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Azerbaijan: A doomed player in Karabakh game?

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  • Azerbaijan: A doomed player in Karabakh game?

    http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=113428&se ctionid=3510303

    Azerbaijan: A doomed player in Karabakh game?
    Fri, 11 Dec 2009 03:03:40 GMT
    Press TV of Iran

    By Tarâné Kaveh

    It has been almost 21 years since the Republic of Azerbaijan and
    Armenia engaged in an armed conflict over the 4400-square-kilometer
    (1,700-square-mile) mountainous Karabakh region.

    After six years of intensive fighting, about 20 percent of
    Azerbaijan's land, including seven towns surrounding Karabakh, was
    occupied; up to one million Azerbaijanis were displaced and some
    40,000 people from both sides were killed.

    The conflict, known as the Nagorno-Karabakh war, which broke out in
    February 1988, ended in a ceasefire on May 16, 1994, but there has
    been no agreement so far to turn the ceasefire into a permanent peace
    treaty.

    However, it appears that in the closing days of 2009, efforts have
    increased to realize the long-awaited peace between the two neighbors.

    Most of the activities in this respect have been made by the
    Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk
    Group, which was established in 1992 to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict. The OSCE Minsk Group is co-chaired by the United States,
    France and Russia.

    Among the efforts made to establish peace between the two parties
    involved in the conflict were: The statement of the OSCE Minsk Group
    co-chairmen at the G8 summit, two meetings between the presidents of
    Armenia and Azerbaijan in Moscow at Russian mediation, the meeting
    between the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan in the Moldovan
    capital of Chisinau, the meeting of the two leaders in Munich, the
    meeting of the two countries' foreign ministers at the 17th OSCE
    Ministerial Council in Athens which issued a statement stressing on
    the need for the two sides to continue negotiations.

    Although there has been a number of futile attempts by the OSCE Minsk
    Group in this regard, new developments and equations have come to the
    play this time around that make a distinction between the recent wave
    of efforts and the previous proceedings. One distinction is that
    formerly the OSCE Minsk Group was merely trying to manage the conflict
    between Azerbaijan and Armenia, whereas this time it seems to be
    attempting to actually establish peace.

    Most analysts believe there is a mutual consent between the United
    States and Russia, which is they both would prefer the Karabakh issue
    resolved in favor of Armenia - in other words, they both want Karabakh
    to officially become part of Armenia.

    What is crystal clear is that after meetings between US President
    Barack Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, Washington scraped
    a plan to deploy an anti-missile defense system in Eastern Europe and
    with the exception of the 2008 Caucasus conflict - after which the US
    sided with Georgia - the two sides have seen eye to eye on issues
    relating to the Caucasus region. Among such issues are normalization
    of relations between Turkey and Armenia as well as Azerbaijan and
    Armenia.

    It remains to be seen whether there has been any secret agreement
    between Moscow and Washington; however, the two powers seem to have
    reached an understanding on major issues such as the Middle East,
    Afghanistan, the Nabucco pipeline etc.

    The Russia-Georgia war erupted on August 7, 2008 after Tbilisi
    launched a major offensive against the independence-seeking province
    of South Ossetia in a bid to take control of the region. Russia, the
    main ally of South Ossetia, repelled the attack by sending in armed
    convoys and military combat aircraft and drove deep into Georgia. Most
    South Ossetians hold Russian citizenship.

    Following the conflict the United States has deemed Georgia 'unsafe'
    as a transit route for the Caspian Sea gas and is seeking to find
    alternative energy routes in the South Caucasus.

    Russia on the other hand, finds cooperation with the United States an
    effective measure in safeguarding the achievements it made through war
    with Georgia. These are examples of each side's motives for
    maintaining cooperation with respect to the Caucasus region.

    Members of the OSCE Minsk Group have hinted that they all support a
    resolution to the Karabakh issue in favor of Armenia. Their financial
    and political support for the self-proclaimed Karabakh Republic or
    even supporting the separatist leaders in the region all point to that
    direction.

    It is true that the interests of the United States, France and Russia
    have run counter to each other at different periods of time and in
    different corners of the world. However, when it comes to the Karabakh
    issue, it appears that all three are willing to ignore Azerbaijan's
    claims on the region.

    Therefore, one is left with no other option but to assume that the
    OSCE Minsk Group's framework is based on persuading Azerbaijan to
    submit to the so-called Madrid Principles.

    Although there has been little transparency regarding the Madrid
    Principles, unofficial reports suggest that the principles call for an
    international peacekeeping force to be deployed in the region and call
    for a referendum on the status of Karabakh - which is believed to
    result in the region's eventual separation from Azerbaijan.

    The OSCE Minsk Group has unsuccessfully made attempts to execute
    similar plans in the past. However, back then the member states did
    not share the same view on the manner in which the Karabakh issue
    should be 'managed' nor did they - as former US state secretary Colin
    Powell suggested - deem the public was ready for such a development.

    Another factor taken into consideration is that Azerbaijan is
    currently weaker than ever. A few years back, with high oil revenues
    and high military funding, Baku was hinting at an imminent breakout of
    another armed conflict in the region. The global financial meltdown
    and falling oil prices, however, have proven problematic for
    Azerbaijan.

    Should the status quo continue Azerbaijan will be doomed to submit to
    unfair terms of a Western-dictated peace treaty, which would only take
    Armenian's interests into consideration.

    Baku's only chance is to launch a full-throttle diplomatic campaign to
    break away from the OSCE Minsk Group in its current form. Azerbaijan
    can make progress through calling on the United Nations, the
    Organization of Islamic Conference and neighboring countries like Iran
    for their effective mediations on the Karabakh issue, which could in
    turn rescue Baku from an impossible political situation.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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