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BAKU: Armenian Constitutional Court Ruling Setback For US Diplomacy

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  • BAKU: Armenian Constitutional Court Ruling Setback For US Diplomacy

    ARMENIAN CONSTITUTIONAL COURT RULING SETBACK FOR US DIPLOMACY

    news.az
    Jan 20 2010
    Azerbaijan

    Ilgar Mammadov US strategy in the South Caucasus needs to be changed,
    Baku-based politician Ilgar Mammadov writes in an article for News.Az.

    The newly emerged details of the Armenian Constitutional Court ruling
    on the Turkish-Armenian protocols mark a major setback for American
    diplomacy in the South Caucasus.

    The ruling "contains preconditions and restrictive provisions which
    impair the letter and spirit of the Protocols", reads a statement
    by the Turkish Foreign Ministry. The statement says that the ruling
    undermines the very reason for negotiating the Protocols as well as
    their fundamental objective.

    Unlike comments by various Turkish officials about the link between
    resolution of the Karabakh conflict and ratification of the protocols,
    the ruling of the Armenian Constitutional Court is a formally binding
    text, and not a personal or party political opinion. It must be
    changed if Turkish-Armenian dialogue is to move forward.

    US diplomacy made significant efforts in recent years to outplay Russia
    in the South Caucasus by normalizing Turkish-Armenian relations. In
    implementing that now failed strategy, US diplomacy made resolution
    of the Karabakh conflict secondary to Turkish-Armenian rapprochement.

    This was in vain, as the new Armenian move has shown. From now on,
    even if the Armenian parliament ratifies the protocols, this will be
    a mere propaganda move as Turkey engaged in the talks and signed the
    protocols with the understanding that Yerevan will firmly recognise
    the Turkish-Armenian border and drop allegations of genocide against
    Turkey.

    The American approach would be very credible and intelligent, were
    it not for a fundamental omission: Armenia is governed from Moscow,
    it is not an independent state.

    Correcting the error does not mean doing the opposite, i.e. giving
    priority to resolution of the Karabakh conflict and postponing
    Turkish-Armenian rapprochement. The US should approach the region from
    another angle - that of rewarding countries for practical cooperation
    with America.

    For almost two decades Azerbaijan has been a more committed partner
    and ally of the United States than Armenia in the South Caucasus and
    more important in practical terms. Azerbaijan sees no rewards for that
    choice as far as resolution of the Karabakh conflict is concerned. As
    a result, the country is drifting back to closer ties with Moscow,
    not necessarily in the expectation that the Kremlin will play into the
    hands of Baku this time, but because of the greater sense of security
    the Russians can provide, especially in the post-August 2008 realities
    of the South Caucasus.

    US reluctance to put pressure on Armenia over the Karabakh issue is
    a total mystery, given America's well-known practicality. A possible
    explanation is that the loyalty of American citizens of Armenian
    descent is dearer to policymakers in Washington than Azerbaijan's
    lasting loyalty. However, I can hardly imagine success of a foreign
    policy influenced by the quasi-religious prejudices of a group of
    citizens about "small, Christian Armenia surrounded by the wild,
    Muslim Turks of Azerbaijan and Turkey."

    If we all claim to be defending goodies against baddies, then the
    120,000 Armenians who lived in the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomy
    of Azerbaijan are no better than the 300,000 Azeris expelled from
    Zangezur, which was not an autonomy in Armenia, as part of the
    on-going Karabakh conflict. If they are entitled to more respect
    than the Azerbaijanis of Zangezur, that can only be recognition of
    military action as a legitimate and effective tool in the conflict.

    US assistance in restoring and expanding the authority of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomy within Azerbaijan is the solution that
    will lead to sustained peace and growing US influence in the South
    Caucasus. It will protect US diplomacy from new setbacks like the
    one created by the Armenian Constitutional Court a few days ago.
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