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Peacekeepr of the Caucasus

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  • Peacekeepr of the Caucasus

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    March 18, 2005, Friday

    PEACEKEEPER OF THE CAUCASUS

    SOURCE: Novye Izvestia, March 15, 2005, p. 4

    by Mekhman Gafarly


    GEORGIA IS PREPARED TO BECOME A MEDIATOR IN THE ARMENIAN-TURKISH AND
    ARMENIAN-AZERBAIJANI RELATIONS


    Foreign Minister of Georgia Salome Zurabishvili said on a visit to
    Ankara that her country could become an intermediary in the
    Armenian-Turkish and Armenian-Azerbaijani dialogues - provided
    Ankara, Yerevan, and Baku seconded the initiative.

    Tbilisi needs the tension in the Armenian-Turkish relations abated.
    First and foremost, their improvement will allay the fears and
    irritation Yerevan feels viewing Georgia's friendship with Turkey.
    Second, it will be quick pro quo: Zurabishvili appreciates the
    positive role Ankara is playing in the Russian-Georgian political
    dialogue. Georgia hopes with Ankara's help to solve some problems
    marring its relations with Moscow. Along with everything else,
    Georgia is looking for support from the European Union and the United
    States and, also importantly, from Turkey as its neighbor now that
    Tbilisi's own relations with Moscow are at so low a level. The matter
    is both political and economic. When Moscow introduced the visa
    regime on the border with Georgia, Russian cities became out of reach
    for thousands and thousands unemployed Georgians seeking jobs abroad.
    In an attempt to compensate for it, Tbilisi hopes to secure a
    visa-free regime on the Georgian-Turkish border and intends to
    establish a regular Batumi-Istanbul plane run. Success will enable
    Georgians to find jobs in Turkey and stabilize the socioeconomic
    situation in Georgia itself. Before it can accomplish all of that,
    however, Georgia has to score some political points. From this point
    of view, the role of an intermediary in the Armenian-Turkish and
    Armenian-Azerbaijani relations will come in very handy. What it will
    result in is a different matter altogether. Tbilisi already offered
    its services to Armenia and Azerbaijan at war over Nagorno-Karabakh
    in 1992. The offer was turned down then.

    Ramaz Sakvarelidze of the expert council of the Georgian parliament
    says in the meantime that the situation is different now and that
    Tbilisi's offer may be accepted. According to Sakvarelidze, the
    political and economic situation in the region changes with the
    years, and the warring sides know now that integration into Europe is
    impossible with the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh remaining
    unsettled. Moreover, construction of pipelines and establishment of
    the TRASECA transport corridor force Ankara, Yerevan, and Baku to
    seek ways of improvement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani and
    Armenian-Turkish relations. Along with everything else, upper
    echelons of the European Union and Parliamentary Assembly demand an
    end to political and territorial disputes from these countries or
    they may forget about integration into the European Union. From this
    point of view, Zurabishvili's offer is well-timed and therefore may
    be accepted, Sakvarelidze said. A neutral intermediary, Georgia is
    prepared to arrange a meeting of leaders of Armenia, Turkey, and
    Azerbaijan for negotiations on its territory. Baku's and Yerevan's
    reaction to the offer is not clear at this point.
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