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Analysis: Azeri-Armenian relations

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  • Analysis: Azeri-Armenian relations

    United Press International
    Sept 11 2008


    Analysis: Azeri-Armenian relations

    JOHN C.K. DALY
    WASHINGTON, Sept. 11


    Last month's military conflict between Russia and Georgia over South
    Ossetia has cast a harsh spotlight on Western assumptions about
    exporting Azeri oil through neighboring Georgia and Turkey.

    While the military confrontation focused Western media attention on
    tensions between Russia and Georgia, Azerbaijan itself remains gripped
    by a "frozen conflict" dating back to even before the 1991 collapse of
    the Soviet Union. Azerbaijan's clashes with Armenia over the enclaves
    of Nagorno-Karabakh and Nakhchivan broke out in February 1988; by the
    time a cease-fire was signed in May 1994 ending active hostilities,
    thousands had been killed and wounded, while hundreds of thousands of
    refugees were created on both sides and the Armenian armed forces were
    left occupying swaths of Azeri territory, including Nagorno-Karabakh
    and seven neighboring districts. The volatility of the situation was
    instrumental in the eventual decisions of the Western consortium
    members to build their proposed export pipeline for Azeri oil through
    Georgia rather than utilize a shorter route transiting Armenia.

    Now, however, there are some indications that there might yet again be
    movement toward a resolution of the issue. On Wednesday, after meeting
    with Turkish President Abdullah Gul, Azeri President Ilham Aliyev
    expressed hope that the Nagorno-Karabakh issue eventually could be
    settled. Gul's comments had a strong economic undertone, as he told
    reporters, "If we settle this conflict, which I hope we will manage to
    do, all countries of the region will develop much faster."

    A resolution of the disputes between Azerbaijan and Armenia could give
    Western investors yet another export route for Caspian energy, an
    issue of growing concern among Western investors because of Russia's
    increasing assertiveness in the region, combined with the fragility of
    export routes through Georgia, as demonstrated by the recent
    conflict. The prize is certainly tempting: The Caspian's 143,244
    square miles and attendant coastline are estimated to contain as much
    as 250 billion barrels of recoverable oil, boosted by more than 200
    billion barrels of potential reserves, quite aside from up to 328
    trillion cubic feet of recoverable natural gas. From the outset
    Washington's policy has been to construct, if possible, multiple
    export pipeline routes, bypassing both Russia and charter "axis of
    evil" member Iran.

    Because of the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, however, export routes to
    Armenia were never considered as a viable option in 1994 after
    then-Azeri President Geidar Aliyev signed the "Contract of the
    Century" with Western energy concerns to develop Azerbaijan's Caspian
    Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli fields. Consequently, the first Western export
    oil pipeline not under Russian control went westward through
    Georgia. In 1999 Baku's export options broadened with the opening of
    the $600 million, 515 mile, 100,000-barrel-per-day Baku-Supsa
    pipeline. Azerbaijan was finally able to free itself completely from
    reliance on Russian export pipelines when, in May 2006, the $3.6
    billion, 1,092-mile, million-barrel-per-day Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    pipeline opened.

    The Armenians and Azeris sought to influence Washington's decisions on
    the region; political agitation by the Armenian-American lobby
    resulted in the inclusion in 1992 of Section 907 in the U.S. Freedom
    Support Act, which banned any direct U.S. aid to the Azerbaijani
    government as punishment for its blockade of Armenia. It was only in
    January 2002 that President George W. Bush waived the legislation as a
    reward for Azeri support of the United States following the Sept. 11,
    2001, terrorist attacks.

    The Bush administration, in one of its first foreign policy
    initiatives, attempted to break the diplomatic impasse between the two
    Caucasian nations. In April 2001, even before the waiver of Section
    907, Secretary of State Colin Powell's first major foreign initiative
    was to try to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute during a summit in
    Key West, Fla., where he met with Azeri President Geidar Aliyev and
    Armenian President Robert Kocharyan. But the meetings, which were held
    by the Office for Security and Cooperation in Europe Minsk Group
    co-chairs France, Russia and United States, proved fruitless.

    There now seems to be a genuine chance for breaking the diplomatic
    logjam, especially as Turkey and Armenia are slowly edging toward
    restoring relations, as well, in the wake of last week's "soccer
    diplomacy," which saw Gul fly to Yerevan to attend a Turkish-Armenian
    football match, where he held talks with Armenian President Serzh
    Sargsyan.

    Gul is convinced that new opportunities have opened for settling the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. He pragmatically informed journalists that a
    resolution of the issue could allow all countries of the region to get
    involved in major energy transportation projects, noting, "If the mood
    of cooperation prevails in the region over hostility, it will serve
    the interests of all countries in the Caucasus." Ankara is certainly
    thinking big; Turkish Minister for Energy and Natural Resources Hilmi
    Guler, currently in Baku to attend a conference on "oil and gas
    potential in Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan" organized in Azerbaijan,
    held out optimism that one of the West's most cherished projects, the
    Nabucco pipeline to bring Azeri natural gas westward, would go
    forward, telling reporters, "Turkey will definitely finalize the
    Nabucco project."

    Turkey is also pressing to resolve the Russian-Georgian dispute; on
    Sept. 2 Gul telephoned Bush, whom he informed about Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan's proposal for a Caucasus Stability Platform to
    restore peace and stability to the region. Rather than unilaterally
    pushing military aid to Georgia, Washington ought to listen closely to
    Turkey's diplomatic initiatives, especially if it wants to prevent any
    further checkmates to its policies of developing Caspian energy
    projects: The Kremlin is less likely to feel threatened by a friendly
    soccer match than U.S. naval warships sailing in the Black Sea.
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