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Armenian paper says USA not to help Azerbaijan resolve Karabakhconfl

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  • Armenian paper says USA not to help Azerbaijan resolve Karabakhconfl

    Armenian paper says USA not to help Azerbaijan resolve Karabakh conflict

    Ayots Ashkar, Yerevan
    29 Sep 04

    Text of Sarkis Gevorkyan's report by Armenian newspaper Ayots Ashkar
    on 29 September headlined "'The logic' of a gambler"

    Against the background of reports about the deployment of US
    mobile forces in Azerbaijan, [Azerbaijani] President Ilham Aliyev's
    "antiterrorist" speech at the 59th session of the UN General Assembly
    points to a drastic change in his country's foreign policy.

    Talks on the deployment of US mobile forces in Azerbaijan were
    conducted long ago and were met by serious objections on the part of
    Russia and openly hostile attitude of Iran. Let us try to understand
    what calculations the Azerbaijani leader was guided by when taking
    this step.

    Meanwhile, we have to make clear at least two realities:

    a) It will be naive to think that if they come to Azerbaijan, the
    Americans will become a toy in Ilham Aliyev's hands: their today's
    target is neither Russia nor Armenia nor Karabakh but only Iran.

    b) If in exchange for Ilham's "friendly attitude" the Americans have
    promised to settle the Karabakh issue as soon as possible or at least
    to ensure the return of liberated territories, a question arises:
    how will this happen given that Armenia is also a partner of the USA
    in the antiterror coalition and Russia's partner with strict security
    guarantees under the CIS Collective Security Treaty.

    We think that Ilham Aliyev has only one expectation: the Americans
    after coming to Azerbaijan will put serious pressure both on Armenia
    and Moscow so that the latter forces Armenia to make compromises in the
    Karabakh issue. In fact, they have a task not to persuade Russia (as it
    was the case earlier), but to make it adopt pro-Azerbaijani decisions
    with the help of Washington. Following the logic of the Azerbaijani
    party, let us make everything clear: how much will Washington's
    "political payment" be for the deployment of its mobile forces in
    Azerbaijan? And second, why should Moscow yield to Washington's
    pressure and insist that Armenia withdraw from liberated territories
    opening the way not only for the USA but also for Turkey via Naxcivan?

    The Azerbaijani president's calculations may be regarded as logical
    only if there is Russian-US agreement on dividing the region into
    spheres of influence. But if there is such agreement, which undoubtedly
    outlines the parties' positions towards the Karabakh issue as well,
    then why is Azerbaijan in a hurry to gain a new enemy in the person
    of Iran?

    Today's attempt by Ilham Aliyev to invite Americans to Azerbaijan
    and at the same time to accuse Armenia of terrorism from the UN's
    high rostrum is threatening to pose a serious danger in future not
    to Armenia but Azerbaijan. The latter will be involved in a big game
    whose participants, including the USA, in fact, are not interested in
    the Karabakh issue. The superpowers, on the basis of actual borders
    controlled by the countries in a certain part of the region, will
    turn the Karabakh issue from the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict into a
    problem of protecting their own spheres of influence and, as a result,
    create a status quo. It seems that even in this case the Karabakh issue
    can be settled in Azerbaijan's favour if the USA "settles problems"
    with Iran, ousts Russia from the Caspian and the South Caucasus, that
    is, becomes the only dictating force. But even in this unlikely case,
    iron logic about the necessity of strengthening the "weakest link"
    of the region will tip the scales of US policy in Armenia's favour.

    Thus, in fact, the only "logic" of Aliyev's previous and today's
    actions is an unrestrained desire of a losing gambler to stake his
    all. We think it is not difficult to understand what it means to put
    everything at stake for a small country which once suffered defeat. So,
    we have to wait for that decisive moment when the gambler Aliyev
    makes his next and probably the gravest mistake.
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