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Oil interests hang in the balance in Karabakh conflict

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  • Oil interests hang in the balance in Karabakh conflict

    The Georgian Messenger
    23 April 2004

    Prepared by Anna Arzanova
    Oil interests hang in the balance in Karabakh conflict

    According to the newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta, the aggravation of
    Armenian-Azeri conflict may interfere in the construction of the pipeline
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan. For the first time after ten years of peace, there has
    been talk in Baku and in Yerevan about the possibility of the renewal of
    military actions in the zone of the Nagorno-Karabakh con-flict.

    Last week, the Minister of Defense of Azerbaijan stated that a war between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan may start at any moment and specified that it can
    take place given that Armenian authorities are loosing control over the
    situation in the country, where the political crisis is aggravating.

    The United States is concerned that armed forces may act independent of
    politicians and provoke armed conflict themselves. The clearest sign of
    Washington's concern regarding the development of events in the zone of
    Armenian-Azeri conflict is the appointment of Steven Mann as the American
    co-chair of the Minsk Group of the OSCE.

    This diplomat managed to solve the most important problem for the United
    States to direct the transportation of energy resources from the Caspian Sea
    region to the West, which is needed by Washingon. Steven Mann has close
    relations not only with the leadership of one of the countries involved in
    the conflict Azerbaijan, but also with Western oil companies, which have
    interests in this region.

    It is possible that Washington really intends to stimulate the process of
    regulating the conflict. Though, probably, the task before Steven Mann is to
    postpone armed conflict until 2005. By this time, the BTC pipeline will be
    set in motion. After this, the insuring of the pipeline's security will
    become an international problem.

    The West will at any price not allow the renewal of hostilities, though, as
    the former co-chairman of the Minsk Group of OSCE of Russia Vladimer
    Kazimirov said, the experience gained by Steven Mann at the position of
    president's special representative of the United States in Caspian region,
    will not help him in this new field. "There are lots of ways to exert
    pressure to avoid armed actions and the smell of oil is not necessary for
    this," states the expert.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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