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Moscow attack should push Russia to tackle Karabakh issue

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  • Moscow attack should push Russia to tackle Karabakh issue

    Haykakan Zhamanak, Armenia
    April 1 2010


    Moscow attack should push Russia to tackle Karabakh issue



    The attacks on the Moscow metro on 29 March can become yet another
    argument to convince the Russians that the Karabakh settlement should
    not be delayed, the editor of the pro-opposition.

    The Karabakh settlement should not be delayed because Russia's North
    Caucasus might be affected if war resumes between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan, Nikol Pashinyan said in a comment on 1 April.

    "The possibility of this war should be a very serious concern for
    Russia, because the war itself would mean an uncontrollable flow of
    ammunition and armed groups. Like a chain reaction, instability could
    reach the North Caucasus, which is well within the range of a shell to
    be fired from the possible Armenian-Azerbaijani war zone," Pashinyan
    said.

    The Karabakh settlement is likely to top the list of Russia's
    priorities because tension in the region has increased due to the
    developments in Armenian-Turkish relations and the probability of a
    new Armenian-Azerbaijani war, Pashinyan said.

    The editor believed that "only the settlement of Armenian-Azerbaijani
    and Armenian-Turkish relations can become the guarantee the prevention
    of war".

    The attacks in Moscow may boost Russia's recent interest in
    contributing to Armenian-Azerbaijani and Armenian-Turkish settlements
    and "this can have a decisive meaning for further developments in the
    Nagornyy Karabakh issue", the editor said.

    Pashinyan hinted that the Moscow attacks may have had an impact on
    recent developments in the Karabakh talks, saying the blasts coincided
    with a 24-hour period between two different statements from the OSCE
    Minsk Group Russian co-chair, Yuriy Merzlyakov. Merzlyakov said on 28
    March after meeting the Karabakh president that the Armenian side
    opposes some provisions of the Madrid principles of the settlement,
    but denied this statement on 29 March after meeting the Armenian
    leadership in Yerevan.

    "It is a little improbable that Russian diplomacy would act with such
    speed," the editorial said. "It is very likely that all this is mere
    coincidence. However, it is known that there are no coincidences in
    politics."
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