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Kosovo Precedent Watch, Part II

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  • Kosovo Precedent Watch, Part II

    KOSOVO PRECEDENT WATCH, PART II
    by Nikolas K. Gvosdev

    The National Interest Online, DC
    June 28 2007

    A summit was held earlier this month in Tiraspol, capital of the
    unrecognized, breakaway region of Transdnistria. This meeting brought
    together representatives from a number of the various statelets that
    emerged after the break-up of the Soviet Union in Moldova, Georgia
    and Azerbaijan-each claiming the right to leave their titular republic
    when those states left the USSR.

    On the agenda? What implications the recognition of Kosovo would have
    for their own aspirations.

    An advisor to the president of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic was
    quoted as saying:

    "The recognition of the independence of Kosovo as a legal precedent
    will, of course, be working. In this sense it may prove a certain
    acceleration in the recognition of our states."

    No one from this group seems to be accepting the notion that Kosovo
    is a unique case.

    The foreign minister for South Ossetia, Murat Jioev, said, "[I]f
    Kosovo is recognized by the international community, it will
    automatically become a precedent for those states that are also
    seeking their recognition. It must be reckoned with." The foreign
    minister for Abkhazia, Sergei Shamba, stressed, "[T]here must be a
    general principle, as everyone is seeking independence."

    What should be especially worrying for Washington is that
    Nagorno-Karabakh, which in 2004 withdrew from what is often referred
    to as the "Commonwealth of Unrecognized States", in part as a gesture
    to the United States to show its willingness to pursue a settlement
    with Azerbaijan, has rejoined this body in advance of an expected
    push for Kosovo independence.

    Sometimes double standards are a necessary part of statecraft
    and diplomacy. Not all precedents have to be applied equally. But
    Washington's public diplomacy in the region is going to need some
    stronger and more convincing talking points on this matter.

    Nikolas K. Gvosdev is editor of The National Interest.

    http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article .aspx?id=14784

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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