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TOL: Experts Skeptical About Prospects For Karabakh Breakthrough

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  • TOL: Experts Skeptical About Prospects For Karabakh Breakthrough

    EXPERTS SKEPTICAL ABOUT PROSPECTS FOR KARABAKH BREAKTHROUGH
    by Rovshan Ismayilov

    Transitions OnLine, Czech Republic
    May 9 2007

    The Azeri leader claims Armenia will make concessions over the occupied
    territory, but observers remain doubtful. From EurasiaNet.

    Despite evidence of movement toward a settlement of the long-stalemated
    Nagorno-Karabakh peace talks, Azeri experts remain skeptical that
    Azerbaijan and Armenia will settle their differences in the near
    future.

    Mediators from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe's Minsk Group have sounded optimistic notes of late about
    progress in negotiations. U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State and
    Minsk Group co-chair Matthew Bryza indicated in an interview with Voice
    of America that the two sides appeared on the verge of breakthroughs
    in several areas. According to a transcript of Bryza's comments
    distributed by the Today.az website, Azeri and Armenian negotiators
    were nearing agreement on the return of two Armenian-occupied regions
    of Azerbaijan, Kalbajar and Lachin. In addition, the two sides were
    making headway on perhaps the thorniest issue: Karabakh's future
    political status.

    Following an OSCE Permanent Council session in mid-April, Armenian
    Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian was quoted as saying that, at least
    on paper, "we have never been as close to a settlement," the Arminfo
    news agency reported.

    Elmar Mammadyarov, the Azeri foreign minister, was also cautiously
    upbeat. Speaking to journalists in Baku on 26 April, Mammadyarov
    hinted that progress had been made, but added that all the details
    had not yet been worked out. "Negotiations have to continue," he said.

    Armenian President Robert Kocharian recently revealed that he is
    likely to meet with his Azeri counterpart, Ilham Aliev, early in June
    in the Russian city of St. Petersburg. "After this meeting it will
    be clear at which stage we are now," Kocharian said. Armenian leaders
    are currently focused on that country's parliamentary elections on 12
    May. Pro-Kocharian parties are expected to maintain their solid hold
    on power, thus it is likely that the vote's outcome will not have a
    significant impact on the Armenian negotiating position.

    On 4 May, Aliev appeared to engage in a bit of negotiating gamesmanship
    when he claimed during a public ceremony that Armenia had made
    pivotal concessions. The Azeri president alleged that Armenia had
    already agreed to withdraw from all seven of the occupied territories
    surrounding Karabakh, including Kalbajar and Lachin, the two most
    strategically sensitive areas under discussion. Yerevan had also
    consented to withdraw troops from the occupied territories before
    the establishment of a framework for the determination of Karabakh's
    status, Aliev said.

    In addition, according to Aliev, internally displaced persons (IDPs)
    in Azerbaijan would be permitted to return to their homes in the
    conflict region as soon as Armenian troops withdrew from the occupied
    territories. Armenia and Azerbaijan have both sanctioned the deployment
    of an international peacekeeping force in the region for a limited
    period of time, Aliev added.

    Aliev's statements run counter to the existing basic principles for an
    agreement. Under those guidelines, the implementation of any portion
    of a peace pact cannot begin until all outstanding issues are resolved.

    Armenian leaders immediately denied making any negotiating
    concessions. Meanwhile, Bryza indicated that the two sides remained
    divided over the composition of a peacekeeping force. A means for
    determining Karabakh's final status also remains problematic. Azeri
    officials have said that the return of Azerbaijani IDPs to Karabakh
    must take place before any kind of vote or referendum on the
    territory's political status could be considered.

    Political analysts in Baku remain unconvinced that a peace deal
    is within reach. Referring to the recent string of optimistic
    pronouncements from officials involved in the negotiations, Ilgar
    Mammadov, Baku-based independent political analyst, said: "We have
    already heard it in the past."

    Alesker Mammadli, a Baku-based lawyer and political analyst (as well
    as an IDP from the Agdam Region), expressed the belief that Yerevan's
    desire to negotiate would weaken after that country's parliamentary
    elections. Mammadli additionally voiced doubt that Armenia would agree
    to withdraw from occupied Azeri territory unless firm guarantees were
    in place concerning the determination of Karabakh's status. "The
    occupied territories are their [Armenia's] main trump card at the
    talks. From the other standpoint, Azerbaijan cannot give guarantees
    over the status of Karabakh, as government officials [in Baku] always
    have said that a settlement will maintain the country's territorial
    integrity," he said.

    Mammadov said that the respective administrations of Aliev and
    Kocharian were in relatively strong domestic political positions,
    and thus had no incentive to budge from their current negotiating
    stances. "Both countries are not weak now and there is no chance"
    of pressuring them into making sizable concessions, Mammadov said.

    "Therefore I do not expect anything serious from the upcoming meeting
    of the presidents."

    Experts' pessimism is related in part to the instability of the
    ceasefire regime at the frontline. Azeri and Armenian news outlets
    both have reported widespread and frequent exchanges of gunfire
    throughout April and into early May.

    Rovshan Ismayilov is a freelance journalist based in Baku. This is
    a partner post from EurasiaNet.
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