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... Spring Will Come: Once More On The Subject Of Promising Nuances

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  • ... Spring Will Come: Once More On The Subject Of Promising Nuances

    ... SPRING WILL COME: ONCE MORE ON THE SUBJECT OF PROMISING NUANCES OF THE KARABAKH CONFLICT RESOLUTION
    by political observer Grigori Alexandrjan
    Translated by A. Ignatkin

    Source: Novoye Vremya (Yerevan), December 5, 2006, EV
    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    December 13, 2006 Wednesday

    ARMENIAN POLITICAL OBSERVER ON THE KARABAKH CONFLICT RESOLUTION;
    Analysis of the Karabakh process: a view from Yerevan.

    Analysis of the opinions on the Karabakh conflict resolution
    process coordinated by chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group leads to
    two conclusions. First, the process is anything but clear. Second,
    practically nothing about the talks changed in the last 12 years.

    Probably save for the shape of the peace talks as such because the
    Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh is no longer involved. Status
    of the region remains the stumbling block for the whole process
    of negotiations. All sorts of statements on what is presented as
    "progress" are only restricted to the effort to overcome consequences
    of the armed confrontation. Why are the Armenians so worried about
    the step-by-step resolution plan? Because we fear that Azerbaijan may
    flatly refuse to discuss the status of Karabakh once the troops are
    withdrawn from the territories they currently control. Unfortunately,
    these fears are not groundless. They are not just a diplomatic whim
    or anything like that.

    Baku annulled Karabakh Armenians' autonomous status and went to war
    on them when not a single district around Karabakh was occupied.

    When, in fact, Azerbaijani kept living there. When Azerbaijan was
    defeated and conflict resolution talks were under way, our neighbors
    drafted a Constitution that does not specify any self-government
    powers for Karabakh. When Ilham Aliyev or his Foreign Minister Elmar
    Mamedjarov maintain nowadays that the matter of status should be
    settled on the basis of the acting Constitution of Azerbaijan,
    we are at a loss over how we are supposed to react. Demanding
    it at this point makes all and any talks a plain waste of time
    and effort. That is why the Armenians insist on a document that
    will specify overcoming consequences of the military phase of the
    conflict and, no less important, outline the principle definition
    of the status of Karabakh. In other words, the Armenians stand for
    gradual implementation of a package accord so that neither involved
    party will be able to shirk any clause of the document.

    As for Aliyev, he says he is not going to sign any document that so
    much even hints at the possibility that Karabakh may eventually quit
    Azerbaijan. In the meantime, everyone is stone-cold confident that
    Aliyev will be elected president again in 2008 (he will all but elect
    himself, really), but Robert Kocharjan in Armenia will step down in
    2008. It follows that the positions of the involved parties are not
    going to change at least until 2008. Count on Aliyev not to change
    his stand on the matter. And what will the next president of Armenia
    do? Our neighbors would certainly like to know that. They are stalling
    for time in the hope that the new head of the Armenian state will
    reconsider his options. That is why we do not really expect Aliyev
    to sign any documents pending election of the president in Armenia.

    If the heads of states decide to sign a document that does not specify
    the procedure of Karabakh's status definition on the other hand, they
    will incur the wrath of their own peoples and opposition forces. It
    does not take a genius to foresee that every president will present
    the document as his own diplomatic triumph. In the meantime, it is
    impossible to have two winners and not a single loser, isn't it?

    Statements made in Yerevan and Baku nowadays plainly indicate that
    neither side so much as entertains the thought of a compromise in
    the matter of Karabakh's status even though both capitals do extol
    the latest meeting between Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents in
    Minsk, Belarus.

    All of that confirms our previous forecasts that chairmen of the OSCE
    Minsk Group would do everything in their power to create at least
    an illusion of some progress made in this "year of opportunities",
    everything to prevent the process of negotiations from becoming
    history altogether. Neither involved party will outsmart the other.

    Neither will international mediators fare any better. Judging by
    the latest statements made by senior Armenian and Azerbaijani
    negotiators, they are determined to be on the level with their
    respective peoples. It apparently means that we will yet encounter new
    "promising nuances" in the conflict resolution saga.

    It is the unbelievable lack of information on what is happening in
    the conflict area and what the conflicting sides are after displayed
    by some representatives of the West that cannot help being amazing.

    According to a story in the Baku newspaper Zerkalo, one Steffen
    Raiche of the German Bundestag believes that the Armenians living in
    Karabakh might accept autonomy in Azerbaijan as long as the Azerbaijani
    authorities permit them to commemorate victims of genocide of the
    Armenians in Osmani Turkey! Along with everything else, the German
    lawmaker is confident that it is the Azerbaijanis who aspire for a
    just and fair resolution. "The Armenians themselves will slow down
    their development unless they do what they can to have spring to
    come into the region. Whoever refuses to join prosperous Azerbaijan
    nowadays will miss his chance for millennia to come..."
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