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Karabakh Key To Turkish - Armenian Peace - Azerbaijan

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  • Karabakh Key To Turkish - Armenian Peace - Azerbaijan

    KARABAKH KEY TO TURKISH - ARMENIAN PEACE - AZERBAIJAN

    New York Times
    April 23 2010

    BAKU/YEREVAN (Reuters) - Azerbaijan warned Armenia on Friday it
    could not achieve anything in the region unless it makes peace over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, and warned its army was ready "to hit any target"
    to take the breakaway region back.

    The comments follow the collapse on Thursday of a U.S. and
    Russian-backed bid to mend ties between Armenia and Turkey after a
    century of hostility stemming from the World War One mass killing of
    Armenians by Ottoman forces.

    Armenia suspended ratification of a deal to establish diplomatic
    ties and reopen its border with Turkey after Ankara said Armenia
    should first reach terms with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh,
    where ethnic Armenians threw off Azeri rule in the early 1990s with
    backing from Armenia.

    Armenia says it is unacceptable to link the two issues.

    But in Baku, Azeri President Ilham Aliyev said nothing would be
    possible without a solution to Nagorno-Karabakh, something that has
    evaded mediators since a cease-fire was agreed in 1994.

    "You cannot achieve anything in the region without a solution to
    the Karabakh conflict," Aliyev said in a televised meeting of the
    government.

    Azerbaijan, its military budget swollen by petrodollars, frequently
    threatens to take the mountain region back by force.

    But the rhetoric became sharper after the thaw began between Turkey
    and Armenia late last year, and traditionally good ties with the
    United States have become strained by Washington's support for the
    rapprochement.

    ISOLATED

    "The fact that we continue peaceful negotiations is a major compromise
    on our part," Aliyev said.

    Defence Minister Safar Abiyev told him: "The Azerbaijan army has
    all the capabilities to hit any target on the territory of Armenia
    if necessary."

    To the vast majority of Armenians, the idea of giving up some of
    the land won during the Nagorno-Karabakh war in exchange for an open
    border and diplomatic ties with Turkey, is unacceptable.

    But Turkey, which closed the border in 1993 in solidarity with
    Azerbaijan, has been stung by the backlash in Azerbaijan, an oil and
    gas exporter and one of the West's key hopes for gas for the planned
    Nabucco pipeline.

    Though the deal is now on ice, some analysts warn it is too late to
    sooth tempers in Azerbaijan.

    "It increases instability because the process has left Azerbaijan
    isolated and effectively pulled the rug from under its foreign policy
    framework, built on close ties with the U.S. and Turkey," said Svante
    Cornell of the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute.

    The Armenian-Turkish peace process has also roused opposition within
    Armenia and the huge Armenian diaspora, many of whom trace their
    roots to the killings and deportations of World War One.

    On Friday, the eve of the 95th anniversary of the massacres, thousands
    of Armenians with flaming torches marched through the capital Yerevan
    to demand Turkey recognise the events as genocide.

    Turkey rejects the term genocide and says many Muslim Turks and Kurds,
    as well as Christian Armenians, were killed in inter-communal violence
    as Russian forces invaded eastern Anatolia during World War One.
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