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U.S. State Department Report Raises Concern In Baku And Yerevan

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  • U.S. State Department Report Raises Concern In Baku And Yerevan

    U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT REPORT RAISES CONCERN IN BAKU AND YEREVAN
    By Taleh Ziyadov

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    April 27 2007

    On March 6, the U.S. Department of State released its 2006 Country
    Reports on Human Rights Practices, prepared by its Bureau of Democracy,
    Human Rights, and Labor. The annual report contains updates on human
    rights conditions in countries around the world.

    This year's reports on Armenia and Azerbaijan have caused serious
    reactions in both countries and resulted first in a delay and then a
    postponement of a high-level Azerbaijani delegation's visit to the
    United States. The delegation, led by Azerbaijan's Deputy Foreign
    Minister Araz Azimov, was scheduled to arrive in Washington on Monday,
    April 23 for annual U.S.-Azerbaijan security talks that include senior
    officials from the ministries of Foreign Affairs, Defense, National
    Security, Internal Affairs, Emergency, and other security agencies.

    The main point of contention was the wording of several sentences
    concerning the Karabakh region of Azerbaijan that, along with seven
    adjacent regions, have been occupied by Armenian forces since 1992.

    For the first time, the U.S. Department of State made an insertion
    into the Armenia report under the "Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of
    Life" section that read: "Armenia continues to occupy the Azerbaijani
    territory of Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding Azerbaijani
    territories" (initial U.S. Dept. of State report of March 6). While
    similar statements have appeared in previous reports on Azerbaijan,
    they have never been used in the reports on Armenia.

    Yerevan reacted by officially contacting the U.S. Department of State
    and asking for a revision of the statement. At the same time, Armenian
    lobbying groups began sending letters to U.S. Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice with similar demands (PanArmenian.net, April 20).

    On April 17, the statement was revised to read: "Armenian
    forces occupy large portions of Azerbaijan territory adjacent
    to Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenian officials maintain that they do not
    'occupy' Nagorno-Karabakh itself" (revised U.S. Dept. of State report
    of April 17).

    Meanwhile, there have been some slight changes to the 2006 Azerbaijan
    country report as well. In the introduction to this year's report,
    the previously used statement "Armenian forces continued to occupy
    an estimated 16 percent of the country's territory, including
    Nagorno-Karabakh" was revised to read: "Armenian forces controlled most
    of Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as large portions of adjacent Azerbaijani
    territory" (U.S. Dept. of State report on Azerbaijan, March 6).

    The difference in wording compared to previous issues and later
    revisions upset Baku and prompted strong reaction in the Azerbaijani
    press, which began questioning the "impartiality" of the U.S. as a
    mediator country in the Karabakh peace process (Day.az, April 23).

    Rasim Musabekov, a local expert, stated, "Partnership and cooperation,
    even when it is between a superpower like the United States and a
    small country like Azerbaijan, cannot be a one-way street and [the
    U.S.] should show extra care to interests of [Azerbaijan], especially
    on such sensitive issue as [Azerbaijan's] territorial integrity"
    (Day.az, April 23).

    On April 20, the U.S. Department of State released another statement,
    saying that U.S. "policy with respect to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    remains unchanged [and that the U.S.] reaffirms its support for the
    territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, and holds that the future status
    of Nagorno-Karabakh is a matter of negotiations between the parties"
    (U.S. Dept. of State Press Statement, April 20).

    In an interview with AzerTag news agency, Matthew Bryza, deputy
    assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian Affairs and
    U.S. co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group that mediates the Karabakh
    conflict, remarked that there is "nothing to indicate any shift in
    [U.S.] policy" and noted that the U.S. has been an "impartial and
    honest broker" in the Karabakh conflict for years (AzerTag, April
    24). Bryza also stated that he hoped the talks on U.S -Azerbaijan on
    security issues would resume soon (Zerkalo, April 25).

    U.S. officials have reiterated that the statement in the Armenia report
    was a "mistake" that has been corrected. But some local analysts
    believe the insertion of such a statement into the Armenia report
    may also be associated with the upcoming parliamentary elections in
    Armenia on May 12 and the current stage at the Karabakh peace process
    (Day.az, April 23).

    We are "at a very unique moment" in the history of the
    Armenia-Azerbaijan negotiations, said Bryza, adding that the parties
    are "at a juncture in the [Karabakh] peace process" where they have
    started discussing the future status of Karabakh (AzerTag, April 24).

    Speaking at the OSCE Permanent Council on April 17, Armenian Foreign
    Minister Vardan Oskanian also stated, "I have seen all the [peace]
    proposals that have ever been produced by the mediators [of the
    Karabakh conflict]. I can assure you we have never been this close"
    (OSCE Press Release, April 17).

    Nonetheless, on April 25, the U.S. Department of State made yet another
    revision to the report on Armenia and restored the initial wording of
    the sentence on Karabakh, which now reads "Armenia continues to occupy
    the Azerbaijani territory of Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding
    Azerbaijani territories All parties to the Nagorno‑Karabakh
    conflict have laid landmines along the 540‑mile border with
    Azerbaijan and along the line of contact."

    (State Dept. Report on Armenia of April 25).

    Whether the phrasing of the statement on Karabakh in the State
    Department report on Armenia was an unintentional "mistake" or
    another "carrot-and-stick" tactic, it remains to be seen what impact
    it will have on Baku or Yerevan. The foreign ministers of Armenia
    and Azerbaijan are preparing to finalize the basic principles of
    the Karabakh peace process, which would then be presented to the
    presidents of both states. It will be up to the presidents to accept
    or reject these principles and thus determine the fate of the current
    negotiations.
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