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The New York Times: The Unity On Nagornyy Karabakh Issue Allowed To

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  • The New York Times: The Unity On Nagornyy Karabakh Issue Allowed To

    THE NEW YORK TIMES: THE UNITY ON NAGORNYY KARABAKH ISSUE ALLOWED TO SAY ABOUT A GLIMMER CONSENSUS BETWEEN OBAMA AND PUTIN

    arminfo
    Thursday, June 21, 16:46

    A day after the presidents of the United States, Russia and France
    issued a joint statement calling for a peaceful settlement to the more
    than 20-year war between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed
    territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, the two enemies publicly blamed each
    other Tuesday for failing to resolve the conflict.

    To note, the statement issued Monday by President Obama, Vladimir V.

    Putin of Russia and Francois Hollande of France at the Group of 20
    meeting in Mexico faulted the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan
    for not following steps toward an agreement urged last year. The
    statement called on them to move swiftly to make "the important
    decisions necessary to reach a lasting and peaceful settlement."

    Armenia's foreign minister, Edward Nalbandian, said on Tuesday that
    his country was prepared to negotiate a settlement along terms outlined
    by the Minsk Group, and he accused Azerbaijan of refusing to do so.

    "Unlike Armenia, Azerbaijan has rejected and continues to reject
    the co-chair countries' proposals to consolidate the cease-fire,
    to withdraw snipers from the line of contact, to create a mechanism
    on investigating cease-fire violations and incidents," Mr. Nalbandian
    said. "Armenia, unlike Azerbaijan, has on numerous occasions reiterated
    that it is ready to continue the negotiations."

    Meanwhile, a spokesman for the Azerbaijan Foreign Ministry, Elman T.

    Abdullayev, said that Azerbaijan had long been willing to sign a
    comprehensive peace agreement and accept proposals by the Minsk Group,
    but that Armenia was preventing a truce by refusing to first withdraw
    its troops from Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "We have shown a very clear and concrete will on Azerbaijan's side
    to start the peace process," Mr. Abdullayev said in a telephone
    interview. "Armenian occupying forces must leave so we can move
    forward in the peace process. That's the major and No. 1 obstacle."

    In Mexico, the unity on addressing the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    provided a glimmer of consensus between Mr. Obama and Mr. Putin,
    whose face-to-face meeting on Monday was largely characterized by
    their disagreement over how to handle the conflict in Syria.

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