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Matthew Bryza: `We need constructive ambiguity'

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  • Matthew Bryza: `We need constructive ambiguity'

    Mediamax, Armenia
    June 12 2013

    Matthew Bryza: `We need constructive ambiguity'


    The exclusive interview of former U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of
    State and former OSCE Minsk Group U.S. Co-chair Matthew Bryza to
    Mediamax

    - During a lecture in Baku on June 7 you have reportedly said that
    West made a mistake when it decided to separate the Turkish-Armenian
    process from the Nagorno Karabakh settlement. This statement created a
    lot of heated discussions in Armenian political circles and media.

    - Well, actually I said the following - it was a mistake for the
    United States government to end the constructive ambiguity stipulating
    around whether or not the NK peace process and the Turkey-Armenia
    reconciliation process were explicitly linked or de-inked.

    By explicitly disconnecting both processes, the U.S. offered one of
    the key benefits Armenia hoped to receive from the NK peace process -
    reopening the borders with Turkey. Once it was clear, Armenia would
    receive this benefit without the need to make compromises on other
    issues in the Minsk Group process. Armenia naturally hardened its
    negotiating position on NK (and in fact drew off some of the key
    concessions it had already made).

    At the same time, I also said it would be a mistake to explicitly link
    two processes and to say there can only be Turkey-Armenia
    normalization if there is a settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict.
    This is an equally destructive position. A much better thing to do is
    to recognize the truth, the logical truth, which is to inexplicitly
    link these two processes. If you make progress on one that may mean
    direct or indirect progress on the other, because progress on one
    process will improve the mood and decrease the anger and emotionality.

    A better policy, which the U.S. government followed until August 2009,
    was to maintain ambiguity regarding the connectivity of the two
    processes and to state publicly that progress on one track will
    reinforce progress on the other track, even though the two processes
    are not directly connected.

    So, don't explicitly link or de-link the two processes. Let
    constructive ambiguity work to the advantage of the peaceful
    settlement.

    - When politicians try to link two processes in this or other way,
    everybody expects compromises from Armenia and not from Azerbaijan or
    Turkey. And if we talk about Turkish-Armenian relations, Yerevan's
    position is clear - let's open the border and establish relations
    without preconditions. What else do you expect from Armenia?

    - I think that it's not a helpful approach. All issues that you have
    just described are handled as an organic whole, and each progress, or
    each step over that one side gains have to be brought into an
    appropriate negotiating process by making a concession on the other
    side, let's say - return of territories. And so, at any negotiation
    all of the factors are interrelated. And it's not easy for either side
    to pull out one set of factors and focus on those.

    I think it won't be helpful if, let's say the Azerbaijanis say we are
    not going to negotiate any further, unless all the 7 territories are
    returned: return the territories and then we will negotiate further,
    or return the territories and then we'll accept the Turkey-Armenia
    border re-opening.

    I think the only way you get to a final settlement is to negotiate all
    the aspects of Basic Principles at the same time as part of one big
    deal.

    - But the Turkish-Armenian process is not part of Basic Principles at all.

    - That's right. It's not. It's a negotiation between two countries.
    But restoring all the trade links between Armenia and Turkey and
    Armenia and Azerbaijan - that is part of the Basic Principles. Armenia
    and Turkey have a right to pursue whatever they want to pursue. What I
    am saying is that it was a mistake when the United States said
    explicitly there is no link between Turkey-Armenia normalization and
    NK settlement.

    - So, you say that if there is a progress on NK issue, Turkey will be
    more interested and motivated to establish relations with Armenia. But
    there is another opinion, which was voiced by Armenian Foreign
    Minister Vartan Oskanian still in 2001. `If Turkey opened the border
    with Armenia or re-established the relations, that would make Yerevan
    more constructive on NK issue, because Yerevan would soften a lot of
    demands in terms of security', he said then.

    - This is another argument that many of us, including myself, has made
    during the Minsk process. I myself have made this argument in Baku.
    But Baku says `no'.

    - Turkey openly took a pro-Azeri position at the very beginning of the
    conflict and closed its border with Armenia during the NK war.
    Obviously, the Turkish government made a mistake about 20 years ago
    and when today you talk about any linkage between the processes, it
    looks like you are trying to legitimize that mistake.

    - When I was a Minsk Group Co-Chair I was against any attempts to
    explicitly link the two processes. And I myself discussed these issues
    with Turkey's President, Turkey's opposition leaders and parliamentary
    leaders saying `please don't explicitly link the NK process with
    Turkey-Armenia normalization'. At the same time, I am saying that it's
    also unhelpful explicitly to de-link them. So, it's better just to not
    even talk about whether they are linked or de-linked. See the reality,
    the logical reality which is at the heart of what Vartan Oskanian was
    saying: that if you make progress on one, you'll make progress on the
    other one. That's the reality.

    - Do you think that Turkish-Armenian protocols signed in 2009 are
    still alive, or one day Armenia or Turkey will formally withdraw from
    this process?

    - I think neither Armenia nor Turkey will withdraw from that process.
    There was a very difficult constructive negotiation between the
    Armenian and Turkish sides, and in the end it was Prime Minister
    Erdogan who himself came out in the end and said that these two
    processes must be explicitly linked, and the Turkish parliament agreed
    with him.

    I hope and I believe that as focus is restored over the Nagorno
    Karabakh peace process, we will see the political mood in Turkey
    change, and I hope for Armenia's perspective to improve, so that we'll
    get to a point when we see those protocols ratified. But the political
    reality right now in Turkey is that unless there is progress on NK,
    the mood is going to remain negative. So, what we have to do is to
    keep working and re-invigorate the Karabakh peace process.

    - In your remarks you stressed that there will never be an NK
    settlement as long as Azerbaijanis treat Armenians, and Azerbaijanis
    who engage with Armenians, as enemies. Don't you think that the
    problem is that nobody is telling this to Ilham Aliyev publicly - I
    mean officials from EU and U.S. As a result, we have the Ramil Safarov
    case, the Aykram Aylisli case and we have a generation growing in
    Azerbaijan, which is every day being fed with anti-Armenian
    propaganda.

    - Certainly I agree with that. As long as the Azerbaijanis can't even
    perceive Armenians as a friend there is no way to resolve the
    conflict. And the reality is that the President of Azerbaijan, I
    believe, has gone quite a bit further in negotiations with the
    President of Armenia than the society is ready for in Azerbaijan.
    Let's say there are other political forces in Azerbaijan, who are not
    ready to go as far as the President of Azerbaijan.

    - But it was the President of Azerbaijan who personally pardoned Ramil
    Safarov and made him a hero. Don't you think that this is a bad
    example for the young generation in Azerbaijan to make a hero of
    someone who has killed an Armenian?

    - This case has actually really upset the Armenians. I think now is
    really the time for the leadership of both countries, but more in
    Azerbaijan of course, to come forward. And if we are serious about
    having a negotiated settlement we have to talk to each other. There
    will be results if the two Presidents trust each other and take
    actions not to treat each other as enemies.

    Ara Tadevosyan talked to Matthew Bryza.

    http://www.mediamax.am/en/news/interviews/7578/

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