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Sarkisian 'Confident' About Pre-Election Karabakh Deal

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  • Sarkisian 'Confident' About Pre-Election Karabakh Deal

    SARKISIAN 'CONFIDENT' ABOUT PRE-ELECTION KARABAKH DEAL
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Dec 13 2007

    Contradicting a recent statement by President Robert Kocharian,
    Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian has said that Armenia and Azerbaijan
    could reach a framework peace agreement on Nagorno-Karabakh before
    the Armenian presidential election.

    "I don't think the presidential election should impact on these
    negotiations. I am very hopeful, confident even, that we can still
    reach a conclusion on such a framework before then," he told Reuters
    news agency in an interview published late Wednesday.

    Sarkisian, who is the favorite to win the February 19 vote, argued
    that he is aware and approves of the existing peace proposals by the
    OSCE Minsk Group. "I am well aware of all the details and now when
    new proposals are coming, there are also coming with my consent,"
    he said. "That is why I don't think that the presidential elections
    can disturb the negotiation process."

    Kocharian, however, claimed the opposite last October as he commented
    on similarly upbeat statements made by the Minsk Group's U.S. co-chair,
    Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza.

    Kocharian said the conflicting parties are unlikely to agree on the
    proposed basic principles of a Karabakh settlement before presidential
    elections due in both Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2008.

    The remarks did not stop Bryza and the group's two other co-chairs
    from making more trips to Baku and Yerevan. The mediators are due
    to again visit the conflict zone by mid-January in what appears to
    be a last-ditch attempt to clinch a pre-election peace deal. They
    presented the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers with a
    slightly modified, final version of their peace proposals at an OSCE
    ministerial council meeting in Madrid on November 29.

    Sources privy to the negotiating process say the parties have
    essentially accepted the main points of the framework accord and
    mainly disagree on how those should be phrased.

    The document envisages a gradual resolution of the Armenian-Azerbaijani
    conflict that would begin with the liberation at least six of the
    seven Armenian-controlled Azerbaijani districts around Karabakh
    and culminate in a referendum of self-determination in the disputed
    region. But it sets no time frames for the holding of the referendum,
    suggesting that Karabakh's status, the main bone of contention,
    would remain unresolved in the foreseeable future.

    This makes the Minsk Group plan similar to a solution proposed by the
    mediators in 1997 and strongly advocated by Armenia's then President
    Levon Ter-Petrosian. Ter-Petrosian had to resign after key members
    of his administration, notably then Prime Minister Kocharian and
    then Interior Minister Sarkisian, rejected the plan as "defeatist"
    and demanded a package deal that would solve all issues at once.

    The Kocharian administration's stated readiness to revert to the
    so-called step-by-step strategy of conflict resolution thus represents
    a major policy change. Analysts say that by embracing the proposed
    deal Sarkisian would significantly boost Western support for his bid
    to succeed Kocharian as Armenia's president.

    The Armenian prime minister was interviewed by Reuters while visiting
    Brussels for talks with senior European Union and NATO officials. His
    office said Karabakh was high on the agenda of the talks. Sarkisian
    was due to proceed to Strasbourg on Wednesday to meet top Council of
    Europe officials.

    Ter-Petrosian and his pro-Western loyalists claim that neither
    Kocharian or Sarkisian is committed to compromise on Karabakh.

    Ter-Petrosian has repeatedly said that the two Karabakh-born men, whom
    he had promoted to high-ranking positions in Yerevan in the 1990s,
    believe that the best way to ensure continued Armenian control over
    the territory is to perpetuate the status quo.

    In a separate interview that could earn him more points in some
    Western capitals and Washington in particular, Sarkisian said that
    Turkey's accession to the European Union would be "good" for Armenia.

    "Maybe the problems between us could find a solution within an EU
    framework," he told "The Financial Times" newspaper after his talks
    in Brussels.

    Other Armenian leaders, notably Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian,
    have said that Turkey should not be allowed to join the EU without
    normalizing relations with Armenia and facing up to the 1915 genocide
    of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. Sarkisian, by contrast, did not
    demand any EU preconditions for the Turkish membership. He also said
    he thinks Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is interested
    in a rapprochement with Armenia.

    "I don't think it's correct to say he's not committed to establishing
    relations with Armenia," said Sarkisian. "We'll see what happens in
    the future."
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