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NK analyst on Vilnius conference:"evidently, they are deluding thems

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  • NK analyst on Vilnius conference:"evidently, they are deluding thems

    Nagorno-Karabakh analyst on Vilnius conference: "evidently, they are deluding themselves"

    Regnum, Russia
    May 7 2006

    "The forum on NATO's Role in Defrosting Frozen Conflicts recently
    held in Vilnius is a landmark event revealing a number of trends,"
    Karabakh analyst David Babayan commented to a REGNUM reporter. First
    of all, the Forum confirms the gravity of NATO's plan to strengthen
    its role in resolving conflicts in South Caucasus.

    "We can only welcome participation of such an influential organization
    in peaceful conflict settlement in this strategically important South
    Caucasian region. However, the conference participants offer NATO
    a ready approach, a preset settlement scenario. They behave quite
    contradictory in this context," David Babayan said. He reminded
    that in the declaration adopted at the forum it is pointed out that
    unsettled conflicts in Transdniestria, Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and
    Nagorno Karabakh corrupt general European well-being: "The existence
    of unrecognized states is straightforwardly characterized in the
    declaration as aggressive separatism. Meanwhile, another declaration
    article proclaims that unsettled European conflicts may be settled
    only based on principles of democratic pluralism and respect for human
    rights, as well as with the assistance of peacekeeping missions. These
    two theses conflict with each other. On the one hand, unrecognized
    states are stigmatized as aggressively separatist, which excludes
    every chance to recognize their self-determination. On the other
    hand, principles of democratic pluralism and respect for human rights
    are maintained. What is it really that hinders application of the
    abovementioned democratic principles?" David Babayan questions.

    The situation, according to Babayan, is rather paradoxical: politicians
    are trying to "delude themselves and avoid taking decisions crucial
    for the strengthening of democracy itself."

    "Meanwhile, international conflicts are a good test to measure
    democracy. It is how states behave in the process of conflict
    settlement and how they approach the settlement that indicates most
    clearly sincerity of the states' adherence to democratic values.

    Otherwise, lofty democratic ideals merely camouflage aggressive
    imperial striving," analyst stressed. He believes that the threat
    of such neo-imperial striving to democratic communities could not
    be overemphasized. It is too often underestimated due to the small
    size and relative weakness of states who adopt such covert official
    ideology. "An analogy with medicine immediately comes to mind.

    Generally speaking, the size of viruses is neglectable compared to
    the size of organisms which they invade, but the former are able to
    parasitize and paralyze the latter, even when these are healthy and
    very large organisms," David Babayan resumed.
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