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Russian Peacekeepers Might Be Sent Into Nagorno-Karabakh

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  • Russian Peacekeepers Might Be Sent Into Nagorno-Karabakh

    RUSSIAN PEACEKEEPERS MIGHT BE SENT INTO NAGORNO-KARABAKH
    by Sergei Bekirov
    Translated by Pavel Pushkin

    Source: Rossiiskie Vesti, No. 23, June 22, 2006, p. 6
    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say Part A (Russia)
    June 26, 2006 Monday

    BREAKING THE DEADLOCK;

    Azerbaijan is a promising partner for Russia; It's no secret that
    relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia remain strained due to the
    protracted Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Nagorno-Karabakh is called a
    "frozen conflict." If that is the case, a question arises: what might
    happen after it's "unfrozen"? Another war?

    The complexity of intra-CIS relations was vividly demonstrated at
    the latest meeting of CIS defense ministers in Baku, Azerbaijan. The
    Armenian defense minister stayed away because Azeri authorities
    refused to guarantee his personal safety.

    It's no secret that relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia remain
    strained due to the protracted Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. This
    problem isn't being resolved, despite measures taken by various
    international negotiation mechanisms. Nagorno-Karabakh is called a
    "frozen conflict." If that is the case, a question arises: what
    might happen after it's "unfrozen"? Another war? But geopolitical
    circumstances have changed since the last war, and if Nagorno-Karabakh
    flares up again now, it might further destabilize the situation in
    the Greater Middle East region, which the West defines as including
    the former Soviet republics of the Trans-Caucasus. Therefore, no
    expression of readiness to take part in Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    resolution passes unnoticed.

    This applies to a recent statement from Russian Deputy Prime Minister
    and Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov, made at a news conference in Baku:
    "I don't rule out the possibility that in the foreseeable future, our
    peacekeeping forces may be sent into the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    zone to carry out all the political agreements that will be reached
    sooner or later."

    "A 'neither one thing nor the other' situation cannot last forever,"
    said Ivanov.

    Clearly, the decision to send in peacekeepers would primarily depend on
    the two sides involved in the conflict: namely, the Nagorno-Karabakh
    Republic and Azerbaijan. However, it is undeniably Russia that has
    attempted to break the deadlock, with this proposal.

    This "push" has been met with approval in Azerbaijan and alarm
    in Armenia.

    >>From Baku's perspective, the deployment of peacekeeping contingents
    would open up the prospect of liberating the Azeri districts which are
    presently controlled by Armenia and the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh
    Republic (NKR). But the most important aspect here is that for the
    first time in many years, Moscow is taking a constructive approach and
    supplementing the efforts of other Minsk Group c-chairs. Presumably,
    Russia and its Western partners have made some significant decisions
    about the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. To all appearances, Russian
    keepers might be deployed in the conflict zone beneath the OSCE flag
    and under OSCE command; moreover, most of the contingent would be
    made up of military personnel from NATO member states. These issues
    were considered in the process of preparing a step-by-step conflict
    resolution plan in the mid-1990s, and the principal points were
    discussed at the OSCE's Budapest summit. It isn't very appropriate
    to draw parallels with the situation in Abkhazia, South Ossetia,
    or the Trans-Dniester region. The Nagorno-Karabakh proposal bears a
    greater resemblance to Russian participation in the Bosnia and Kosovo
    peacekeeping forces.

    Thus, geopolitical processes in the South Caucasus are developing
    some new directions. It's worth noting that Nagorno-Karabakh marked
    the start of the USSR's disintegration process and the emergence of
    hot-spots across the former Soviet Union. At the time, the influence
    of external forces was clearly aimed at undermining the situation
    in this region, and Russia subsequently had to to "lock" quarreling
    entities together, while distancing itself from conflict zones.

    Nowadays, much has changed. Russia and the West are establishing
    a substantial dialogue with regard to conflict resolution in the
    former Soviet Union. On the other hand, the South Caucasus is
    being increasingly drawn into processes in the Middle East. For
    example, political processes in Iran now have a direct impact on the
    Armenian-Azeri conflict. As Azeri awareness grows and the ethnic Azeri
    component of Iranian politics becomes stronger, this will certainly
    make the regional geopolitical situation worse for Armenia.

    Moreover, given that Russian troops are being withdrawn from Georgia,
    the Armenian government's position becomes even more vulnerable from
    the geopolitical standpoint.

    As for Azerbaijan, it seems to be a promising partner for Russia.

    Baku maintains the most balanced and moderate position within GUAM.

    At a press conference after GUAM's Kiev summit, Azeri President
    Ilkham Aliyev indicated directly that in his view, the GUAM project
    is not aimed against any other country. That was a veiled reply to
    those who are trying to intensify an anti-Russian tendency within
    GUAM. Aliyev's stance is understandable: unlike Ukraine, Moldova,
    and Georgia, which are closer to Europe and have direct contacts with
    it, Azerbaijan is surrounded by Russia, Iran, and Armenia. Geography
    itself requires Azerbaijan to be cautious. All the same, it should
    not be forgotten that Azerbaijan's sole truly strategic ally - Turkey
    - is an influential NATO member and European Union candidate. The
    aim of ensuring security and development for Azerbaijan prompt an
    analogous choice. Baku's movement toward NATO and the EU could be
    rapid or relatively slow, depending on the situation. Incidentally,
    Turkey doesn't even object, in principle, to the prospect of Armenia
    joining NATO. How would Yerevan react to a new situation in the
    conflict zone, with the West no longer prepared to give unconditional
    support to Armenia's Nagorno-Karabakh claims? So far, the reaction
    has been cautiously hostile: while ignoring the Baku summit, Armenia
    has been transferring a great quantity of arms and military hardware
    to Nagorno-Karabakh.
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