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  • Pardon the expression

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    June 2, 2006 Friday

    PARDON THE EXPRESSION

    by Arkady Dubnov

    A MEETING OF THE CIS COUNCIL OF DEFENSE MINISTERS IN BAKU ENDORSED
    PRIORITIES AND PRINCIPAL EVENTS IN REALIZING THE CONCEPT OF MILITARY
    COOPERATION BETWEEN CIS COUNTRIES; At the meeting of the CIS Council
    of Defense Ministers in Baku, Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said:
    "Peace, security, and law in the Caspian Sea should be maintained by
    the coastal states." This was how Moscow responded to rumors that
    Washington wants an American radar installation in the region.


    Defense ministers voted to extend the powers of Major-General Sergei
    Cheban, current commander of the Collective Peacekeeping Force in the
    Georgian-Abkhazian conflict area, for another six months. When it was
    over, Russian Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister Sergei
    Ivanov called the meeting "another step to advancement of military
    cooperation and facilitation of trust and mutual understanding
    between CIS countries."

    Ivanov's phrase of "trust and mutual understanding" was certainly
    made to sound quixotic by the absence of the Armenian military from
    the Baku conference. The Azeris did not invite them to the meeting,
    because they view the Armenian military as personae non grata and
    their country as an "occupier."

    Ivanov made an even more interesting statement in Baku. "As for
    Nagorno-Karabakh," he said, "I don't rule out the possibility that
    peacekeepers may appear there soon - in order to guarantee
    realization of the political agreements that I'm sure will be signed
    sooner or later."

    "This so-so situation - if you'll pardon the expression - cannot
    last," Ivanov said.

    This mention of Nagorno-Karabakh will probably require a
    clarification because the matter concerns the Azeri-Armenian conflict
    area, actually Armenian-occupied territories of Azerbaijan around the
    enclave.

    But this wasn't what attracted observers' attention. Ivanov made his
    statement in Baku, the same day that Ukrainian and Azeri defense
    ministers Anatoliy Hrytsenko and Safar Abiyev discussed establishing
    a GUAM peacekeeping contingent (both countries are GUAM members).
    Moscow is not going to like it if and when initiators of the idea
    offer their services in Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolution.

    Ivanov said, "Peace, security, and law in the Caspian Sea should be
    maintained by the coastal states." This was how Moscow responded to
    rumors that Washington wants an American radar installation in the
    region. Ivanov was diplomatic enough to add that he "doesn't know
    anything of any such plans."

    Armenian President Robert Kocharjan and Azeri President Ilham Aliyev
    are expected to meet under the aegis of the OSCE Minsk Group in
    Bucharest on June 5. Moscow is already troubled. Even if Yerevan and
    Baku find a compromise, not everyone will agree with participation of
    the Russian military in the international peacekeeping contingent
    (probably under the UN aegis) in the conflict area.

    Azeri Foreign Ministry called Ivanov's statement on peacekeepers
    "considerate" and took it as an indication of Moscow's eagerness to
    see the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolved. Ex-president of
    Azerbaijan Ajaz Mutalibov called the statement "positive" as well.
    Radio Echo of Moscow quoted Mutalibov as accepting "the possibility
    that Russia is just the peacekeepers neither Azerbaijan nor Armenia
    will have any objections to."

    Official Yerevan's reaction to the news from Baku is not known at
    this point. Alexander Iskanderjan, a prominent political scientist,
    in the meantime is quite skeptical of Ivanov's words concerning
    deployment of peacekeepers and his confidence that "the situation...
    cannot last." "On the contrary, the status quo may last long yet,"
    Iskanderjan said. "In any case, no serious politician in Yerevan is
    going to propose a compromise with Baku before the parliamentary
    election scheduled for 2007 and presidential scheduled for 2008."
    "Moreover, Moscow itself needs resolution of the conflict postponed
    for as long as possible because the advantages this resolution will
    give either side will inevitably weaken Russia's influence with the
    southern part of the Caucasus," Iskanderjan said.

    Source: Vremya Novostei, June 1, 2006, p. 3

    Translated by A. Ignatkin
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