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  • Nagorno-Karabakh talks: prelude to peace?

    EurasiaNet Organization
    April 12 2005

    NAGORNO KARABAKH TALKS: PRELUDE TO PEACE?
    Samvel Martirosyan 4/12/05


    Tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh are
    growing in the run-up to an upcoming summit meeting to discuss new
    proposals from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe for an end to the 17-year conflict over the disputed region.

    For the past month, skirmishes on the ceasefire line between Armenian
    and Azerbaijani forces have been reported almost every day. The
    exchange of gunfire has brought the highest casualty rate since the
    1994 ceasefire agreement that ended the three-year war between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan over the territory. In March, at least six
    servicemen were killed in the exchanges. Three Azerbaijani soldiers
    have also been taken prisoner by Armenian forces, and the Armenian
    defense ministry reported on April 7 that an Armenian soldier was now
    held by Azerbaijan.

    The clashes come as both sides state that they are ready to make
    serious compromises to resolve the conflict. Armenian Foreign
    Minister Vartan Oskanian and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
    Mammadyarov are scheduled to meet on April 15 in London as a
    precursor to a possible meeting between Armenian President Robert
    Kocharian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on the sidelines of
    a May 16 Council of Europe summit in Warsaw.

    "We have never questioned the need for compromises in the settlement
    of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict," Armenian President Robert
    Kocharian was quoted as saying by the news agency Mediamax at an
    April 11 meeting with students at Yerevan State University. "We have
    to understand that compromises in the settlement are inevitable. But
    we had better not speak about their possible scale today."

    The extent of those compromises, Kocharian said, depended on
    Armenia's domestic political and economic situation and the position
    taken by the international community on a resolution to the crisis.
    Azerbaijan has charged that the ruckus over the skirmishes is a
    negotiating tactic staged by Armenia to strengthen their position at
    the London meeting, as well as to shore up popular support for
    President Robert Kocharian's government.

    "[The Armenians] have to sit at the negotiating table and have their
    final say," Azerbaijani Parliamentary Deputy Speaker Ziyafat Asgarov
    stated on April 6, the Baku-based Space TV reported. "I believe that
    they are trying to avoid having their say and deliberately violating
    the cease-fire to give the international community the impression
    that stability is being disrupted."

    Speaking at the Armenian parliament's March 29-31 hearings on
    Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenian Defense Minister Serge Sarkissian charged
    that attempts by Azerbaijani forces in the territory to take better
    positions had reduced the distance between Armenian and Azerbaijani
    troops to a mere 35-50 meters in some places. "Where do we want to
    lead the people, what do we want - a new war? . . . Can war last for
    eternity?" the Armenian news service ArmInfo quoted Sarkissian, a
    former commander of Armenian forces in Karabakh, as saying on April
    7. "This is an option too, though. [W]hen people make such a
    decision, then the defense minister will also have to assume this
    position."

    In Armenia, Russian news outlets have added to the tensions with
    reports that cite Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev as saying that
    "[t]he war may start at any moment." Azerbaijani media outlets have
    not carried the remarks.

    The OSCE has also expressed concern over the growing Nagorno Karabakh
    tensions. "Aggressive statements must stop and the sides must do
    their best to establish an atmosphere of mutual trust," OSCE Acting
    Chairman and Slovenian Foreign Minister Dimitri Rupel stated during a
    March 30 trip to Yerevan. During his stay in the Armenian capital,
    Rupel met with the de facto president of Nagorno Karabakh, Arkadi
    Ghukasian, and told reporters that, despite the ceasefire violations,
    chances were strong that negotiations between Armenia, Azerbaijan and
    Nagorno Karabakh would open by the end of summer.

    The participation of Nagorno Karabakh representatives in the talks
    would be a first for the OSCE-brokered peace process - and a move
    long opposed by Azerbaijan. The OSCE appears to hold strong hopes
    that Baku will yield on this point. "There are some details for which
    solutions are impossible without the participation of Nagorno
    Karabakh," OSCE Minsk Group Chairman Russian Ambassador Yuri
    Merzlyakov told the Azerbaijani news agency APA in a recent
    interview.

    Meanwhile, both sides stress that they are ready to talk peace.

    Sarkissian has stated that the Armenian government would agree to a
    referendum on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh to be held in the
    territory under the auspices of the OSCE and United Nations, and also
    agree to negotiations over the status of the seven Azerbaijani
    regions currently occupied by Armenian forces. The defense minister
    presented the fact that Armenia has not to date recognized
    Nagorno-Karabakh's independence as a third concession made to
    Azerbaijan, though the chances appear to be slim that Baku would
    acknowledge it as such.

    Increasingly, Yerevan appears to be focusing its peace overtures on
    the seven regions bordering Karabakh that are currently occupied by
    Armenian forces. "I think such a pragmatic approach by the Armenian
    side may become a pledge of success," Sarkissian told parliament.
    Armenia, however, he said, would not return the regions to Azerbaijan
    without "strict guarantees of security and non-resumption of war,
    guaranteed by the international community, separate countries and
    organizations."

    The statements could be seen as a quid pro quo for Azerbaijani
    concessions to Armenian demands on Karabakh itself. Armenian Foreign
    Minister Vardan Oskanian has indicated that Yerevan sees the two
    issues as separate. "We will not concede Nagorno Karabagh; we will
    not concede the security of Nagorno Karabagh population; and will not
    admit a status of enclave for Nagorno Karabagh," Oskanian told
    parliament. " All this does not mean that the option territories for
    status cannot be discussed."

    Speaking at the parliamentary hearings in Yerevan, Vladimir
    Kazimirov, a key architect of the 1994 ceasefire and Russia's former
    envoy to the OSCE Minsk Group, the body charged with overseeing the
    Karabakh peace talks, pushed the Kocharian government to drop its
    traditional insistence on a package peace deal, terming the strategy
    "not realistic." Given differences between the two sides, he argued,
    a gradual approach is the only way to peace.

    Meanwhile, Azerbaijan has indicated that it would agree to a
    step-by-step withdrawal from the seven occupied territories, but
    cautioned that the ceasefire must hold during the talks in London.
    "Regular violations of the ceasefire carry the aim of increasing
    tensions. Armenia wants to receive [from this] a postponement [of
    talks], citing the tense situation. But losing time is not
    advantageous to either of the sides," Deputy Foreign Minister Araz
    Azimov was quoted as saying by the Baku-based newspaper Zerkalo on
    April 8.


    Editor's Note: Samvel Martirosyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
    political analyst.
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