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VoA: Rice Urges Political Will To Settle Nagorno-Karabakh Dispute

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  • VoA: Rice Urges Political Will To Settle Nagorno-Karabakh Dispute

    RICE URGES POLITICAL WILL TO SETTLE NAGORNO-KARABAKH DISPUTE
    By David Gollust

    Voice of America
    April 15 2008

    U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice Tuesday called on the Armenian
    and Azerbaijani governments to summon up the political will to settle
    the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. Rice said the long-running territorial
    dispute is holding back both countries. VOA's David Gollust reports
    from the State Department.

    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice In comments reflecting
    U.S. frustration over the continued impasse, Rice says the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute is adversely affecting the interests of both
    Armenia and Azerbaijan and could be resolved quickly, with a little
    bit of political will by the two principals.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic-Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan,
    declared independence in 1988, triggering a conflict between the two
    countries that claimed some 35,000 lives.

    The parties have generally observed a cease-fire agreement brokered
    in 1994 by the Minsk Group, chaired by the United States, Russia
    and France, but truce violations and cross-border sniping continue,
    including an outbreak of fighting last month.

    Asked about the conflict in an appearance before the American-Turkish
    Council in Washington, Rice said Minsk Group diplomats have been
    close to getting an agreement on several occasions, and that it is
    time for the parties to make the hard choices needed to finally end
    the conflict:

    "It needs to be done. I have made the case to both the Armenian
    government and the Azeri government that they are falling behind
    the rest of the region because they will not resolve this conflict
    between them. And frankly there is plenty of, if you wish to use the
    word, blame to go around on both sides. This could be done if there
    is political will, and it ought to. It ought to be done," he said.

    In conjunction with the Rice remarks, the State Department issued
    a fact sheet Tuesday reiterating that the United States does not
    recognize Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent country, supports the
    territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, and holds that the future status
    of the region is to be settled through negotiations.

    It reaffirmed the U.S. commitment to the Minsk process and said
    cooperation among the three co-chairs is excellent.

    In her remarks to the Turkish-American group, Rice also said there
    is new momentum building toward a resolution of the Cyprus dispute,
    four years after the collapse of the settlement effort of former U.N.

    Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

    Rice noted that Turkey had supported the Annan plan, which was voted
    down by Greek-Cypriots in a referendum, and that the United States
    had later taken steps to ease the isolation of Turkish Cypriots,
    whose self-proclaimed state is recognized only by Turkey.

    The Secretary called it a more hopeful time for the two Cypriot
    communities, who have resumed talks for the first time in two years
    and opened a new crossing in Nicosia.

    But as in Nagorno-Karabakh, Rice said the Cyprus parties will have to
    make difficult choices and overcome political resistance if they are
    to take advantage of what she termed a different spirit on the island.
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