перепутье «ни мира, ни войны». – Ереван, 2005 г.; Арда Инал-Ипа. Обзор результатов качественного социологического исследования по проблеме конфликта вокруг Карабаха. – https://www.international-alert.org/sites/default/files/ArdaInal-Ipa_The… Глоссарий языка вражды в СМИ Азербайджана и Армении. – https://ypc.am/upload/GLOSSARY_rus.pdf и др.
19. In: Ариф Юнусов. Азербайджан в начале XXI века, с. 207.
20. Интервью с Грантом Матевосяном. – Газ. «Литературная газета» (Москва) от 8 июля 1992 г.