NAGORNO-KARABAKH AFTERMATH
The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict — one of the post-Soviet world's longest frozen conflicts — reached a definitive military resolution on September 19-20, 2023, when Azerbaijan launched a 24-hour "anti-terrorist operation" that caused the complete collapse of the Armenian forces in the enclave and forced the dissolution of the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (also called Artsakh). Within one week, over 100,000 ethnic Armenians — virtually the entire population — fled to Armenia in what the Armenian government and diaspora describe as ethnic cleansing; Azerbaijan describes it as a voluntary departure.
The seeds were planted in the 2020 Second Nagorno-Karabakh War (44-day war, September-November 2020) in which Azerbaijan, armed with Turkish Bayraktar TB2 drones and Israeli-supplied Harop loitering munitions, systematically destroyed Armenian armor and air defense systems in spectacular drone-on-armor operations that became required study at military academies worldwide. The drone warfare revolution demonstrated in Nagorno-Karabakh was later replicated on a vastly larger scale in Ukraine. Azerbaijan recaptured approximately 7,000 sq km of previously Armenian-controlled territories in 44 days of fighting before a Russian-brokered ceasefire.
The September 2023 operation was not a war — it lasted 24 hours because the enclave's defenders, cut off for months by Azerbaijan's blockade of the Lachin Corridor (the sole road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia) since December 2022, had no food, fuel, or ammunition reserves to mount resistance. The 2,000 Russian peacekeepers deployed under the 2020 ceasefire stood aside — a clear signal that Moscow had decided to allow Azerbaijan's operation after Armenia moved toward Western alignment.
The Nagorno-Karabakh resolution has redrawn the Caucasus strategic map with profound implications. Russia's failure to protect ethnic Armenians — despite CSTO membership — destroyed Moscow's credibility as a security guarantor and accelerated Armenia's pivot toward Europe. Armenia suspended CSTO membership in 2024 and invited EU civilian monitoring missions to its border with Azerbaijan. Turkey has enhanced its strategic position dramatically: the proposed Zangezur Corridor (a land route through Armenia connecting Turkey and Azerbaijan to Central Asian states) is Azerbaijan's primary post-war demand. If established, it would create a Turkish-Azerbaijani-Central Asian strategic corridor bypassing both Armenia and Iran. The 100,000 Nagorno-Karabakh refugees have fundamentally destabilized Armenia's political and economic situation, adding 3% to the population with no resources.
Azerbaijan's armed forces — rebuilt with $24 billion in oil revenues over 30 years and Turkish/Israeli equipment — deployed Bayraktar TB2 drones, Israeli Harop loitering munitions (autonomous kamikaze aircraft), Spike anti-tank missiles, TOS-1 thermobaric artillery, and Turkish T-155 Firtina self-propelled howitzers in the 44-day war. The 2023 operation required minimal force: a day of artillery and drone strikes against a starving, fuel-deprived garrison. Armenian forces in Nagorno-Karabakh possessed Soviet-era tanks, artillery, and no functional air defense after 2020 losses.
POST-CONFLICT. Azerbaijan completed its takeover of Nagorno-Karabakh in September 2023 with a 24-hour military operation. 120,000 ethnic Armenians fled to Armenia. Azerbaijan now consolidates control and resettles the territory. Armenian diaspora advocacy continues but no international action taken. The conflict is effectively resolved in Azerbaijan's favor.
COMPARE MILITARY STRENGTH
Head-to-head comparison of the parties' military capabilities — troops, hardware, budget, and power index.