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Clinton Briefed On Latest Armenian-Azeri Summit

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  • Clinton Briefed On Latest Armenian-Azeri Summit

    CLINTON BRIEFED ON LATEST ARMENIAN-AZERI SUMMIT
    By Emil Danielyan

    http://www.armenianow.com/karabakh/35317/clinton_aliyev_munich_nagorno_karabakh_conflict
    Karabakh | 06.02.12 | 14:12

    Photo: www.state.gov

    www.azatutyun.am

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was briefed on the results
    of the latest Armenian-Azerbaijani summit in Russia during separate
    talks with Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev and Armenia's Foreign
    Minister Edward Nalbandyan held over the weekend.

    Clinton met with the two men on the sidelines of an annual conference
    on global security that took place in Munich, Germany. She made no
    public statements after those meetings.

    In a short statement, Aliyev's press office said the Azerbaijani leader
    and the chief U.S. diplomat had a "broad exchange of opinions on the
    settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh conflict." It
    did not elaborate.

    The Armenian Foreign Ministry said Nalbandyan and Clinton "discussed
    in detail the latest developments in the negotiating process of
    the Karabakh settlement" and, in particular, Aliyev's January 23
    meeting with President Serzh Sargsyan that was hosted by their Russian
    counterpart, Dmitry Medvedev, in the Russian city of Sochi. Nalbandyan
    shared her with the details of the summit, a ministry statement said.

    A senior U.S. State Department official told U.S. journalists ahead of
    the Munich Security Conference that the Karabakh issue is "something
    the Secretary takes a personal interest in." "The Secretary wants
    to talk to both sides about the results of that [summit] and the
    follow-on from that and how we can help move the process forward,"
    the official said.

    In joint statement with Medvedev issued after the Sochi talks, Aliyev
    and Sargsyan did not announce progress towards an Armenian-Azerbaijani
    agreement on the Basic Principles of the conflict's resolution
    jointly drafted by the United States, Russia and France. They only
    "expressed readiness to accelerate the achievement" of such a framework
    peace deal.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said there is still "a whole
    series of issues that remain to be agreed" by the conflicting parties.

    This was a further indication that a breakthrough in the long-running
    talks is unlikely in the coming months.

    The Sochi statement insisted that the nearly one dozen Aliyev-Sargsyan
    meetings organized by Medvedev since late 2008 have brought the parties
    closer to peace. Both the U.S. and France have also repeatedly welcomed
    the outgoing Russian president's mediating efforts that have enhanced
    Moscow's role in the peace process.

    According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry statement, Nalbandyan
    stressed the importance of the U.S. involvement in the process. The
    statement also quoted Clinton as saying that Washington will continue
    to lend "full support" to the conflict's resolution by "in a solely
    peaceful way."

    Both Baku and Yerevan say that the existing peace proposals by the
    U.S., Russian and French co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group are largely
    in tune with their positions. At the same time senior Azerbaijani
    officials regularly criticize the mediating powers.

    Ali Ahmedov, executive secretary of Aliyev's Yeni Azerbaycan party,
    demanded "significant changes" in the Minsk Group's activities the
    day after the Sochi summit. The Trend news agency quoted Ahmedov
    as saying that Baku could seek "a new format" for the negotiating
    process if the group's three co-chairs fail to take "serious steps
    to resolve the conflict within a short period."



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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