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Karabakh Peace In Question After Armenian Vote

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  • Karabakh Peace In Question After Armenian Vote

    KARABAKH PEACE IN QUESTION AFTER ARMENIAN VOTE
    By Emil Danielyan

    Eurasia Daily Monitor
    April 3 2008
    DC

    Armenia's post-election political crisis and Azerbaijan's apparent
    attempts to take advantage of it are dealing a serious blow to
    international mediators' hopes for a near-term solution to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The conflicting parties are hardening
    their positions and stepping up mutually hostile rhetoric, despite
    significant progress made in Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks in the
    past two years.

    The talks have centered on the basic principles of a Karabakh
    settlement proposed by the US, Russian and French diplomats co-chairing
    the OSCE Minsk Group. A relevant agreement was formally submitted
    to Baku and Yerevan by the Foreign Ministers of the three mediating
    powers in November 2007. They expressed the hope that it would be
    finalized in the coming months.

    The agreement calls for a phased settlement of the Karabakh conflict
    that would start with the restoration of economic links between the
    two South Caucasus states parallel to the liberation of virtually all
    Azerbaijani districts around Karabakh that were occupied by Armenian
    forces during the 1992-1994 war. The disputed territory's status,
    the main bone of contention, would be determined by its predominantly
    Armenian population in a future referendum. Karabakh would remain
    under Armenian control in the interim.

    Presidents Robert Kocharian of Armenia and Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan
    were close to cutting a peace deal along these lines in early 2006.

    The talks collapsed, however, apparently because of last-minute
    disagreements on the timetable for Armenian troop withdrawal and the
    practical modalities of the Karabakh vote. The mediators modified their
    proposals and revived the peace process in the following months. The
    final version of those proposals in November 2007 set no time frames
    holding the referendum on self-determination, suggesting that it
    might never be held. The logic behind this compromise formula is
    obvious: While effectively legitimizing continued Armenian control
    over Karabakh, it does not force Azerbaijan to drop its claim to
    the territory.

    According to Western diplomats privy to the Armenian-Azerbaijani talks,
    the parties essentially agreed on the key points of the Minsk Group
    plan by the end of 2007. US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew
    Bryza spoke of the need to "work out the remaining small differences"
    as he visited the conflict zone together with the group's two other
    co-chairs, Russia's Yuri Merzlyakov and France's Bernard Fassier,
    in January 2008. The mediators seemed satisfied with their talks
    with Aliyev and Kocharian. "We sense that they are trying to finish
    the process as soon as possible," Bryza told reporters in Yerevan
    (RFE/RL Armenia Report, January 17).

    The co-chairs had hoped that the two sides would sign the framework
    peace accord some time after Armenia's February 2008 presidential
    election, clearly expecting it to be won by Kocharian's longtime chief
    lieutenant, Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan. Sargsyan's victory proved
    extremely controversial, sparking opposition protests in Yerevan that
    were brutally suppressed by the ruling regime on March 1. Kocharian and
    Sargsyan are currently busy trying to neutralize further opposition
    challenges to their rule. Although they both have voiced support for
    the proposed Karabakh settlement, it remains to be seen whether they
    are really committed to it and ready to risk alienating nationalist
    elements in the ruling regime that are opposed to any territorial
    concessions to Azerbaijan. The loyalty of pro-government groups such
    as the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (also known as the Dashnak
    Party) is now essential for a successful transfer of power from
    Kocharian to Sargsyan.

    The search for Karabakh peace was further complicated on March 14
    when the UN General Assembly passed an Azerbaijani-drafted resolution
    demanding an "immediate, complete and unconditional withdrawal of
    Armenian forces" from occupied Azerbaijani lands. The United States,
    Russia and France voted against the non-binding resolution, backed
    by 39 mostly Islamic nations, saying that it was at odds with their
    existing peace proposals largely accepted by Azerbaijan. Baku responded
    by accusing the mediators of favoring the Armenian side and threatening
    to demand that the Minsk Group be co-headed by other countries.

    The Armenian side construed this threat as an attempt to disband a body
    that has spearheaded international efforts to resolve the Karabakh
    dispute since 1992. Kocharian warned on March 20 that Armenia would
    officially recognize the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
    as an independent state if Azerbaijan pulled out of the Minsk Group
    process.

    The Minsk Group co-chairs, meanwhile, urged Aliyev and Sargsyan
    to hold their first-ever talks on the sidelines of the upcoming
    NATO summit in Bucharest. In a March 19 statement, they said that
    the two sides had agreed "in principle" to such a meeting. Aliyev,
    however, has subsequently refused to meet his newly elected Armenian
    counterpart. His chief foreign policy aide, Novruz Mammadov, claimed
    on March 29 that the embattled Sargsyan needed such an encounter to
    shore up his "domestic position," rather than to achieve a breakthrough
    in the negotiation process (Turan, March 29).

    This was seen by Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian as a further
    indication that Baku wanted to avoid signing a "document created
    as a result of two years of work by the Armenian and Azerbaijani
    parties." (Armenian Public Television, March 31.) During a March 31
    visit to the Karabakh capital of Stepanakert, Kocharian stressed the
    need for Armenia to recognize the NKR, either immediately or in the
    near future. In remarks clearly addressed to his incoming successor,
    the outgoing president said Yerevan should at least sign a defense
    pact with the Karabakh Armenian leadership (lragir.am, March 31).
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