Obviously, as we've heard, there's been a waning of Russian influence beyond its own borders in a large part of the world, whether it's here or in Syria or whatever. Obviously they have less ability to project force, or less desire to project force, and more need to have allies and to keep people happy and things of this sort.
Obviously it's very hard to look at the Russians as occupiers when a trilateral statement was made in which they agreed to have Russian peacekeepers there. I should also add that, as part of that trilateral statement, there was an agreement to have a peacekeeping monitoring centre that had Turkish troops in it. I don't see the Azerbaijanis referring to those Turkish troops, who are at that monitoring centre, again far away from the line of contact but still there, as occupiers of Azerbaijan either. Obviously there's some moral judgment being made as to what the role of the Russians is and what they're doing there.
You can portray the Russians as bad, not that they need any help, but if they portray them as the bad guys and somehow for their consumption they're occupiers, they're hoping to get a better result from what they're doing, so I think there's part of that happening.