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Iran Offers To Mediate Azeri-Armenian Dispute

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  • Iran Offers To Mediate Azeri-Armenian Dispute

    IRAN OFFERS TO MEDIATE AZERI-ARMENIAN DISPUTE

    United Press International
    June 11 2008

    WASHINGTON, June 11 (UPI) -- As oil prices rise relentlessly to
    record-high levels, relations between the United States and Iran,
    OPEC's third-largest producer, continue to worsen. Further heightening
    investors' anxieties, speculation about a possible Israeli or
    U.S. attack to thwart Iran's nuclear ambitions continues to mount.

    Despite Washington branding Iran a charter member of the "axis
    of evil," in a diplomatic gesture full of portent for the future
    of Caspian energy exports, Tehran has offered to mediate one of
    the Caucasus region's longstanding disputes, the Nagorno-Karabakh
    clash between Armenia and Azerbaijan. If Iran succeeds, it will have
    accomplished something The Bush administration failed to do in one
    of its first foreign policy initiatives.

    As reported by Azerbaijan's APA news agency, during a news conference
    in Baku, the Azeri capital, on June 5, Iranian Deputy Foreign
    Minister Alireza Sheikh-Attar said that Iran is ready to mediate the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict if requested by both sides, noting that while
    Iran had earlier attempted to negotiate a resolution of the issue,
    "Unfortunately, under the influence of outside forces, our country
    was sidelined from the mediatory mission."

    A shooting war between the two southern Caucasian nations broke out in
    February 1988, as both nations claimed the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave,
    then administered by Baku. The rising violence saw the Commission on
    Security and Cooperation in Europe (now the Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe) in the summer of 1992 create the 11-country
    Minsk Group with the aim of mediating a solution to the conflict.

    By May 1994, when Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a cease-fire agreement
    ending active hostilities, the conflict had caused thousands of
    casualties and created hundreds of thousands of refugees on both sides
    and left Armenian armed forces occupying swaths of Azeri territory,
    including Nagorno-Karabakh and seven neighboring districts. While
    14 years later Russia, France and the United States, currently the
    Minsk Group co-chairs, are currently holding talks, nothing concrete
    has been achieved.

    In a largely forgotten U.S. diplomatic initiative, Washington's
    interest in resolving the impasse led the new administration of
    U.S. President George W. Bush to convene a diplomatic summit in
    April 2001 in Key West, Fla., under OSCE auspices between Armenian
    President Robert Kocharian and Azeri President Geidar Aliyev. As with
    the earlier Minsk Group efforts, however, the talks went nowhere.

    The diplomatic impasse has affected all three countries' economies,
    with only Azerbaijan's soaring because of its oil revenue. Last year
    the Central Intelligence Agency estimated Armenia's GDP growth rate at
    13.7 percent, Azerbaijan's at 31 percent and Turkey's at 5.1 percent.

    The last couple of years have seen some softening of Yerevan's
    position; on June 5, 2005, the Armenian media noted that Kocharian
    announced, "We are ready to continue dialogue with Azerbaijan for
    the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and with Turkey on
    establishing relations without any preconditions."

    Both sides have lost out in the impasse. Armenia was excluded from
    the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, but Azerbaijan in turn was forced
    to pay a price for its unwillingness to negotiate, as BTC was forced
    to take a lengthy detour around Armenia, adding substantially to the
    project's cost and construction delays.

    The prize is certainly tempting; the Caspian Sea's 143,244 square
    miles and attendant coastline are estimated to contain as much as 250
    billion barrels of recoverable oil, boosted by more than 200 billion
    barrels of potential reserves, quite aside from up to 328 trillion
    cubic feet of recoverable natural gas.

    Needless to say, foreign companies are battling to build more export
    pipelines, and Iran has been angling for years to increase its transit
    trade of other Caspian nations' exports, while energy-starved Armenia,
    which has no oil reserves and imports virtually all of its needs,
    could benefit from improved relations with its oil-rich neighbors to
    the east.

    Should diplomatic relations normalize, Armenia also could benefit
    from transit fees on any pipelines constructed across its territory,
    while Iran possibly could sidestep the crippling U.S. ILSA sanctions,
    which have largely precluded development of its natural gas reserves,
    estimated at more than 26 trillion cubic meters, the world's second
    largest after Russia. Despite such potential riches, a lack of foreign
    investment means that Iran currently produces a paltry 460 million
    cubic meters of gas per day.

    Iran brings a number of negotiating strengths to the table; it
    maintains diplomatic relations with both nations, 24 percent of its
    population is Azeri, while an estimated 400,000 Armenians reside in
    the Islamic Republic. The above considerations give Iran an added
    cachet as a possible "honest broker" in negotiations that the Minsk
    Group members lack. In a sign of the diplomatic relations between
    Armenia and Iran, the new Armenian Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan
    recently visited Tehran.

    Given the diplomatic barrenness of 16 years of discussions, Iran's
    offer ought to be seriously considered by all interested parties. The
    results of a negotiated peace are obvious -- the only question is
    whether "outside forces" will allow Iran's efforts to proceed.

    http://www.upi.com/Energy_Resources/2008 /06/11/Iran_offers_to_mediate_Azeri-Armenian_dispu te/UPI-53561213210013/
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