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  • Azerbaijan Has Exhausted

    AZERBAIJAN HAS EXHAUSTED

    Lragir.am
    10/02/10

    ITS RESOURCES OF TRUST

    Today, Serge Sragysan held a speech in the Chattem House British
    Royal Institute of International Affairs. We are bringing into your
    attention some parts of it relating to the Karabakh issue.

    The South Caucasus is one of those regions where there are ostensibly
    insurmountable divisions, the internationally-recognized political
    map of states differs from the reality, fragile peace is extremely
    vulnerable, and re-establishing peace demands enormous efforts.

    We have witnessed a policy of the most brutal ethnic cleansing and
    displacement. The people of Mountainous Karabakh were forced to pay by
    blood to defend their right to live freely in a war that was imposed
    on them. We must find solutions the implementation of which will not
    lead to further displacement and ethnic cleansing. We have to realize
    that the people of Karabakh consider that they have managed, on the
    one hand, to restore historical justice distorted during Stalin's
    dictatorship, and, on the other, to safeguard the minimum conditions
    necessary for their physical survival. It is with this realization
    that we continue the talks with Azerbaijan and perceive the peace
    process and the efforts of the mediators.

    The truth is that Karabakh was never a part of independent Azerbaijan.

    It was forced into Azerbaijan by a decision of the Soviet Union party
    authority, which, defiant of the League of Nations decision and the
    popular referendum as a means of determining the border between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan, decided in its Caucasus Bureau session in 1921, under
    Stalin's direct pressure, and in violation of the procedure, to annex
    Mountainous Karabakh on the condition of forming a national autonomy
    on these Armenian territories within the Soviet Socialist Republic
    of Azerbaijan. Throughout the Soviet period, the people of Karabakh
    never reconciled to this decision. I will not dwell upon details of
    Azerbaijan's state-level policy of cleansing Karabakh from Armenians
    and the periodic uprising of the Karabakhis during the Soviet period,
    as I believe you all are well-aware of them.

    However, I would like to reiterate that the Autonomous Province of
    Mountainous Karabakh seceded from the Soviet Union fully in line
    with the Soviet laws and all the applicable principles and rules of
    international law, exactly as the 15 Soviet Republics did. To sum up
    this part of my speech, I would like to reiterate that Mountainous
    Karabakh was never a part of independent Azerbaijan: it was annexed
    to Azerbaijan by a decision of the Soviet Union party body. The
    people of Karabakh never put up with this decision, and upon the
    first opportunity, seceded from the Soviet Union fully in line with
    the laws of the Soviet Union and the applicable international law.

    The problem has many sensitive and delicate aspects. I urge everyone to
    exercise utmost caution when making public statements on the problem of
    Mountainous Karabakh, to take into account all the dimensions, possible
    consequences, and the perceptions of the sides, and always to rely on
    the positions of the organizations that are familiar with the details
    of the problem and specialize in its peaceful resolution: in this
    case, it would be the OSCE. The problem can only be resolved in the
    context of the international law principles of the self-determination
    of nations, territorial integrity, and the non-use of force. All
    the stakeholders now realize this truth. Whenever one refers to the
    Mountainous Karabakh conflict, the notion of territorial integrity
    should not be emphatically underlined, especially that even if that
    notion is perceived to be the only one applying in the case of the
    Mountainous Karabakh conflict, it would not lead to its application
    in the form envisioned by Azerbaijan.

    I would pose a rhetoric question to all who consider themselves
    advocates of territorial integrity. Where were they when the
    Soviet Union collapsed and the borders changed? Where were they
    when Yugoslavia was falling apart? Why do you think that Azerbaijan
    could secede from the USSR, but Mountainous Karabakh could not? Why
    do you think that large empires should disintegrate, but small ones
    should persevere? What is the basis? Instability? I cannot perceive
    it. I do not accept it. Because unfair decisions are the very cause
    of instability.

    Azerbaijan has exhausted the resources of trust in terms of autonomous
    status for minorities within its boundaries. It was not and is not
    capable of providing guarantees of even internal security to such
    autonomies. There was once another Armenian autonomy in Azerbaijan:
    Nakhijevan. What happened to it? Not a single Armenian is left in
    Nakhijevan. Can such guarantees be taken for granted? You might say
    Azerbaijan was different then, and is different now. During the last
    18 years of that "difference" more Armenian and Christian monuments
    were destroyed than in the preceding 70 years. The international
    organizations tasked with protection of the cultural heritage were
    unable to do anything: Azerbaijan did not even permit them to visit
    and see the obliterated Armenian monuments.

    In the meantime, a full-blown race of arms continues in the South
    Caucasus. It is extremely dangerous. It is dangerous not only for
    the South Caucasus peoples, but also for Europe and the powers that
    have a stake in the region, the corporations that have invested
    in the Caucasus, and everyone else. Azerbaijan has not faced any
    substantial confrontation for having exceeded all the possible caps
    on conventional arms. Even if not used in a war against Karabakh, the
    weapons Azerbaijan is stockpiling today will shoot somewhere. The only
    question is where and when. While spending large sums on purchases of
    oil, the advanced states, in my opinion, cannot remain indifferent to
    how their moneys are being spent. The fact is that these very proceeds
    can become a source of threats, something that has happened elsewhere
    in the past.

    Armenia and Karabakh have never unleashed and never will unleash
    a war. We despise war, as our generation was forced to look death
    straight in the eyes, and has seen and lost more than can be imagined.

    However, we realize that we must be ready for war in case others wish
    to fight. We cannot turn a blind eye to recurrent belligerent threats
    coming from a neighbouring state, whose President's New Year address to
    his people sounded no different from the speech of an army commander
    motivating his units for a battle. The war rhetoric is intensifying
    in the Caucasus. Armenia predominantly refrains from responding to
    the threats. Quoting John Kennedy, we do not need to utter threats to
    prove that we are firm. However, it does not solve the problem. Threats
    also amount to violence, and violence usually begets violence.

    The irony is that Azeri propaganda, spending hundreds of millions
    of dollars, does not miss any opportunity to label Karabakh as an
    aggressor, despite the fact that the people of Karabakh had to take
    on arms literally to avoid extermination. This conduct reminds the
    French saying: "This creature is fierce: it will defend immediately
    after you attack it." The reality is that the people that live in
    Karabakh are and will always be ready to defend their right to survive,
    their values, churches, and cross-stones.

    The Republic of Mountainous Karabakh is a well-established state
    with its institutions, army, and most importantly, citizens that
    exercise control of their fate. Today we, as well as the international
    community, witness Artsakh as a contemporary state that is implementing
    the ideals of freedom, sovereignty, and democracy; in spite of natural
    and manmade difficulties and grave challenges, it is progressing,
    strengthening its democratic institutions, government, economy, and
    culture, and defending peace. In its "Freedom in the World" Report,
    a reputable human rights watchdog, the Freedom House has ranked the
    Republic of Mountainous Karabakh among partially free democratic
    states, while ranking Azerbaijan as a non-free state. No further
    comments are needed here.

    The obvious conclusion is that the times of colonizing a people living
    on its own soil have long passed. Our belief is that the settlement of
    the Karabakh conflict should be based on human rights and the will of
    the Karabakh people as an expres­sion of their collective identity. It
    is the only way to achieve lasting, feasible, and peaceful settlement.

    The alternative to this settlement is the forcing of the Karabakh
    people back into Azerbaijan, which will inevitably lead to attempts of
    new ethnic cleansing of Armenians in Karabakh. There is no alternative
    here, especially given that Azerbaijan has labelled the vast majority
    of the Karabakh population as "criminals" over the last two decades.

    Hence, in view of the consequences of this alter­na­tive, we clearly
    rule out any pressure-driven concessions in the Karabakh process that
    would threaten the Artsakh people's physical existence, security,
    and right to live in dignity.
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