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Lavrov Is Going To Baku

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  • Lavrov Is Going To Baku

    LAVROV IS GOING TO BAKU
    by Manvel Manvelyan

    Haykakan Zhamanak
    March 12 2009
    Armenia

    The main responsibility for resolving the Nagornyy Karabakh
    conflict lies with the Armenians and Azerbaijanis, Russian Foreign
    Minister Sergey Lavrov, who is going to Baku on a two-day visit,
    told Azerbaijani media yesterday. Lavrov said that the Russian
    position on the conflict was already known. "Russia is ready to
    support a compromise agreement that would satisfy all parties to
    the conflict. In this case, Russia would act as the guarantor of
    the settlement," he said. Lavrov said that the common approaches
    of Russia and Azerbaijan to the situation in the Caucasus and the
    desire to make it a region of stability and peace were laid out in
    the Friendship and Strategic Partnership Declaration signed by the
    [Russian President] Dmitriy Medvedev and [Azerbaijani President]
    Ilham Aliyev in Baku on 3 July 2008.

    Despite the fact that Lavrov was trying to demonstrate Moscow's
    neutrality and saying that the main task of settling the conflict
    is on the Armenians and Azerbaijanis, he, meantime, was quoting
    the well-known Russian-Azerbaijani declaration, under which Moscow
    recognized the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and promised not
    to make steps that could undermine it. In other words, it implied
    that the Armenians and Azeris should reach a settlement on the basis
    of the principle of Azerbaijan's territorial integrity.

    Another notable fact: via Lavrov, Moscow warns Baku that even after
    the settlement, the region should not get out of the zone of Russian
    influence. Probably, Azerbaijan's possible membership of NATO is
    implied. By the way, in his yesterday's interview, Lavrov downplayed
    Baku's concerns that the setting up of the Collective Security Treaty
    Organization (CSTO) rapid reaction forces could pose a threat to
    Azerbaijan because Armenia is a CSTO member and Azerbaijan is not.

    He emphasized that those forces will act only in case of an aggression
    against a member state. It turns out that Lavrov is implying that
    if military operations resume in the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict
    zone, the CSTO forces would not intervene because Nagornyy Karabakh
    is considered Azerbaijani territory, and Azerbaijan is not a CSTO
    member. In return for all these, the Kremlin expects from Azerbaijan
    all of Azerbaijan's gas exports, which will allow Russia to control
    Azerbaijani gas exports to Georgia, Turkey and Europe. Gazprom made
    such an offer in summer 2008. Now Lavrov is leaving for Baku to get
    Azerbaijan's response ahead of the Caspian Sea summit. Russia's further
    policies in the South Caucasus will largely depend on that answer.
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