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Lasted To The Election, Settled The Karabakh Problem

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  • Lasted To The Election, Settled The Karabakh Problem

    LASTED TO THE ELECTION, SETTLED THE KARABAKH PROBLEM
    by Grigori Alexandrjan
    Translated by A. Ignatkin

    Source: Novoye Vremya (Yerevan), February 17, 2007, EV
    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    February 28, 2007 Wednesday

    Karabakh Conflict Resolution As Seen From Yerevan: Baku Is Waiting For
    Election Of A President Of Armenia Who Will Accept Azerbaijani Terms

    Baku is waiting for the election the next president of Armenia in
    the hope that he will be more amendable.

    Earlier this week, foreign ministries of Azerbaijan and Armenia
    exchanged caustic comments on each other's Karabakh conflict
    settlement policy. Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister, Araz Azimov,
    spoke of a step backward in the peace process and pinned the blame
    on Armenia. Acting Press Secretary of the Armenian Foreign Ministry,
    Vladimir Karapetjan, spoke of how Baku was setting in advance a
    thoroughly non-constructive approach to the talks. It seems that the
    exchange was simply a means of marking an end to another failed round
    of talks over Karabakh.

    In the meantime, nothing extraordinary happened. This correspondent in
    his previous articles predicted this turn of events more than once,
    basing his assumptions on the fact that the Azerbaijani authorities
    wouldn't discuss anything with the Armenian regime that did not
    think in terms of capitulation. Capitulation meanwhile is the only
    scenario Baku will accept, a fact made quite plain when Heydar Aliyev
    denounced all previously compromises reached within the framework of
    the Minsk process.

    That is, Aliyev made it possible for his son and heir, Ilham,
    to make it necessary to start the negotiations from scratch. It
    meant the abandonment of all and any compromises. Needless to
    say, this attitude made the continuation of talks an exercise in
    futility. OSCE Minsk Group chairmen had to sweat to compel Aliyev
    to resume negotiations. They even invented a new name for the whole
    process and began calling it the Prague Process. This "innovation"
    enabled the president of Azerbaijan to resume the talks without any
    loss of face.

    In other words, this Prague Process is allegedly the "beginning from
    scratch" Aliyev once insisted on. As a matter of fact, there was no
    beginning at all because the very idea is a diplomatic absurdity.

    Something altogether different took place: using the Prague Process
    to provoke Armenia into denouncement of talks, Azerbaijan merely
    feigned constructivism and did its best to prevent an agreement on
    reasonable terms.

    That was what Azerbaijan did throughout 2006, the year international
    intermediaries proclaimed "a window of opportunities" because neither
    involved party (Armenia, Azerbaijan, or Nagorno-Karabakh itself)
    was bracing itself for elections. Armenia alone offered compromises
    and concessions to the other side then, earnestly hoping for an
    agreement. Some terms among what OSCE Minsk Group chairmen were
    suggesting did not suit Armenia, but it proved itself pliable more
    than once - catching the Azerbaijani negotiators unprepared and
    eliciting emotional political demarches from them.

    There is no saying what Aliyev and his Foreign Minister, Elmar
    Mamedjarov, were telling their Armenian counterparts behind closed
    doors, but their statements in public made it absolutely plain that
    Azerbaijan would only accept unconditional capitulation from Yerevan.

    How else can a sane man understand statements from Baku to the
    effect that the very presence of Armenians in Azerbaijan is already
    a compromise on its part? Even more cynical statements were made,
    more often than not by Aliyev himself. Statements calling Baku's
    participation in the negotiations a compromise in itself.

    In any case, the task Aliyev set for the "window of opportunities"
    period was implemented by only 50%. A compromise was never reached (a
    pro) but Armenia would not be tempted to cancel negotiations (a con).

    Aliyev the gambler would not have been himself had he not started to
    bluff. Elated by the fact of the forthcoming election in Armenia,
    he apparently resolved not to meet with Robert Kocharjan anymore
    since the latter's term of office expires next year. It means another
    president in Armenia and a chance for Azerbaijan that Yerevan will
    hopefully capitulate in the matter of Karabakh. Hence the necessity
    to behave in a manner that will preclude any desire on the part of
    Kocharjan to meet with Aliyev in his remaining time.

    Hence the latest demarche on the part of Azerbaijan when Azimov
    questioned the expediency of future negotiations. We were correct
    to assume that Azerbaijan only pretended to accept the idea of
    a referendum in Karabakh, provided the Azerbaijani population
    could come back there and participate in it. To make sure that
    nothing would come out of it (what if these Armenians agree with the
    Azerbaijanis' return?), Baku began insisting in the return of Lachin
    to its jurisdiction. That is an undisguised attempt to get everything
    back to square one, i.e. into what created discontent among Karabakh
    Armenians in the first place. And since the latter are not suicidal
    types and therefore will never accept this scenario, they are left
    with only one alternative; namely, leaving their homes altogether
    which is essentially what Aliyev is after.

    By the way, political scientist Eldar Namazov (former head of the
    secretariat of the president of Azerbaijan who resigned to become the
    head of the Foundation For Azerbaijan) wrote that Baku was bluffing
    in the matter of the Karabakh referendum in the middle (!) of 2006.

    Pointing out that not even the return of Azerbaijani refugees would
    have any effect on the outcome of the referendum, since they accounted
    for only 30% of the population of the region, he offered the following
    explanation of the seeming acceptance of the idea by official Baku:
    "The Azerbaijani tactic is based on the knowledge that the Armenians
    will never put up with turning over all seven districts occupied
    beyond Nagorno-Karabakh and 30% of territories on Karabakh territory
    including Shusha, and this referendum will therefore be denounced as
    a failure because the Armenians are not constructive...

    What can the Armenians do about it? Object to the return of the
    refugees? There will be no referendum then... This is apparently
    what the Azerbaijani authorities count on. Formally, they say "yes"
    but fully expect at the same time that the Armenians themselves will
    fail to pass this test for "democratic procedures" and call it off..."

    The Azerbaijani political scientist is correct. In the meantime, Baku
    keeps hoping that the new president of Armenia will capitulate. The
    same Namazov ventured an opinion in an article the other day that
    "there is no use waiting for anything unless the election takes place
    in Armenia and the politician coming to power in Yerevan are found
    to be hostages of the package solution idea."

    "A breakthrough is not impossible, but the president of Armenia
    will probably play his negative role to the last," Rasim Musabekov,
    another Azerbaijani political scientist, said. "In other words, it is
    Kocharjan himself who is the principal obstacle to the negotiations."

    The political scientist maintains in the meantime that "two politicians
    will run for president in Armenia - pro-Western Foreign Minister Varsan
    Oskanjan and Defense Minister Serj Sarkisjan who is pro-Russian... In
    any case, each of them will allow for better maneuvering in Karabakh
    talks than the acting president of Armenia."

    Better come out and be on the level like Rauf Mirkadyrov, a prominent
    Azerbaijani journalist, who offers the Armenians a "mutually
    acceptable" and "mutually beneficial" compromise - Azerbaijani
    territories in return for Armenia's security and economic prosperity.

    "That is what ex-president of Armenia Levon Ter-Petrosjan tried to
    tell Armenian society in 1998," Mirkadyrov said.

    In short, Baku decided to wait for the appearance in Armenia of a
    "constructive" president who will accept Azerbaijan's terms. We will
    be waiting too (just do not hold your breath)...
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