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Armenia/Azerbaijan: Expectations Muted On Eve Of Karabakh Talks

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  • Armenia/Azerbaijan: Expectations Muted On Eve Of Karabakh Talks

    Armenia/Azerbaijan: Expectations Muted On Eve Of Karabakh Talks
    By Liz Fuller

    Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Aug 19 2005

    The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan are scheduled to meet
    in Moscow on 23 August to resume their talks on approaches to
    resolving the Karabakh conflict. Days later, the two countries'
    presidents, Robert Kocharian and Ilham Aliyev, will meet in Kazan on
    the sidelines of a CIS summit to address the same issue. But although
    international mediators from the OSCE Minsk Group expressed cautious
    optimism after visiting Baku, Stepanakert, and Yerevan in early July,
    they and senior officials in Baku have warned in recent days that
    there is little chance the two presidents will sign a major peace
    accord in Kazan.


    The Kazan talks will be the second between the two presidents in the
    span of four months. The first took place in Warsaw in mid-May on the
    sidelines of a Council of Europe summit and, according to an Armenian
    Foreign Ministry statement released several days later, that meeting
    constituted "yet another step forward in the resolution of the
    Karabakh conflict," RFE/RL's Armenian Service reported. The statement
    added that the Warsaw meeting "makes it possible to continue the
    discussions" between the two countries' foreign ministers that began
    one year earlier. On 17 May, the French, Russian, and U.S.
    co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group that is mediating the search for
    a solution to the Karabakh conflict released a statement similarly
    noting that the two presidents "confirmed their strong interest in
    reaching a peaceful, negotiated solution of the conflict."

    Growing Expectations

    In early July, Armenian officials told RFE/RL's Armenian Service that
    Armenia and Azerbaijan had reached agreement on the key points of a
    formal peace accord ending the Karabakh conflict, and that agreement
    could be signed by the end of this year. Days later, the Minsk Group
    co-chairmen likewise expressed cautious optimism. U.S. co-Chairman
    Steven Mann told journalists in Yerevan on 14 July that "there is a
    possibility of a Karabakh settlement in the course of this year,"
    RFE/RL's Armenian Service reported. Mann repeated that prognosis the
    following day but qualified it, saying, "There are very difficult
    issues that are still on the table and real gaps between the two
    sides." Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov, who is
    President Aliyev's special envoy for the Karabakh conflict, was even
    more upbeat, telling journalists in Baku on 18 July that "we are
    closer to peace than ever before," according to the website day.az.

    Citing the need for confidentiality, the Minsk Group co-chairmen have
    consistently declined to divulge any details of specific issues under
    discussion. But both Azerbaijani and Armenian officials have gone
    public in recent months, identifying aspects of the hypothetical
    peace agreement. In mid-May, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
    Mammadyarov claimed that Yerevan had agreed to, and the two sides
    were already discussing the time frame for, the withdrawal of
    Armenian forces from seven districts of Azerbaijan bordering on the
    unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR). The Armenian Foreign
    Ministry rejected Mammadyarov's claim the following day.The timing of
    the Kazan summit -- two months before the 6 November parliamentary
    elections in Azerbaijan -- in itself makes it unlikely that the two
    presidents would sign a formal peace deal that would require a major
    concession from Baku, because any such concession could alienate many
    voters. But Russian Minsk Group co-Chairman Yurii Merzlyakov was
    quoted on 17 August by day.az as suggesting that the two presidents
    might issue a joint statement hinting that a formal peace deal is
    imminent.

    Three weeks later, on 7 June, Mammadyarov told journalists in Baku
    that the two sides were discussing between seven and nine issues
    related to a peace settlement, and that those issues have to be
    addressed in a specific order, with each made secure before the
    following is added, "like pearls knotted on a silk thread."
    Mammadyarov said Azerbaijan insists on the liberation of the seven
    districts currently occupied by Armenian forces, and that the two
    sides are discussing which countries or organizations could provide
    peacekeeping forces to be deployed on those territories after their
    liberation, according to day.az. He also said that "after the
    frontiers are opened we must revive trade links and transport."
    Echo-az.com quoted Mammadyarov as saying that the two sides are
    discussing both the "phased" and the "package" approaches to
    resolving the conflict. But a senior Armenian Foreign Ministry
    official told this writer on 8 June on condition of anonymity that
    the final agreement will be a package one, although its various
    provisions might be implemented one after the other, rather than
    simultaneously.

    Then in early July, a senior Armenian official told RFE/RL's Armenian
    Service that under the anticipated peace deal, Armenia would return
    to Azerbaijani control five of the seven districts adjacent to
    Karabakh currently controlled by Karabakh Armenian forces, excluding
    the strategic Lachin corridor. A peacekeeping force comprising troops
    from countries that are not members of the OSCE Minsk Group would be
    deployed in the conflict zone. Then, after 10-15 years, the
    population of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic would be
    required to vote in a referendum on whether the region should become
    independent, become a part of Armenia, or revert to Azerbaijan. That
    blueprint is very similar to one proposed in December by former
    Spanish Foreign Minister Ana Palacio and NATO Parliamentary Assembly
    President Pierre Lellouche. But both Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign
    Minister Azimov and NKR Foreign Minister Arman Melikian promptly
    denied that the two sides were discussing a possible referendum.
    Azimov made the point that the constitution of the Azerbaijan
    Republic does not make provision for a referendum to be held only on
    selected parts of Azerbaijan's territory, or on issues related to the
    country's territorial integrity.

    Pulling Back?

    Since the beginning of August -- when Mammadyarov visited Washington
    -- the upbeat statements by both the Minsk Group co-chairs and
    officials from the Armenian and Azerbaijani Foreign Ministries have
    given way to more guarded pronouncements. Commenting on 6 August on
    Mammadyarov's visit, U.S. Minsk Group co-Chairman Mann said the
    Karabakh conflict was one of the issues Mammadyarov discussed with
    his U.S. counterpart Condoleezza Rice, day.az reported. Mann added
    that despite "certain progress" in the peace talks, the degree of
    consensus reached to date is not sufficient to sign a peace treaty.
    In an interview published on 17 August in the online daily
    zerkalo.az, Mann similarly said that "it is still early to speak of a
    specific document. It would be a mistake to affirm that we shall sign
    some document right now." At the same time, he stressed repeatedly
    that the two sides "have achieved a great deal over the past 18
    months," and he predicted that the upcoming Kazan meeting between
    Kocharian and Aliyev "will give an additional impulse to the talks."


    Armenian fighter near the the strategic highway that connects the
    unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic with Armenia, known as the
    Lachin corridor (file photo)
    (AFP)
    Also on 17 August, Mammadyarov echoed Mann almost word-for word,
    telling day.az that "the negotiations have not yet reached the level
    of signing a document." Echoing his comments of 7 June, he said that
    between seven and nine issues would be on the agenda at his 24 August
    meeting with Oskanian, and "we shall try to reach agreement on
    certain elements and inform the presidents, so that they can discuss
    them in Kazan."

    The timing of the Kazan summit -- two months before the 6 November
    parliamentary elections in Azerbaijan -- in itself makes it unlikely
    that the two presidents would sign a formal peace deal that would
    require a major concession from Baku, because any such concession
    could alienate many voters. But Russian Minsk Group co-Chairman Yurii
    Merzlyakov was quoted on 17 August by day.az as suggesting that the
    two presidents might issue a joint statement hinting that a formal
    peace deal is imminent. A 17 August EurasiaNet analysis similarly
    quoted an unnamed Azerbaijani official as saying that the most that
    can be hoped for from the Kazan meeting is "a statement by the
    presidents in which they would order their foreign ministers to start
    working on the text of a future agreement." Such a joint statement
    would serve to send the message to Azerbaijan's electorate that peace
    is finally within reach -- provided its elects a parliament in which
    Aliyev's Yeni Azerbaycan Party has a comfortable majority.
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