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BAKU: Baku Rubbishes Turkish Website Report

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  • BAKU: Baku Rubbishes Turkish Website Report

    BAKU RUBBISHES TURKISH WEBSITE REPORT

    AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
    April 27 2006

    Azerbaijan will launch an attack on Armenia in the coming days, a
    Turkish report has said. Azerbaijani officials have dismissed it as
    groundless. Turkish hurhaber.com website quoted diplomatic sources as
    saying that the Azeri government has made serious preparations for
    liberating Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh from occupation and that Baku
    has passed a decision to restart hostilities.

    Armenia has occupied 20% of Azeri territory in defiance of
    international law since the war broke out in the early 1990s which
    has claimed thousands of lives and displaced 700,000 of Azeris from
    their homes. The report linked the expanding US-Azeri relations to
    the military action to be waged in Garabagh, saying that US President
    George Bush welcomes the idea of launching military action. The website
    also indicated that the operations would affect the oil price. Armenian
    Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian said the Garabagh conflict could
    not be settled through war, which is confirmed by EU representatives.

    "Military action by Azerbaijan may become its last mistake,"
    he said when commenting on the Turkish site's report in a news
    conference held jointly with Austrian Foreign Ministry Secretary of
    State Hans Vinkler. "Azerbaijan may restart war only when all hope
    for peace is gone. However, the Azeri leadership can't make this
    decision on its own," Oskanian said. Oskanian added that Armenia
    would closely follow the talks on the Garabagh conflict to be held
    during President Ilham Aliyev's upcoming visit to Washington. Armenian
    Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian could not help voicing his concerns
    over Azerbaijan's warnings about the resumption of military action
    and the country's growing military expenditure. "We are not afraid
    of war but don't want it to flare up. An agreement [ceasefire] on
    ending hostilities was reached in 1994 with Russia's mediation. Our
    troops have already taken preeminent defense positions and we have
    been invigorating our positions with engineering facilities over the
    past 12 years," he said. He said the Caucasus is a very small area,
    which makes regional countries dependent on each other. "For this
    reason, a resumption of military action could bring about negative
    consequences for us," the Armenian defense chief said. Sarkisian
    claimed that Azerbaijan's statements that its military spending
    has doubled are nothing but "blackmail". Former Armenian foreign
    minister Alexander Arzumanian said he does not expect any drastic
    changes in the conflict resolution. "However, considering Azerbaijan's
    statements made following the two presidents' meeting in the French
    town of Rambouillet, it is not ruled out that this country may resume
    military operations." Azerbaijan threatened to use force to free its
    territories from Armenian occupation after the latest unsuccessful
    round of talks between the two countries' leaders. The Azeri Defense
    Ministry spokesman, Ilgar Verdiyev, said the report contradicts
    reality and peace talks are underway. The Foreign Ministry official,
    Tahir Taghizada, declined to comment on such "rubbish" published by
    the Turkish site. He said Azerbaijan is still adhering to a peaceful
    option to resolve the dispute, but warned that the Azeri people's
    patience was not boundless and the country "won't negotiate for
    the sake of negotiating". If the talks yield no fruit, Azerbaijan
    reserves the right to regain its lands no matter what it takes,
    Taghizada said. The outgoing US ambassador to Azerbaijan, Reno Harnish,
    said on Friday it was necessary to get rid of the military rhetoric
    to resolve the long-standing dispute. "A resumption of hostilities
    in the Caucasus could completely destroy the region." The diplomat
    said the negotiations to settle the conflict had intensified over the
    past two years. "Tangible results have been achieved in agreeing the
    principles of a fair and lasting peace," Harnish said, adding that
    Washington would continue to do its utmost to accomplish the goal.
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