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Opinion: GUAM Introduces Question On Frozen Conflicts In Response To

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  • Opinion: GUAM Introduces Question On Frozen Conflicts In Response To

    OPINION: GUAM INTRODUCES QUESTION ON FROZEN CONFLICTS IN RESPONSE TO RUSSIA'S STATEMENTS

    Regnum, Russia
    Dec 10 2007

    A draft resolution on frozen conflicts released at the UN headquarters
    is a failure of the Armenian diplomacy, Armenian political analyst
    Hamayak Hovhannisyan told a REGNUM correspondent.

    According to the analyst, it is absolutely clear that the Armenian
    envoy to the United Nations must be acting effectively so that he
    could respond to all challenges timely and adequately. "However,
    Armenia failed to prevent from putting it on the agenda, despite the
    fact that it had managed to do so several times by threatening to
    Azerbaijan to withdraw from the current format of the negotiations,"
    Hovhannisyan said. It is unclear for him why Armenia, in particularly,
    its foreign ministry, did not make effort to prevent from debating
    the issue at the UN and explained it by the fact that "they do not
    want to harm the negotiation process within frameworks of the OSCE
    Minsk Group." However, according to Hovhannisyan, discussion of the
    issue at the UN coincided with increasing prospects of declaration
    of independence by Kosovo and with escalation of the tension between
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia on one side and Georgia on the other side.

    As the analyst believes, in reality, Georgia and Moldova are more
    interested in discussing the frozen conflicts at the UN than Azerbaijan
    is. According to him, the conflicts in Abkhazia, South Ossetia and
    Transdnestr are seen in the frameworks of the Russian mandate and,
    to avoid one-sided mediation, and taking into account the willingness
    to take away the peacekeeping mandate from Russia, those countries
    proposed the issue for discussion of the international community,
    while the Nagorno Karabakh conflict was a subject of a multilateral
    debate within the OSCE Minsk Group. "The key reason for putting the
    question for the discussion at the UN so fast was Russia's statement
    that if the West recognizes Kosovo, it would recognize independence
    of the republics in the post-Soviet territory," Hovhannisyan concluded.
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