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  • Armenia: Government Gears Up For Possible Deal With Azerbaijan On Ka

    ARMENIA: GOVERNMENT GEARS UP FOR POSSIBLE DEAL WITH AZERBAIJAN ON KARABAKH
    Emil Danielyan

    EurasiaNet
    Dec 23 2008
    NY

    With international efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    gaining fresh momentum, Armenia's leadership appears to be preparing
    ground for a possible breakthrough in its long-running negotiations
    with Azerbaijan. It has pushed through parliament an amendment paving
    the way for a nationwide referendum on the issue reportedly promised
    by President Serzh Sargsyan.

    The move came amid increasingly vocal domestic opposition to a
    framework Armenian-Azerbaijani peace accord proposed by international
    mediators. The Sargsyan administration faces an uphill battle in
    overcoming opposition from nationalist groups in and outside the
    Armenian government as well, as the ethnic Armenian leadership of
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan met in Helsinki
    on December 3 for more talks on the basic principles of a Karabakh
    settlement proposed by a team of US, Russian and French mediators
    co-chairing the OSCE's so-called Minsk Group. In a joint statement
    issued the next day, Foreign Ministers Sergei Lavrov of Russia and
    Bernard Kouchner of France and US Assistant Secretary of State Daniel
    Fried urged the conflicting parties to finalize those principles
    "in coming months."

    They also emphasized the "positive momentum" which they said was
    established by Sargsyan and Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev during
    their most recent meeting -- hosted by Russia's Dmitry Medvedev outside
    Moscow on November 2. Aliyev and Sargsyan issued a joint declaration
    there pledging to "intensify further steps in the negotiating
    process." The mediators hope that they will meet again soon to close
    remaining gaps. Aides to the two presidents have said that the next
    Armenian-Azerbaijani summit would likely take place early next year.

    Bernard Fassier, France's chief Nagorno-Karabakh negotiator, told RFERL
    on December 9 that Lavrov, Kouchner and Fried presented to Baku and
    Yerevan a "technical document" that puts a settlement within reach
    by next summer. The chief stumbling blocks to date have centered on
    details of a proposed referendum on self-determination in Karabakh,
    and a timetable for the liberation of at least six of the seven
    Azerbaijani districts around the disputed enclave that were fully or
    partly occupied by Armenian forces during the 1991-1994 war.

    Meeting with leaders of nearly 50 Armenian political parties behind
    the closed doors on November 19, Sargsyan reportedly indicated that an
    Armenian-Azerbaijani peace accord is still not imminent. According to
    some participants of that meeting, he also promised to put a possible
    peace deal to a popular vote.

    Two weeks later, Armenia's parliament passed a government-drafted
    amendment to an Armenian law on referendums that enables the government
    to hold non-binding plebiscites on any policy issue. Prior to passage
    of the amendment, parliament and the president had responsibility
    for calling referendums, and authorities were obliged to abide by
    their results.

    Opposition politicians and independent observers see a direct
    link between the adopted amendment and the Karabakh peace
    process. Government officials and pro-presidential MPs have not ruled
    out of the conduct of a Karabakh-related referendum in Armenia in
    the coming months.

    A senior member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF,
    also known as the Dashnak Party), a nationalist party represented
    in Sargsyan's coalition government, asserted at a December 9 news
    conference that the signing of a framework agreement on Karabakh in
    early 2009 is "not unlikely." Giro Manoyan also reaffirmed the ARF's
    opposition to the mediators' existing peace proposals that seem to
    allow for continued Armenian control over Karabakh. "What we wanted in
    1988 (at the start of a popular movement for Karabakh's unification
    with Armenia) can not be a basis for today because a lot has changed
    since then," he said. "Azerbaijan is chiefly responsible for that and
    it must pay a price." Manoyan and many other nationalists generally
    would no longer be satisfied with the formalization of Karabakh's
    separation from Azerbaijan. Now, they also want Armenia to keep much
    of what is now occupied Azerbaijani territory.

    Another ARF leader, deputy parliamentary speaker Hrayr Karapetian,
    insisted that the Armenian side should be happy with the Karabakh
    status quo and that Azerbaijan will not attempt to win back its lost
    territories by force in the foreseeable future. "If this situation
    continues for 10 or 20 years, we will still be in a winning position,"
    Karapetian told the Yerevan newspaper Pakagits in an interview
    published on December 18.

    Hard-line opposition groups, though, are even more vocal in
    opposing any territorial concessions to Azerbaijan. Like the
    ARF, they believe that the occupied Azerbaijani districts are so
    vital for Armenia's security that they must not be traded even for
    international recognition of Karabakh's secession from Azerbaijan. As
    talk of a Karabakh breakthrough intensified in late October, a group
    of opposition politicians and intellectuals launched a new movement
    called Miatsum (Unification) to campaign against the return of what
    they call "liberated territories."

    "If we cede any of those lands, we will disrupt the security system
    that has served us well for the past 15 years and will make another war
    inevitable," Zaruhi Postanjian, a Miatsum leader and parliament deputy
    from the opposition Heritage party, told EurasiaNet. "Even if the
    international community recognizes Nagorno-Karabakh's independence."

    Significantly, government officials in Karabakh seem to share this
    view, raising more questions about Yerevan's ability and willingness to
    implement the peace formula currently on the table. Armenian Foreign
    Minister Eduard Nalbandian visited the Karabakh capital Stepanakert
    on December 19 to meet with the self-proclaimed republic's president,
    Bako Sahakian. An Armenian Foreign Ministry statement said Nalbandian
    briefed Sahakian on details of the Helsinki talks and discussed with
    the Karabakh leader other "recent developments" in the negotiating
    process. Sahakian's office also gave few details of the talks, saying
    only that the two men discussed "the current phase of the Karabakh
    conflict resolution." Incidentally, President Sargsyan twice traveled
    to Karabakh shortly before and after his last encounter with Aliyev.

    The secretary of Sargsyan's National Security Council, Artur
    Baghdasarian, has been a rare conciliatory voice in the Armenian public
    discourse on Karabakh dominated by outspoken nationalist figures. In a
    December 19 interview with the newspaper Iravunk de facto, Baghdasarian
    again made a case for mutual compromise with Azerbaijan, saying
    that it would give Armenia "unique opportunities for political and
    economic development." He said the Armenian leadership will not
    accept any agreement that stops short of legitimizing Karabakh's
    independence or unification with Armenia and giving the Karabakh
    Armenians "international security guarantees."

    Baghdasarian, whose Country of Law Party is also a junior partner in
    Armenia's ruling coalition, further confirmed Sargsyan's reported
    referendum pledge. "God willing, we will arrive at a mutually
    acceptable variant of settlement that the authorities will present
    to the people's judgment," he said.

    Editor's Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
    political analyst.
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