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Mediators Bow out of The Karabakh Game

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  • Mediators Bow out of The Karabakh Game

    MEDIATORS BOW OUT OF THE KARABAKH GAME;
    Russia, Europe, and the United States ought to declare that war is unacceptable

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say Part A (Russia)
    July 21, 2006 Friday

    By Nicholas Whyte, Europe Program Director, Sabine Freizer, Caucasus
    Project Director, International Crisis Group

    An update on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict; International mediators
    have spent 12 years trying in vain to find a way of resolving
    the bloody conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over control of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. American, French, and Russian mediators have now had
    to withdraw, and the opposing sides are preparing to resume their war.

    Contrary to expectations, the G8 summit in St. Petersburg did not
    include talks between President Robert Kocharian of Armenia and
    President Ilkham Aliyev of Azerbaijan. International mediators
    have spent 12 years trying in vain to find a way of resolving
    the bloody conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over control of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. American, French, and Russian mediators have now had
    to withdraw, and the opposing sides are preparing to resume their war.

    After the USSR collapsed, several armed conflicts broke out in the
    Trans-Caucasus - but the largest and most vicious was the conflict
    in Nagorno-Karabakh, a region of Azerbaijan with a predominantly
    Armenian population. By the time a truce was signed in 1995, around
    30,000 people had been killed and over a million people from both
    sides had been subjected to forced resettlement. The armed forces
    of Nagorno-Karabakh, supported by Armenia, are still holding on to
    seven districts of Azerbaijan.

    Over the past decade, the opposing sides haven't managed to sign a
    single agreement that might bring political regulation closer. The
    high points of many years of effort by Minsk Group mediators were two
    meetings between Robert Kocharian and Ilkham Aliyev, held in the first
    half of 2006. But even these meetings didn't produce any concrete steps
    toward achieving a stable peace. In an unusually tough statement issued
    in late June, the international mediators indicated that they don't see
    any point in continuing intensive shuttle diplomacy or organizing more
    meetings at the presidential level. In a statement dated July 3, the
    mediators confirmed that they are prepared to facilitate regulation,
    while emphasizing that in practice, neither Baku nor Yerevan are
    showing any political will to reach agreement.

    The basic components of potential regulation are well-known. The
    International Crisis Group identified them clearly in two reports
    released in 2005. The statement issued by the mediators confirmed these
    provisions: all sides must reject the use of force; Armenian troops
    should leave the territory of Azerbaijan adjacent to Nagorno-Karabakh;
    both sides should undertake to hold a referendum on the ultimate
    status of Nagorno-Karabakh, without any "forcible measures" being used;
    Nagorno-Karabakh should have a temporary status during this period, and
    the international community should provide substantial aid, including
    a peacekeeping contingent - especially given that this is Europe's only
    "frozen conflict" where no international observers are present.

    The stumbling blocks in the negotiations have been the future status
    of two corridors linking Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia, the conditions
    for the proposed referendum, and the requirement to ensure the return
    of refugees before the referendum is held. The mediators proposed
    reaching agreement on other points first, unblocking the process
    itself, and postponing discussion of the most difficult problems -
    but this proposal was not accepted.

    Armenia's victory in the military action of 1992-94, when extensive
    territories were occupied and their Azeri residents expelled, has
    proved to be a Pyrrhic victory. Armenia was left isolated when Turkey
    closed its borders. But the political arithmetic accepted in Yerevan
    precludes the possibility of conclusive regulation: supporters of
    President Kocharian, the former leader of Nagorno-Karabakh, would
    never forgive him for making concessions to Azerbaijan.

    Baku, kept afloat by its oil export earnings (set to triple
    Azerbaijan's revenues by 2009), seems to be harboring its own plans
    for resolving the conflict. Azerbaijan's defense spending for 2007
    will be larger than Armenia's entire state budget. In the last war,
    Azerbaijan was defeated. Clearly, some people in Baku are in a
    revanchist mood: Azeri officials, starting with President Aliyev,
    are praising their country's military might.

    Although the mediators' efforts haven't produced results, the
    international community cannot allow events to get out of control;
    there is too much at stake. The time has come to revise relations
    with both countries.

    Armenia is receiving substantial aid from the outside world, some
    of which was delivered recently from the United States as part of
    the Millenium Challenges program. Azerbaijan is at the center of a
    network of energy and security interests - including the gas and oil
    pipelines connecting Caspian Sea fields with Turkey and the West.
    Some representatives of Azerbaijan are hoping that geopolitical
    interests will make the international community turn a blind eye if
    Azerbaijan launches a military campaign to regain the territory it
    lost in 1994. Russia, Europe, and the United States need to make their
    stance on this issue absolutely clear, if that has not already been
    done by the mediators' latest statement. They should indicate that
    any renewed use of armed force would negate all commitments regarding
    economic and political assistance. If the international community
    can't manage to restore peace to the Trans-Caucasus, it should at least
    make it unambiguously clear that resuming the war is unacceptable.

    Source: Vremya Novostei, July 20, 2006, p. 5

    Translated by Elena Leonova
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