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  • Armenia, Azerbaijan report more progress toward NK peace

    ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN REPORT MORE PROGRESS TOWARD KARABAKH PEACE
    By Emil Danielyan

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Jamestown Foundation
    June 28 2005

    Tuesday, June 28, 2005


    Armenia and Azerbaijan have reported further progress in their
    decade-long negotiations on the Karabakh enclave following the June
    17 meeting of their foreign ministers in Paris. International
    mediators are now cautiously upbeat about prospects for resolving the
    most intractable ethnic dispute in the former Soviet Union. But they
    caution that the conflicting parties have failed to use similar
    windows of opportunity in the past.

    Foreign Ministers Vartan Oskanian of Armenia and Elmar Mammadyarov of
    Azerbaijan met in the presence of the U.S., Russian, and French
    co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group to try to flesh out verbal
    understandings reportedly reached by the presidents of the two
    countries. Ilham Aliev and Robert Kocharian talked for nearly three
    hours in Warsaw on May 15-16.

    Oskanian described the Paris talks as "positive" and "constructive."
    "We have not yet managed to bring discussions on any particular issue
    to a successful conclusion," he told reporters on June 20. "Having
    said that, some common ground is in sight."

    Oskanian also guarded against excessive expectations from the
    Karabakh peace process. "Significantly, the presidents took a step
    forward, no matter how small, on that issue and instructed us to
    build upon that and find some solution," he said in an apparent
    reference to Karabakh's future status. "We failed to do that in
    Paris."

    The Azerbaijani side also appeared largely satisfied with the latest
    round of peace talks. "The pace of meetings and the essence of the
    discussions, in my opinion, are promising," Deputy Foreign Minister
    Araz Azimov told the Azerbaijani ANS television on June 18. Azimov
    announced at a news conference two days later that Aliev and
    Kocharian are scheduled to hold another meeting in Kazan, Russia, on
    August 26.

    Prior to the Armenian-Azerbaijani summit, there will likely be
    another face-to-face encounter between Mammadyarov and Oskanian and a
    visit to the conflict zone by the Minsk Group co-chairs. The troika
    reportedly plans to travel to Baku, Yerevan, and Stepanakert in
    mid-July.

    The Yerevan daily Hayots Ashkhar quoted Arkady Ghukasian, the
    president of the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, as saying
    that the mediators are unlikely to bring any "complete schemes or
    final solutions" to the region. "I don't think that the co-chairs'
    visit will be fateful," he said.

    Still, U.S. officials now do not rule out the possibility of some
    sort of peace agreement being signed in the course of this year. A
    senior official in President George W. Bush's administration
    described recent progress in the protracted peace process as "pretty
    significant." But the official was quick to add that the mediators
    will not "rush agreement" at this juncture.

    The current phase of Karabakh peace talks is part of the so-called
    "Prague process" that began a year ago and raised fresh hopes for
    long-awaited peace. Sketchy details of the talks made public so far
    suggest that the parties and the mediators are trying to combine two
    fundamentally different strategies of conflict resolution.

    Azerbaijan stands for a "step-by-step" resolution of the dispute that
    would delay agreement on Karabakh's status, the main sticking point,
    until after the liberation of surrounding Azerbaijani lands that were
    occupied by Armenian forces during the 1991-94 war. The Armenians, by
    contrast, until recently insisted on a "package" accord that would
    resolve all contentious issues at once. But they are now ready to
    embrace a phased settlement, provided that they get other
    international guarantees of continued Armenian control over Karabakh.

    Accordingly, each side emphasizes elements of the discussed peace
    deal that it finds more beneficial for itself. Azimov, for example,
    said the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers discussed the
    return of the occupied districts in Azerbaijan proper. For his part,
    Oskanian was anxious to stress that none of those districts would be
    given back to Baku without some agreement on Karabakh's status. He
    said it remains the number one issue for the Armenian side and is
    high on the agenda of the Prague process.

    The parties have already been close to hammering out a peace accord
    in the past, most recently at a conference held in Key West, Florida,
    in April 2001. But last-minute disagreements and other obstacles
    always scuttled a deal that would have far-reaching political and
    economic implications for the entire South Caucasus. U.S. officials
    are mindful of the possibility of another fiasco. They say that is
    the reason why renewed hopes for Karabakh peace will not ease U.S.
    pressure on Aliev's regime to ensure the freedom and fairness of
    Azerbaijan's upcoming parliamentary elections. They also rule out
    more leniency toward Armenia's leadership, whose democratic
    credentials are likewise questionable.

    Some Armenian and Azerbaijani pundits have long argued that neither
    regime is interested in mutual compromise on Karabakh, as it would
    run the risk of losing power. The next few months should put this
    theory to the test.

    (Hayots Ashkhar, Haykakan Zhamanak, June 21; BBC Monitoring, June 18,
    June 20; Interviews with Bush administration and State Department
    officials, June 6-9)
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