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  • UN-ization of post-soviet conflicts

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    September 20, 2006 Wednesday

    UN-IZATION OF POST-SOVIET CONFLICTS

    by: Arkady Dubnov


    THE UN WILL DISCUSS SUSPENDED CONFLICTS IN THE FORMER SOVIET UNION;
    The UN will discuss latent conflicts of the post-Soviet zone.


    Moldova with its GUAM allies (Georgia, Ukraine, and Azerbaijan)
    scored a major diplomatic victory on the eve of the referendum in the
    Trans-Dniester region. General Committee of the UN General Assembly
    supported the bloc's idea to put the matter of suspended conflicts on
    the CIS territory on the agenda. Moscow had killed this discussion at
    the UN level in 2005.

    The UN did try - more or less - to tackle the Karabakh conflict. As
    for the Trans-Dniester region, Abkhazia, and South Ossetia, this is
    the first time they are about to be in the focus of attention of the
    international community. Internationalization of interest in the
    post-Soviet zone which Russia views as its own sphere of influence
    will have little effect on conflict resolution. Solutions of the UN
    General Assembly are recommendations at best. A UN resolution adopted
    on a GUAM initiative will put a powerful propagandistic weapon in the
    hands of Kishinev, Baku, and Tbilisi.

    Armenia was the first to react to the forthcoming involvement of the
    UN. Official Yerevan said there would be no talks with Baku for the
    time being. That was how Armenia kept its word to suspend
    negotiations with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenian Foreign
    Minister Vardan Oskanjan said at his meeting with his Azerbaijani
    opposite number Elmar Mamedjarov that the meeting initiated by OSCE
    Minsk Group chairmen would never take place in New York on September
    24 as scheduled. Oskanjan believes in the meantime that discussion of
    the Karabakh conflict by the UN may "slow down" the Minsk process
    where "prospects of positive progress are already undeniable."

    Since "the process of resolution is shifting to the UN that comprises
    191 countries some of which do not even know what the conflict is
    about, Nagorno-Karabakh itself must be involved in the process,"
    Oskanjan said. "If it is the UN rules that we will play by, then
    Azerbaijan should begin negotiations with Nagorno-Karabakh."

    Source: Vremya Novosti, September 18, 2006, p. 5
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