Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

BAKU: Towards Long-Awaited Breakthrough: Resolving Karabakh Conflict

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

  • BAKU: Towards Long-Awaited Breakthrough: Resolving Karabakh Conflict

    TOWARDS LONG-AWAITED BREAKTHROUGH: RESOLVING KARABAKH CONFLICT - NO RESULTS WITH SURVIVING HOPES

    Today
    Dec 29 2009
    Azerbaijan

    The year 2009 is nearing end. Contrary to expectations, this year
    did not brought long-awaited breakthrough in the peaceful settlement
    of Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. But is unfair to
    call negotiations imitation and mediating efforts of the OSCE Minsk
    Group - failure. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev gave an adequate
    assessment of the situation in his recent interview with a Russian TV
    channel. He described this year in terms of the settlement "... as a
    positive, but less positive than it might be", adding that "... we
    hope it will be possible to agree on the basic positions in 2010,
    but we oppose that negotiation will become a permanent process."

    What the year 2009 was noted for in the context of the settlement
    of the Karabakh conflict? First of all, perhaps, for intensified
    negotiation process. The presidents of the conflicting parties held six
    meetings. The foreign ministers met more often. The co-chairs of the
    Minsk group visited the region together or individually almost every
    month sometimes making the shuttle visits between Baku and Yerevan.

    The support for a peaceful settlement was not limited to efforts of
    Special representatives of Minsk Group co-chairing countries. Russian
    President Dmitry Medvedev directly participated in the three
    Armenian-Azerbaijani summit meetings. At the G-8 summit in L'Aquila
    (Italy), Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, United States President
    Barack Obama and French President Sarkozy issued a joint statement on
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. 17th meeting of the OSCE Ministerial
    Council Meeting held in Athens in December supported a statement by
    the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan, as well as foreign
    ministers of France, Russia and U.S. Undersecretary of State which
    said efforts to resolve the Karabakh conflict on the basis of three
    principles of the Helsinki Final Act - non-use or threat of force,
    equality and self-determination of peoples and territorial integrity -
    was continuing.

    Without exaggerating importance of this document, I draw attention
    to the fact that for the first time the Armenian side agreed to
    the document which called for resolving the Karabakh conflict under
    territorial integrity. To be more exact, ten years ago Armenia refused
    to accede to the document which stipulated self-determination for
    Nagorno-Karabakh in the context of Azerbaijan's territorial integrity
    at the OSCE summit in Lisbon. Even in last year's Mein Dorf Declaration
    on political settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict signed by
    the presidents of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia, due to conflicting
    approaches of the conflicting parties they had to refer to general
    principles and norms of international law and decisions and documents
    adopted in this framework.

    Negotiations were difficult and tough throughout 2009. The parties
    made strides not only forward but backward, returning to matters
    that seemed to be earlier coordinated. Presumably, the parties have
    agreed on a phased withdrawal of Armenian forces from occupied areas
    outside Nagorno-Karabakh. Baku also signaled that it does not object
    to a corridor linking Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia. Evidence is a
    visit of a special mission to the Lachin region to review possible
    route and secure width of the corridor. The issue of "interim status"
    also saw some progress, but a possibility to reconcile positions
    of the sides on the final status of Nagorno-Karabakh, or rather,
    a mechanism for determining have been elusive.

    Azerbaijan insists that regardless of the will of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    people, the legal power has been and should rest with Azerbaijan,
    and, consequently, one can speak only about extent of autonomy and
    self-government. Armenia required not to set boundaries for the will
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh people (referring to the Armenian majority)
    seeking to legalize secession from Azerbaijan through the referendum.

    Offering a to define status of Nagorno-Karabakh through mechanism of a
    delayed referendum, the Minsk Group co-chairs want to simultaneously
    solve the difficult question of establishing cooperation between
    Armenia and the Nagorno-Karabakh separatists with Azerbaijan.

    Armenians are interested in such cooperation to a great degree. Even
    if to assume hypothetically that the great powers recognize secession
    of Nagorno-Karabakh from Azerbaijan, no one can force Azerbaijan to
    cooperate with Armenia. Deferred referendum to determine the permanent
    status allows the mediating powers to push Baku to appease the Armenian
    side with economic preferences, to demonstrate its willingness to
    forget the past in every possible way, open communications and to make
    investments in the hope that the Armenians will vote for a referendum
    to remain within the borders of Azerbaijan.

    However, we have closely studied history and behavioral patterns of
    Armenians which leave no room for illusions about their "gratitude and
    prudence." So, attempts to catch Baku in a trap of referendum failed.

    Therefore, in response to requirement to formulate a question about
    will of the people in the most general form and to postpone it for
    a long-term perspective, Yerevan once again raised the issue of a
    "transitional status".

    Armenians want to fill in details which in practice means formation of
    de facto independence of Nagorno-Karabakh without declaring it. Since,
    "transitional status" in the Armenian interpretation is identical
    to independence to be consolidated with international agreements and
    guarantees. Nevertheless, one can try find a balance and to reach a
    mutually acceptable compromise on the timing and time of a referendum
    on one hand and the scope of powers defined by "transitional status"
    on the other.

    Meanwhile, mediators hope to move the negotiating process forward. The
    official websites of the OSCE and the American White House released
    part of the the Madrid Principles in summer to make public aware of
    them. The co-chairs began to meet more with the leaders of public
    opinion, NGO activists, representatives of political parties and
    the media and to inform on the state of settlement of the Karabakh
    conflict. Foreign donors began to fund more projects that involve
    contacts and dialogue between civil society representatives of the
    conflicting parties. The noteworthy is that Russia initiated the
    meeting of parliamentarians from Armenia and Azerbaijan, later media
    leaders and later that of independent experts and NGO leaders.

    To prevent Armenian separatists monopolize the right to speak on behalf
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh, finally steps were taken to strengthen and
    grant an official status to the Azerbaijani community of Karabakh.

    It is important to give an impetus to this community to ensure its
    voice will be loudly sounded in Azerbaijan and abroad.

    Negotiations within the Minsk Group are in homestretch. It is hard
    to protract them indefinitely in a bid extend the existing status quo.

    Azerbaijan is developing and growing while Armenia is stagnating
    amid a blockade. The burden of sustaining its economy, finances and
    armaments, which falls primarily on Russia is becoming harder.

    An attempt to play against Azerbaijan a card of "historical
    Armenian-Turkish reconciliation" developed by Armenians and
    sponsored by their patrons failed. It true goal was to break
    the Turkish-Azerbaijani alliance to cause confusion and to
    persuade Azerbaijan to make concessions, leading to secession of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan's leaders showed firmness, but the
    Turkish government, after a little hesitation, unequivocally confirmed
    that without progress in the settlement of the Karabakh ratification
    conflict, Armenian-Turkish protocols will not be ratified and borders
    between the two countries will not open. Moreover, Armenia and Turkey
    have signed a deal according to which Turkey will provide assistance
    and help strengthen defense capacity of Azerbaijan.

    In these circumstances, there is only one way to avoid complications
    of war in the region which greatly increases the risk in case the
    negotiations fail - to bring Armenia to reason so that it will
    lower its territorial ambitions. Hardness, realism and reliance on
    interests rather than history and emotion leaves a chance to implement
    long-awaited breakthrough in the negotiations within the OSCE Minsk
    Group in the coming year.
Working...
X