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German FM Caucasus Voyage: Germany offers equal multilateral coop

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  • German FM Caucasus Voyage: Germany offers equal multilateral coop

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    February 23, 2007 Friday

    GERMAN MINISTER'S CAUCASUS VOYAGE;
    Germany offers equal multilateral cooperation

    by Anatoly Gordiyenko, Yuri Simonjan

    GERMAN FOREIGN MINISTER FRANK-WALTER STEINMEIER FINISHED HIS TOUR OF
    THE SOUTHERN PART OF THE CAUCASUS; Foreign Minister Frank-Walter
    Steinmeier toured countries of the southern part of the Caucasus.

    Foreign Minister of Germany, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, completed his
    tour of the southern part of the Caucasus with a visit to Yerevan,
    Armenia. Armenia stands out in the region. Unlike Georgia and
    Azerbaijan, it has never lost any part of its territory. Unlike
    Georgia, it does not really aspire for NATO or EU membership. Unlike
    Azerbaijan, it enjoys an abundance of resources. With all of this
    taken into consideration, Steinmeier's statements in Yerevan would
    have been interesting compared to what he said in Baku and Tbilisi.
    Unfortunately, the visitor proved to be something of a
    disappointment.

    He said that Germany's interest in the southern part of the Caucasus
    had nothing to do with eagerness to join NATO or availability of
    resources. When Romania and Bulgaria joined the European Union, it
    made countries of the southern part of the Caucasus Europe's
    neighbors. And the European Union, Germany included, is naturally
    interested in cooperation with these countries, in investments, and
    in their stable economic development.

    The Armenian minister Steinmeier met with said that the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict might be resolved this year and repeated
    his recent statement concerning "a very interesting document already
    on the desk" (a statement his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar
    Mamedjarov promptly denounced).

    Steinmeier's visit to Tbilisi (it was from Tbilisi that he came to
    Yerevan) had been more interesting. The visitor pampered the Georgian
    leaders' daydreams concerning urgent entry into the Alliance. "NATO
    would like to see its new members free of conflicts. I'm not saying,
    however, that conflicts present an insurmountable obstacle for
    membership," Steinmeier said and promised that Germany would use all
    its clout with the European Union (which it was chairing now) and
    NATO to have them facilitate a fair solution of Georgia's problems.
    He emphasized that the West did not intend to apply the Kosovo
    precedent to Georgia, "Kosovo may become a model, but this is a
    separate issue altogether. It should not be applied to Georgia."

    Tbilisi in its turn took Steinmeier's words as a confirmation that
    Georgia might join NATO without Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Some
    experts began asking questions concerning the policy of the Georgian
    administration because membership in NATO had always been regarded
    aiding the problem of territorial integrity restoration. "Ruling out
    of the conflict resolution by force is what the Alliance demands from
    Georgia," Paata Zakareishvili, the head of the Center for Development
    and Cooperation, said. The analyst believes that it will be perfectly
    all right for Georgia to join NATO without the restoration of its
    jurisdiction over the runaway autonomies. As far as Zakareishvili is
    concerned, Russia will do everything to preserve the status quo in
    these territories and thus prevent Georgian membership in the
    Alliance. "And yet, the process is unstoppable now. It's just that
    powers of the Alliance and its projects are not going to apply to
    these territories pending conflict resolution there," the expert
    said. By way of proof, Zakareishvili referred to Turkey. "Sure,
    Turkey was one of the first to join NATO, and the world was wholly
    different then. Still, the Northern Cyprus remains a pressing problem
    even now. The West nevertheless perceives the possibility of the
    solution by peaceful means, and Turkey is nearly in the European
    Union," he said.

    Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, February 21, 2007, p. 6
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