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Armenia And Turkey Are Changing The Caucasus: Alexander Jackson

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  • Armenia And Turkey Are Changing The Caucasus: Alexander Jackson

    ARMENIA AND TURKEY ARE CHANGING THE CAUCASUS: ALEXANDER JACKSON

    Tert
    Sept 18 2009
    Armenia

    The Protocols on establishing and developing Armenian-Turkish
    relations, which omit any reference to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
    seem to reverse statements made earlier which said that the opening
    of the Armenian-Turkish border is contingent on settling the
    Karabakh issue, stated Alexander Jackson in the Caucasian Review of
    International Affairs, as reported by the Azeri Press Agency.

    Jackson goes on to say that if no progress is made on Karabakh by the
    end of the six-week process, Azerbaijan's options would be to hold
    off on the Nabucco pipeline and increase cooperation with Russia,
    in order to reroute gas in Azerbaijan through Russia's network.

    In Jackson's words, domestic political upheaval in either Armenia
    or Turkey is a real risk, particularly Armenia, which will have to
    deal with engaging Turkey and withdrawing from the occupied regions
    around Nagorno-Karabakh simultaneously. A serious domestic setback
    could stall all regional peace processes for the near future.

    "Azerbaijan's position is crucial, and is inflexible. Exactly what it
    will - or can - do if Turkey opens the border without Armenian gestures
    on Karabakh is impossible to establish at this stage, but gas projects
    from the Caspian to the West are clearly under threat. This would
    ruin Turkey's reputation as an energy hub, one of its key attractions
    for the EU. Russia would lose some of its influence over Armenia,
    but could gain far greater power over Azerbaijan's energy exports,
    reshaping the whole oil and gas game in the region," says Jackson.

    Jackson concludes by saying that "Most strikingly, we could see an
    end to the Baku-Tbilisi-Ankara axis, which has proved one of the most
    enduring alliances in Eurasia. The next six weeks could reshape the
    Caucasus as we know it."
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