Tag: Nagorno-Karabakh

  • Artsakh in 2026: The Country That Was Erased in 24 Hours

    On September 19, 2023, Azerbaijan launched what it called an “anti-terrorist campaign” against Nagorno-Karabakh — a mountainous enclave of approximately 120,000 ethnic Armenians that had operated as the de facto independent Republic of Artsakh for thirty years. The offensive lasted 24 hours. By September 20, Artsakh’s authorities had surrendered. By September 28, the Lachin corridor — the only road connecting the enclave to Armenia — was opened. Within two weeks, over 100,000 Armenians had fled through it. Sixty-nine people died during the exodus. The few dozen who remained — elderly, disabled, unable to travel — had their passports confiscated by Azerbaijani authorities. On January 23, 2026, eleven of the last Armenians were transferred to Armenia. Relatives said they were not informed of their destination and feared for their lives during the journey. The Republic of Artsakh — which had held elections, maintained a parliament, operated a university, printed a currency, and existed as an unrecognized state since 1991 — ceased to exist in the time it takes to drive from New York to Boston. The territory is now being resettled: Azerbaijan plans to move 140,000 Azerbaijani citizens into the abandoned Armenian homes, schools, and churches. Freedom House satellite imagery has documented the destruction of Armenian cemeteries, churches, and residential neighborhoods. The International Association of Genocide Scholars has classified the displacement as genocide. The world hosted COP29 in Baku two months later.

    The thirty-year state that wasn’t

    Nagorno-Karabakh — “mountainous black garden” in a mashup of Russian, Turkic, and Persian — was an autonomous oblast within Soviet Azerbaijan, populated primarily by ethnic Armenians. When the Soviet Union dissolved, the Armenian majority voted for independence. Azerbaijan rejected the vote. The First Nagorno-Karabakh War (1991-1994) produced approximately 30,000 dead, 500,000 displaced Azerbaijanis from the surrounding territories, and a Russian-brokered ceasefire that left Artsakh and seven adjacent Azerbaijani districts under Armenian control. For thirty years, the Republic of Artsakh governed the enclave — holding presidential and parliamentary elections, operating schools in Armenian, maintaining a military, and depending on Armenia for economic and security support through the Lachin corridor.

    The territory was never recognized by any country — not even Armenia. The Somaliland post documented a functional state that has spent thirty-four years waiting for its first recognition. Artsakh functioned for thirty years without any recognition, and the absence of recognition meant that when Azerbaijan decided to reclaim the territory, no international obligation existed to prevent it. The micronations post covered entities that declare statehood without capacity. Artsakh had capacity — elections, governance, a military — and it still wasn’t enough. The lesson the Off The Map course draws from Artsakh is not that recognition prevents dissolution. It is that without recognition, dissolution has no legal obstacle.

    How it ended: blockade, starvation, offensive

    The dissolution was methodical and occurred in three phases that the Shadowcraft course would recognize as a coercive campaign conducted through escalating pressure rather than a single decisive strike.

    Phase one: the 2020 war. In September 2020, Azerbaijan — armed with Turkish Bayraktar TB2 drones and Israeli loitering munitions — launched the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War. In 44 days, Azerbaijan recaptured the seven surrounding districts and a third of Nagorno-Karabakh proper, including the strategically critical city of Shusha. The Battlefields of the Future course covers how drone warfare has compressed the timescales of territorial seizure. The 2020 war was the proof case: Turkish and Israeli drones destroyed Armenian air defenses, tanks, and artillery positions at a rate that conventional forces could not sustain. The war ended with a Russian-brokered ceasefire and the deployment of approximately 2,000 Russian peacekeepers to the residual Armenian-controlled portion of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Phase two: the blockade. On December 12, 2022, Azerbaijan blocked the Lachin corridor under the pretext of “environmental protests” — individuals claiming to be eco-activists stationed at the road, preventing the movement of food, fuel, and medicine to 120,000 people. The blockade lasted nine months. By September 2023, bread was rationed to one loaf per family per day. The first death from starvation had been reported. Gas had been cut since March. Electricity was rationed to six hours daily. The International Court of Justice ordered Azerbaijan in February 2023 to ensure free movement along the corridor. Azerbaijan ignored the order. The ICJ has no enforcement mechanism.

    Phase three: the offensive. On September 19, 2023 — with the population weakened by nine months of blockade, the Armenian military unable to intervene without crossing Azerbaijani territory, and the Russian peacekeepers unwilling to act — Azerbaijan launched its 24-hour operation. Two hundred people were killed. Over 400 were injured. The Artsakh government surrendered. The population fled.

    The Russian peacekeepers who watched

    Two thousand Russian peacekeepers were deployed to Nagorno-Karabakh under the November 2020 ceasefire agreement. Their mandate was to ensure security in the residual Armenian-controlled territory and to guarantee freedom of movement along the Lachin corridor. During the nine-month blockade, the peacekeepers did not break the blockade. During the September 2023 offensive, the peacekeepers did not intervene. They watched the territory they were mandated to protect be overrun, the population they were mandated to secure flee, and the corridor they were mandated to keep open be used as an evacuation route for a population that had no other choice.

    The failure is the detail that haunts every other Russian-protected territory in the former Soviet space. The Abkhazia post documented Abkhazians watching Artsakh disappear and drawing the conclusion that Russian security guarantees are contingent. The South Ossetia post documented a territory accelerating its absorption into Russia because the alternative — remaining nominally independent with Russian “protection” — was demonstrated by Artsakh to be worthless. The Transnistria post documented a territory collapsing because Russia withdrew economic support. Artsakh is the case where Russia didn’t withdraw — it was physically present, with 2,000 soldiers — and the territory was dissolved anyway. The peacekeepers were there. They were not enough. They were not intended to be enough. Russia was fighting in Ukraine. Its capacity to project force in the South Caucasus had been hollowed out. Azerbaijan knew it. Everyone knew it. The timing was not accidental.

    The cultural erasure

    Azerbaijan’s post-conquest program in Nagorno-Karabakh is not limited to resettlement. It includes the systematic destruction of Armenian cultural heritage — churches, monasteries, cemeteries, khachkars (carved stone crosses), and the “We Are Our Mountains” statue, a symbol of Armenian identity in Artsakh that Azerbaijan has reportedly slated for demolition. Freedom House’s fact-finding mission documented satellite imagery showing destruction of entire neighborhoods in Stepanakert. Azerbaijan’s defense ministry published a video describing the “reintegration process” that included the remark: “Even a wild cat can be tamed.”

    The pattern has precedent. Azerbaijan destroyed the medieval Armenian cemetery at Julfa in Nakhchivan between 1998 and 2005 — approximately 10,000 khachkars, some dating to the 6th century, were systematically demolished. The destruction was documented by satellite imagery and eyewitness accounts. Azerbaijan denied it. When a European Parliament delegation attempted to visit the site in 2006, Azerbaijan refused access. The cemetery no longer exists. The Western Sahara post documented an occupier that reshapes territory through settler demographics and infrastructure investment. Azerbaijan’s approach in Nagorno-Karabakh goes further: not just resettlement but the physical elimination of the evidence that another population ever lived there. The settlers move into Armenian houses. The Armenian churches are destroyed. The Armenian graves are bulldozed. The history is rewritten in real time.

    The diaspora in 2026

    The 100,000+ refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh are now distributed across Armenia — a country of 2.8 million people with a GDP per capita of roughly $7,000 that absorbed a population equivalent to 3.5% of its total in under two weeks. Integration has been difficult. UNHR’s 2025 interviews with the displaced community documented continued efforts to keep the right to return on the diplomatic table, even as Armenia-Azerbaijan normalization talks proceed with Baku demanding that Yerevan formally recognize Nagorno-Karabakh as Azerbaijani territory. The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention warned that the displaced Artsakhtsis will lose “their distinct identity as Artsakhsis, an identity forged through centuries — millennia — of independent cultural flourishing in their mountains and valleys.”

    The Diego Garcia post documented a population deported fifty-eight years ago that is still waiting to return. The Chagossians number approximately 10,000 and maintain a distinct cultural identity. The Artsakhtsis number 100,000 and have been displaced for less than three years. Whether the Artsakhtsi identity survives displacement — or whether it dissolves into the broader Armenian diaspora the way the Lemkin Institute fears — depends on whether the right to return remains a political reality or becomes a rhetorical artifact. The ICJ ordered Azerbaijan in November 2023 to allow returns. Azerbaijan has not complied. The disputed borders post documented 150+ active territorial disputes. Nagorno-Karabakh is no longer among them. The dispute has been resolved — by force, in 24 hours, while the world watched and 2,000 peacekeepers stood aside.

    Why it’s in the course

    Artsakh is the Off The Map case study in total erasure — the territory that demonstrates what happens when every variable that sustains an unrecognized state fails simultaneously. The patron’s military capacity was depleted by a war in Ukraine. The adversary’s military had been modernized with Turkish drones and Israeli munitions. The population had been weakened by nine months of blockade. The international community had no mechanism to intervene. The ICJ issued orders that were ignored. And the territory — which had existed for thirty years, held elections, governed itself, educated its children, and maintained its cultural heritage — was dissolved in a single day.

    Every other Off The Map case study exists in an ongoing state: Transnistria is collapsing. Somaliland is persisting. Azawad is being born. Northern Cyprus is frozen. Pripyat is irradiated. Artsakh is finished. It is the only territory in the course that has reached its terminal state — not frozen, not contested, not transitioning, but erased. The population is gone. The buildings are being demolished. The cultural heritage is being destroyed. The graves are being bulldozed. The name itself — Artsakh — is being replaced in Azerbaijani maps with “Karabakh Economic Region.” The territory that was once a de facto state is becoming, in the most literal sense, a place that never existed.

    This is the kind of place our Off The Map course was built to map — where a thirty-year republic was dissolved in 24 hours, 100,000 people fled through a single corridor while peacekeepers watched, the International Court of Justice ordered the aggressor to allow returns and the aggressor ignored the order, the churches are being demolished, the cemeteries bulldozed, the homes resettled, the name erased from the map, and the world hosted a climate conference in the aggressor’s capital two months after the ethnic cleansing was completed — because Azerbaijan has gas that Europe needs, and the Armenians of Artsakh had nothing except a thirty-year state that nobody had ever recognized as real.

  • Disputed Borders in 2026: The Territorial Conflicts Most People Don’t Know Exist

    There are more than 150 active territorial disputes on Earth right now. Most people can name three — maybe Kashmir, maybe Crimea, maybe something in the South China Sea. The rest exist in a strange geopolitical limbo: lines on maps that two or more governments disagree about, sometimes violently, while the rest of the world goes about its business unaware that the borders it sees on Google Maps are somebody’s political opinion rather than settled fact. Some of these disputes involve nuclear-armed states. Some involve resources worth trillions. Some involve populations that have been stateless for decades. And some involve patches of frozen ground so remote that the only regular visitors are researchers and penguins. Here are the ones worth understanding — not ranked by severity, because severity depends on whether you’re measuring by geopolitical risk, resource value, human displacement, or the simple question of how many people live in a place two governments simultaneously claim to own.

    The ones you’ve probably heard of, updated

    Kashmir remains the world’s most militarized territorial dispute. India controls approximately 55 percent of the land area and 70 percent of the population, including Jammu, the Kashmir Valley, most of Ladakh, and the Siachen Glacier — the highest battlefield on earth, where Indian and Pakistani soldiers have been stationed above 20,000 feet since 1984. Pakistan controls roughly 30 percent, including Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan. China controls the remaining 15 percent — Aksai Chin and the Trans-Karakoram Tract — after Pakistan ceded it in 1963, a transfer India has never recognized. In May 2025, India launched Operation Sindoor following a terrorist attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 tourists, resulting in a four-day aerial engagement between Indian and Pakistani forces — 114 aircraft engaged, cruise missiles used between the two nuclear-armed nations for the first time. An October 2024 agreement between India and China on Line of Actual Control patrolling at Depsang and Demchok has held, but both sides continue building military infrastructure along the disputed Himalayan border.

    The South China Sea dispute involves six claimants — China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, and Taiwan — over an area that carries roughly one-third of global shipping traffic. China’s “nine-dash line” claim covers approximately 90 percent of the sea, a claim the Permanent Court of Arbitration ruled had no legal basis in 2016. China rejected the ruling. It has constructed and militarized seven artificial islands in the Spratly archipelago, complete with airstrips, radar installations, and missile batteries. The Philippines has pushed for an ASEAN-China code of conduct, which remains unfinished. Incidents between Chinese coast guard vessels and Philippine ships near the Second Thomas Shoal have become routine.

    Crimea and eastern Ukraine represent the most consequential border revision by force in Europe since 1945. Russia annexed Crimea in 2014 and subsequently occupied portions of the Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson oblasts. The frontline remains active. The international community overwhelmingly does not recognize the annexation or the occupation, but de facto control is a different question than legal recognition, and Russia shows no indication of withdrawal.

    The ones you probably haven’t

    Western Sahara is one of the longest-running territorial disputes on earth and receives almost no sustained international attention. Spain withdrew from the territory in 1976. Morocco immediately annexed it, constructing the Berm — a 2,700-kilometer military sand wall, the second-longest wall in the world after the Great Wall of China — to divide the territory between Moroccan-controlled areas to the west and Polisario Front-controlled areas to the east. The Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, backed by Algeria, claims sovereignty. The United Nations classifies Western Sahara as a non-self-governing territory. Forty-seven UN member states recognize the Sahrawi republic’s independence. The United States under Trump recognized Moroccan sovereignty in 2020 in exchange for Morocco normalizing relations with Israel. The territory contains the world’s largest phosphate reserves and rich fishing waters — resources Morocco extracts and the Polisario Front considers theft.

    The Kuril Islands dispute between Russia and Japan has been active since 1945 and prevents the two countries from signing a formal peace treaty ending World War II. The Soviet Union seized the four southernmost Kuril Islands — Iturup, Kunashir, Shikotan, and the Habomai group — in the final days of the war. Japan calls them the Northern Territories and considers their seizure illegal. Russia considers them sovereign Russian territory. Approximately 20,000 Russian citizens live there. Japan’s population of the islands prior to 1945 — roughly 17,000 — was entirely expelled. No resolution is in sight, and the dispute has hardened since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine eliminated any diplomatic goodwill between the two countries.

    The Essequibo dispute between Venezuela and Guyana escalated dramatically in late 2023 when Venezuela held a referendum on annexing the Essequibo region — a territory comprising roughly two-thirds of Guyana’s total land area. The region contains significant offshore oil reserves (ExxonMobil’s Stabroek block, producing over 600,000 barrels per day by 2025) and is rich in gold and timber. Venezuela massed troops on the border. Guyana, which has no military capability to resist a Venezuelan invasion, relies on international pressure and the presence of Western oil companies as a deterrent. The International Court of Justice is hearing the case but has no enforcement mechanism.

    The Senkaku Islands — called the Diaoyu Islands by China — are eight uninhabited rocks in the East China Sea that Japan administers and both China and Taiwan claim. On February 10, 2026, four Chinese Coast Guard vessels entered Japanese territorial waters near the islands, two near Uotsuri Island and two near Taisho, departing after approximately two hours. These incursions are now routine — dozens per year — and each one tests the credibility of the U.S.-Japan security alliance, because the islands fall under Article 5 of the mutual defense treaty.

    The Golan Heights, seized by Israel from Syria in 1967 and formally annexed in 1981, was recognized as Israeli territory by the United States in 2019. Almost no other country recognizes the annexation. The Syrian civil war and the collapse of the Assad regime in late 2024 have made the question of “returning” the Golan to Syria effectively moot — there is no functioning Syrian government with the capacity to administer it — but the legal dispute remains unresolved.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is now a resolved dispute in the most brutal sense: Azerbaijan recaptured the territory in September 2023 through a military offensive that lasted 24 hours, and the entire ethnic Armenian population — approximately 120,000 people — fled. A region that had been disputed for decades and fought over in two wars is no longer disputed because one side’s population has been entirely displaced. Whether that constitutes resolution or ethnic cleansing depends on who’s talking.

    And then there’s Hans Island — a 1.3-square-kilometer rock in the Nares Strait between Canada and Greenland (Denmark) that was the subject of a 49-year dispute resolved in 2022 by splitting the island in half, creating the only land border between Canada and a European country. The resolution was celebrated with bottles of Canadian whisky and Danish schnapps left at each other’s border markers. Not every territorial dispute ends with cruise missiles.

    Why it matters

    Disputed borders are where the world’s legal order meets its physical reality, and the gap between the two is wider than most maps suggest. The South China Sea’s artificial islands are military installations built on land that an international court says doesn’t belong to the country that built them. The Arctic’s continental shelf claims overlap across five nations’ exclusive economic zones in waters that are only now becoming navigable due to melting ice. The water resources that flow through disputed Kashmir feed agriculture for hundreds of millions of people downstream in India and Pakistan. The borders that look settled on a map are often the ones where the most is at stake — and the ones most people haven’t heard of are often the ones closest to producing the next crisis.

    We cover disputed borders, forbidden zones, undersea cable warfare, and the geopolitics of infrastructure that most people never see across our Atlas of Non-Existent Places course — where the map is never the territory, and the territory is always more complicated than the map.