Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Nagorno Karabakh: Another summit meeting is planned

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Nagorno Karabakh: Another summit meeting is planned

    EurasiaNet, NY
    May 9 2006

    NAGORNO-KARABAKH: ANOTHER SUMMIT MEETING IS PLANNED
    Haroutiun Khachatrian 5/09/06


    Armenia and Azerbaijan seem prepared to make yet another attempt at
    settling the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The presidents of the two
    states are now tentatively scheduled to hold their second summit
    meeting of the year.

    Armenian officials revealed May 5 that President Robert Kocharian
    hopes to meet his Azerbaijani counterpart, Ilham Aliyev, in June. The
    precise time and venue for the summit will be determined at a meeting
    between the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers later in May.
    The announcement followed an early May meeting of the OSCE's Minsk
    Group - comprising representatives of the United States, Russia and
    France. Following that Minsk Group meeting in Moscow, French Minsk
    Group Co-Chair Bernard Fassier traveled to Yerevan and Baku to secure
    both parties' agreement to another summit.

    There were high hopes for a breakthrough heading into the first
    summit meeting of the year between Kocharian and Aliyev, held in
    February in France. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].
    However, that meeting ended without any tangible progress toward a
    lasting peace settlement. Both sides have remained tight-lipped about
    the discussions in France, as well as about any new proposals
    currently under consideration.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian indicated that Karabakh
    discussions remained in an acutely sensitive phase, in which the
    slightest misstep by either side could derail the renewed efforts to
    foster a peace deal. "The problem now is to avoid a setback, and we
    expect appropriate moves from Azerbaijan," the Armenpress news agency
    quoted Oskanian as saying on May 7.

    Since the summit meeting in France, Azerbaijan has appeared to be the
    party most dissatisfied with the proposed peace framework. The first
    Kocharian-Aliyev summit talks appeared to stumble over differences on
    a proposed referendum that would determine Karabakh's political
    status. Aliyev and other Azerbaijani officials have since repeatedly
    stated that they will never to agree to Karabakh's secession from
    Azerbaijan.

    Prior to first summit of 2006, Armenia made what officials in Yerevan
    considered to be a major concession, abandoning their insistence on a
    so-called "package" settlement, in which Karabakh's status would have
    been determined in tandem with a decision to return to Azerbaijan
    territory occupied by Armenian forces. Armenian leaders are now
    willing to go along with a "step-by-step" settlement, in which the
    return of occupied lands, along with the return of Azerbaijani
    internally displaced persons, is followed by settlement of Karabakh's
    status.

    The United States has been the most active Minsk Group member in
    promoting a Karabakh settlement. Assistant Secretary of State Daniel
    Fried visited the region in March, and US Minsk Group Co-Chair Steven
    Mann engaged in a round of shuttle diplomacy in late April, just days
    prior to Aliyev three-day visit to Washington.

    Nagorno-Karabakh figured prominently in Aliyev's discussions with US
    officials, including President George W. Bush. [For background see
    the Eurasia Insight archive]. Armenian officials and policy analysts
    had feared that Aliyev would strike a geopolitical deal with the Bush
    administration, in which Washington would provide unqualified support
    for Azerbaijan on the Karabakh issue in return for Baku's backing on
    the tough US stance toward Iran.

    Following Aliyev's trip, Azerbaijani officials voiced satisfaction
    with the US position on Karabakh. Nevertheless, Armenian officials
    were relieved that no Azerbaijani-American geopolitical deal was
    struck. "We know that Aliyev was made to understand in Washington . .
    . that seeking a military solution to the Karabakh conflict is not an
    option. We appreciate it," Oskanian said, according to Armenpress.

    Even if the second summit meeting is held in June as currently
    planned, and the two presidents somehow manage to agree on a peace
    framework, there are concerns that they will have trouble selling a
    settlement to the Armenian and Azerbaijani public. In Armenia, for
    example, there appears to be substantial opposition to the withdrawal
    of Armenian forces from the occupied territories around Karabakh. For
    example, Deputy Defense Minister Manvel Grigorian, who is also a
    leader of Yerkrapah, the influential organization of the Karabakh war
    veterans, recently spoke out against the return of occupied
    territories. "We have no lands to cede," Grigorian said at a
    Yerkrapah meeting May 8.


    Editor's Note: Haroutiun Khachatrian is a Yerevan-based writer
    specializing in economic and political affairs.
Working...
X