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ANKARA: Nagorno-Karabakh Problem And Solution: Role For Turkey

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  • ANKARA: Nagorno-Karabakh Problem And Solution: Role For Turkey

    NAGORNO-KARABAKH PROBLEM AND SOLUTION: ROLE FOR TURKEY
    Adil Baguirov

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Nov 30 2009
    Turkey

    Towards the end of this year, several important developments are taking
    place that should clarify the likelihood of the peaceful resolution
    of the problem of the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan on terms
    consistent with U.N. Security Council resolutions, OSCE statements
    and the wishes of the majority of people in the South Caucasus,
    namely cessation of Karabakh's occupation by Armenia and withdrawal
    of its military from there in exchange for a number of significant
    concessions by Azerbaijan ranging from economic and trade, to the
    political status of a high-level autonomy for the region.

    One is the upcoming Dec. 7 visit by Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan to the United States on the invitation of President
    Obama. While a whole range of issues will be discussed, as U.S. needs
    Turkey on the issues of Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, the Muslim world
    in general, but Caucasus, especially the Turkey-Armenia land border
    opening vis-a-vis the Karabakh peace process, would be a very large
    part of the agenda as well. The wish of the Obama administration
    and the architect of the Turkey-Armenia protocols David L. Phillips
    was to decouple the Turkey-Armenia land border opening from the
    Armenia-Azerbaijan Karabakh peace resolution, so that these processes
    are not dependent on each other, as was clearly stated by numerous
    U.S. officials, including Ambassador to Armenia Marie Yovanovitch.

    However, due to vociferous objections from Baku, the diaspora and
    the Turkish public's loud indignation over such an approach, the
    governing Justice and Development Party, or AKP, stressed to the Obama
    administration that decoupling of the two was not possible, and the
    Turkish Parliament would need to see real progress in Karabakh peace
    settlement in order to ratify the Turkey-Armenia protocols. This was
    admitted by the U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Philip Gordon after
    his meetings in Ankara on Nov. 13.

    Another important development is the final meeting for this year
    between President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan and President Serge
    Sarkisian of Armenia in Munich on Nov. 22, under the auspices of the
    OSCE Minsk Group co-chair nations (France, Russia and the United
    States), that discussed some of the outstanding details of the
    peace proposal currently negotiated by the two presidents. Before
    departing Baku, President Aliyev made some of the strongest remarks
    to date, that if this meeting also brings no results like the dozen
    of preceding meetings he held with his Armenian counterpart since
    last year to find a peaceful resolution to the Karabakh conflict,
    then a military liberation campaign by Azerbaijan to force Armenian
    withdrawal becomes inevitable, as negotiations cannot be endless,
    hinting that they have been going on since 1992. This stern message
    was clearly intended not so much for domestic or European audience,
    as it was for American and Turkish ears. Although the Minsk Group
    co-chairs declared that "progress was made" in some areas, it is clear
    that Azerbaijan is increasingly restive, and feels confident that it
    can take the initiative into its own hands at a near time to restore
    its territorial integrity.

    Additional tectonic shifts are seen in the energy geopolitics,
    with Azerbaijan signing an agreement to send its ever-expanding
    gas production north to Russia, as well as expressing interest
    in supplying gas to China via a reverse Trans-Caspian pipeline via
    Turkmenistan. Needless to say, this would undermine the problem-plagued
    Nabucco pipeline, since gas to fill it from Iraq is not reliable,
    Iranian option is opposed by the United States, while supplies from
    Egypt are still far-fetched. Similar moves have been seen in oil
    exports, with Azerbaijan preparing to ship more of its crude oil via
    Baku-Supsa and Baku-Novorossiysk pipelines. While these moves do not
    jeopardize the Baku-Ceyhan (BTC) and Baku-Erzurum (BTE) pipelines,
    they would cost Turkey not only billions of dollars in potential
    revenues lost, but also its nascent "energy hub" status and deny
    Ceyhan terminal the status of becoming larger than Rotterdam.

    These prospects of multibillion-dollar losses to Turkey are because
    of unsound politics and flawed strategy by the AKP. Consider the
    following hollow "gains" Turkey will get - according to U.S.

    Ambassador Yovanovitch, only 1 percent to 3 percent per year increase
    in trade with Armenia would ensue from the open land border (currently
    turnover stands at only $200 million at most). Also, the supposed
    abandoning of the Armenian claims internationally and particularly
    in the U.S. Congress, which the Armenian diaspora, which is fully
    independent from the Republic of Armenia, has already sternly stated
    they would not, and cannot, abandon their raison d'être (and U.S.

    Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid along with dozens of Congressmen,
    unequivocally stating they will continue introducing and supporting
    anti-Turkish resolutions). The same was actually stated by Armenia's
    Ambassador-at-large Arkady Ghukasyan, a close confidante of
    President Sarkisian, in mid-November. Moreover, in a striking move,
    Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Arman Kirakosyan during a recent
    trip to the United States has extensively talked about 19th century
    Ottoman-Armenian history, such as the territorial-political demands of
    the Berlin Congress of 1878 - thus expanding the timeframe from the
    1915-1923 period. This shows that neither the leadership of Armenia,
    nor the diaspora, nor members of the Armenian Caucus in the U.S.

    Congress, have even planned to abandon their claims and anti-Turkish
    rhetoric.

    What is the only realistic way out of this conundrum that can and
    should be done by Turkey in the current geopolitical climate. The two
    principal parties of the conflict, Armenia and Azerbaijan, have shown
    different valuations, the extent to which they can make concessions
    and be expected to negotiate on. Whilst for Azerbaijan the Karabakh
    problem is by far the most important - a USAID-funded poll found that
    93 percent Azerbaijanis consider it their #1 problem - while for a
    similar USAID poll in Armenia the problem of NK was ranked only third,
    being most important for just 24 percent of Armenians. Whereas late
    President Heydar Aliyev found it impossible to accept the Key West
    peace proposals in 2001 because of the tremendous opposition by the
    Azerbaijani public and Parliament, in Armenia the public opinion places
    lesser importance and the opposition dismissed by the government,
    as can be determined not only from U.S. polls, but the March 2008
    post-election violence, in which President Sarkisian did not shy away
    from leaving at least 10 protesters dead (according to unofficial
    sources, over 40 protesters died). In 2009, many Armenian protesters
    opposing President Sarkisian's readiness to sign the Turkey-Armenia
    protocols, were either beaten (France), or detained (Los Angeles and
    Beirut), and in conversations with the diaspora leaders the Armenian
    president mocked the 10,000 protestors crowd, saying he too can amass
    as many counter-protesters if needed.

    This shows that the Azerbaijani government and public have offered
    their maximum level of concessions - that is high-degree autonomy for
    the Armenian community of Karabakh within Azerbaijan, along with full
    restoration of relations with Armenia - from which the Azerbaijani
    side cannot fall back even more. Meanwhile, the Armenian side, which
    has proven it can silence opposition by any means necessary while
    strengthening its regime, and was ready to compromise (or betray,
    as some ultranationalists in the Armenian diaspora allege) in some
    ways on their seemingly most important issue, that of claims against
    Turkey, can most definitely come to an agreement with Azerbaijan
    on these terms. After the border protocols and the handling of the
    March 2008 protests, the Armenian side simply cannot hide behind the
    supposed stronger-than-government domestic opposition and pretend that
    it has its hands tied on the issue of Karabakh. As evidence shows,
    Armenian government and President Sarkisian are ready, willing and
    able to come to an agreement on important issues. If "genocide"
    can be part of concessions, then so can "Attach."

    Turkey, as the regional powerhouse, can play a very important role
    in this mediation, since it knows first-hand how Armenia negotiates,
    and makes concessions, on its most important issue, and since Turkey
    has now permanently inserted itself into the geopolitics of Caucasus
    by specifically engaging and "locking-in" Armenia. The year 2010
    can become the year of peace and prosperity for the entire region,
    the year when all regional countries will win from open borders
    and peacefully resolved conflicts. Concerted efforts by Turkey,
    the United States and Russia, along with EU/France, can finally help
    resolve the oldest post-Soviet conflict if more constructive pressure
    on Armenia is made, and President Sarkisian realizes the benefits
    of not stonewalling the peace talks with talks about "independence"
    and "self-determination" for Karabakh as the "maximum concession"
    possible, but commits to complying with the U.N. Security Council
    resolutions and the new geo-economics realities in the region.

    * Mr. Adil Baguirov, Ph.D., is the founding member of the Azerbaijan
    Turkey Historical Research Foundation (ATAF), co-founder of the U.S.

    Turkic Network (USTN), and post-doctoral fellow at the Moscow State
    Institute for International Relations (MGIMO).
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