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Russia's President, In Yerevan, Sees Quick Action On Karabakh

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  • Russia's President, In Yerevan, Sees Quick Action On Karabakh

    RUSSIA'S PRESIDENT, IN YEREVAN, SEES QUICK ACTION ON KARABAKH
    by Tatul Hakobyan

    Armenian Reporter
    October 25, 2008
    Armenia

    President Dmitry Medvedev of Russia plants a tree at the Armenian
    Genocide Memorial complex in Yerevan on Oct. 22 during his official
    visit. Photolure

    Yerevan - President Dmitry Medvedev of Russia is looking forward
    to a meeting of the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Moscow,
    he announced during an official visit to Armenia on October 20-21.

    "I am hopeful that we are in the stage where progress is being made,"
    he said in a joint press conference with President Serge Sargsian. "In
    any case, the two sides are prepared to look for solutions. I will not
    comment on the details of the negotiations because they are details of
    negotiations and that is their value. I hope that in the near future
    a meeting of three presidents takes place in the capital of Russia,"
    he added.

    A large part of the discussions between Mr. Sargsian and Mr. Medvedev
    was dedicated to the resolution of the Karabakh conflict.

    "Armenia is prepared to continue the negotiations on the basis of
    the Madrid principles," Mr. Sargsian said, referring to a proposal
    presented to Armenia and Azerbaijan by high officials from the United
    States, Russia, and France. "These are foundations, which make it
    possible to recognize Karabakh's right to self-determination and some
    other issues that are matters of principle for us," Mr. Sargsian added.

    Moscow-Baku talks After leaving Armenia, Russia's president spoke
    on October 22 to the president of Azerbaijan. Mr. Medvedev and
    President Ilham Aliyev discussed preparations for a meeting of the
    three presidents, Interfax reported.

    Mr. Medvedev had visited Baku on July 3. During that visit, he
    and Mr. Aliyev signed a Declaration on Friendship and Strategic
    Partnership. In the declaration, Moscow and Baku emphasized "the
    importance of speedily resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict on the
    basis of widely accepted norms and principles of international law,
    and first of all, maintaining and guaranteeing those of the sovereignty
    of states, their territorial integrity, and the unchangeability of
    their borders." The two presidents also pledged to promote military
    cooperation (Russia last year sold tanks to Azerbaijan for the first
    time since the mid-1990s) and to work against groups undermining the
    sovereignty of each of the two countries (with both sides stepping
    up attacks on Islamist groups in the border areas).

    But when Mr. Aliyev returned Mr. Medvedev's visit in September -
    after the war in Georgia - Mr. Medvedev did not repeat the verbiage
    about territorial integrity.

    Madrid Principles At a meeting in Madrid in November 2007,
    U.S. undersecretary of state Nicholas Burns, Russian foreign minister
    Sergei Lavrov, and French foreign minister Bernard Kouchner presented
    to the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan a document with
    their proposals for the resolution of the Karabakh conflict. The
    three officials represent the three states that co-chair the OSCE
    Minsk Group, which mediates the resolution of the Karabakh conflict.

    "It is the same document that has been on the table for about two
    years," Vartan Oskanian, Armenia's foreign minister at the time
    said after the Madrid meeting. "In those matters where there was no
    agreement, the co-chairs have added their own proposals to the sides,
    for consideration. That is the only detail of that document. For that
    reason it is important to be careful in one's assessment, because
    the level was high, and the expectations could also be high."

    The substance of the earlier document referred to by Mr. Oskanian,
    known as the Prague document, was made public in June 2006.

    It was U.S. deputy assistant secretary of state Matthew Bryza, the
    U.S. co-chair of the Minsk Group, who disclosed the main principles
    of a framework peace accord. Under the principles, he said, Armenian
    forces would leave those territories of Azerbaijan in which they are
    now stationed; Armenia and Azerbaijan would normalize their economic
    and diplomatic ties; peace-keepers would be stationed; there would
    be international economic aid for Karabakh; and more. In the end, he
    said, there would be a vote on the future status of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Mr. Bryza said the proposed vote would take place "at some point"
    in the future, after the liberation of Armenian-occupied lands in
    Azerbaijan, the deployment of an international peacekeeping force in
    the conflict zone, and the restoration of political and economic ties
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    Official Yerevan responded quickly to the June 2006 disclosures,
    saying they were partial.

    The matter of a referendum and that of handing the Lachin corridor
    and Kelbajar to Azerbaijan were the most contentious issues. As the
    negotiations continued, the co-chairs offered their own proposals -
    the Madrid Principles - for the resolution of the issues on which
    Yerevan and Baku could not agree. Since Yerevan had accepted the
    earlier document as a basis for negotiations and Baku had rejected
    it, the assumption was that the Madrid principles were more favorable
    to Azerbaijan.

    On October 7, speaking to the Russian daily Rossiiskaya Gazeta,
    Mr. Lavrov, the foreign minister, said, "There remain two or three
    unresolved issues which need to be agreed upon at the next meetings of
    the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan," Mr. Lavrov told the Russian
    newspaper. "The first among them is the Lachin corridor," he added.

    Working toward a settlement Mr. Bryza lately told the BBC, "The
    resolution of the Karabakh conflict must start with the principle of
    Azerbaijan's territorial integrity. Other complementary principles
    can then be incorporated."

    He added, "We must say that yes, from a legal perspective, by law,
    Nagorno-Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan. But, after all, so that
    the negotiations result in an agreement, Armenia too must agree to
    it. We know that Armenia has a different position, and we must use
    very creative, constructive approaches so that Armenia and Azerbaijan
    find a common language."

    Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried, in Yerevan on October
    18, in response to a question from the Armenian Reporter's Armen
    Hakobyan, clarified current U.S. policy: "Territorial integrity
    is a recognized principle of international law. There are other
    principles, such as self-determination. Now we all know what we're
    talking about here. Bringing these principles together, reconciling
    these principles is extremely difficult and complicated." He added
    that the Minsk Group continues to work "to actually find a settlement."

    Mr. Fried gave no indication, however, that a settlement is imminent.
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