Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia's Attempts Are Doomed To Failure

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenia's Attempts Are Doomed To Failure

    ARMENIA'S ATTEMPTS ARE DOOMED TO FAILURE

    Today.Az
    17 December 2009

    Leading world powers are forced to consider the position and
    interests of the Azerbaijani-Turkish tandem for the sake of their
    own geopolitical interests.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan's U.S. trip sheds light
    on numerous issues connected with normalizing Armenian-Turkish
    relations and resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Until then,
    many Armenians claimed Ankara's statement that it is impossible to
    normalize Armenia-Turkey ties without resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict was designed for domestic and Azerbaijani audiences. However,
    Erdogan made quite a different statement in the West.

    The Turkish prime minister reiterated his position at a joint
    news conference with U.S. President Barack Obama, who is the major
    initiator of normalizing Armenian-Turkish relations. Erdogan made it
    clear that the protocols on the normalization of Armenian-Turkish
    relations have no preconditions. He immediately noted the Turkish
    parliament has only one precondition to ratify these protocols -
    the settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    First, Erdogan's statement at the high-level U.S.-Turkish meetings
    is a significant event. Much more important for Azerbaijan, though,
    is the U.S. president's reaction to the statement. He just kept silent.

    And silence, as they say, is a sign of consent.

    Second, the statement voiced later by Washington and Moscow confirmed
    that leading centers of world power see Turkish-Armenian relations
    and the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict as interdependent
    processes. The U.S. hopes that Armenia-Turkey rapprochement will impact
    the settlement of the Karabakh conflict. U.S. Assistant Secretary of
    State Philip Gordon shared this view in a conversation with reporters
    almost immediately after the U.S.-Turkey talks.

    In response to the question how the White House sees the fate of
    Armenian-Turkish relations after Obama's talks with Erdogan, Gordon
    said the U.S. backs Armenian-Turkish normalization and wants the
    protocols to be ratified soon, which will benefit Turkey and Armenia
    and help boost peace and stability in the region.

    "The U.S. is also involved in resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    This topic is important not because we see it linked with
    Armenian-Turkish relations, but because it can also impact the
    stability in the region that will benefit both Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    We are concerned over this matter and we want it to be moved forward,"
    he noted.

    Gordon also added that Georgia is the only point of contradiction
    between Washington and Moscow.

    Thus, the State Department official actually admitted the importance
    of parallel solutions to both issues. Gordon's statement coincides
    with the estimates of a number of local experts who indicate some
    correction in Washington's position in light of Erdogan's visit.

    Moreover, Gordon almost admitted that the U.S. and Russia are close
    to reaching an agreement on the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict. Gordon's statement that Georgia is the only point of
    contradiction between Washington and Moscow cannot be interpreted
    otherwise.

    Russian Foreign Ministry senior official Andrey Nesterenko stated
    almost simultaneously that "Azerbaijan and Armenia are on the way to
    a serious breakthrough on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue."

    Nesterenko added that "if the positive dynamics achieved in
    negotiations this year are maintained next year, there will be reason
    to expect the basic principles will be coordinated quickly and finally
    and a text of the peace agreement will be prepared on their basis."

    Third, it does not matter that the interested parties publicly
    declare that the normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations and
    the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict are not linked in
    terms of time. However, the fact is that they are doing everything
    possible to link the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations
    and the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in terms of
    time. So, if Washington and Moscow reach agreement on the settlement of
    regional conflicts, except for the Georgia-Russia situation, Armenian
    President Serzh Sargsyan will not be able to resist this powerful union
    whatever he says. All his attempts to prolong the settlement of the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh conflict are doomed to failure.

    Finally, there is a need to answer the following question - which
    factors influence Russia's and America's willingness to act as a
    single bloc to resolve the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict? The main determining factor influencing leading world powers
    is the inviolability of the Azerbaijani-Turkish tandem. Events have
    shown that attempts to split the tandem will fail.

    The strength of this tandem is that the realization of many
    geopolitical interests of world players depends on its position. For
    example, without Azerbaijan's and Turkey's support, the West, above
    all, the U.S., will never be able to implement the Nabucco project. To
    develop and implement a unified strategy against Iran's nuclear
    program, the U.S. and Russia also need to agree with Azerbaijan and
    Turkey, as the emergence of another nuclear power in the volatile
    region does not the meet interests of not only Russia and America,
    but also Azerbaijan and Turkey, who are Iran's neighbors.

    Russia cannot implement its energy strategy and the U.S. its Middle
    East strategy without Turkey.

    It should be noted that Armenia's participation is not required in
    solving problems that are of a geopolitical importance for leading
    world powers. Simply put, Armenia's help is not required to resolve
    these issues. So, major world powers are forced to consider the
    position and interests of the Azerbaijani-Turkish tandem not for love,
    but for the sake of their own geopolitical interests.
Working...
X