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  • Karabakh: Possibly Exhausted Peace

    KARABAKH: POSSIBLY EXHAUSTED PEACE

    ISN
    http://www.isn.ethz.ch/news/sw/details. cfm?id=18831
    April 7 2008
    Switzerland

    Azerbaijan changes tactic over the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, lashing
    out at the Minsk Group and hoping for more pull with the UN, as the
    peace process threatens to unwind, Haroutiun Khachatrian reports for
    ISN Security Watch.

    By Haroutiun Khachatrian in Yerevan for ISN Security Watch (07/04/08)

    Recent moves by Azerbaijan to criticize and question the OSCE Minsk
    Group, the international mediating force in the Nagorno Karabakh
    conflict, have experts and observers concerned that the peace process
    may have reached its end along with chances for peaceful resolution.

    March 2008 was marked with two events related to the conflict of
    Nagorno Karabakh, which were unprecedented for at least a decade.

    On 4 March, a military incident took place in one of the fragments
    of the contact line between the armed forces of Azerbaijan and
    the unrecognized Nagorno Karabakh Republic. It differed from other
    incidents in that for the first time in over a decade, heavy weapons
    were used and more than 15 people were killed from both sides (with
    each side accusing the other of initiating the incident).

    The second event, on 14 March, came in the form of a contentious
    vote at the UN General Assembly that saw the Assembly call for the
    recognition of Azerbaijan's right to territorial integrity and for
    the immediate withdrawal of Armenian forces "from all the occupied
    territories of the Republic of Azerbaijan."

    Thirty-nine countries supported the Azerbaijani draft resolution,
    while seven voted against, including the US, Russia and France,
    the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group.

    The UN General Assembly vote has indeed set a precedent, as it was
    the first time that an international body outside of the OSCE's Minsk
    Group has been involved in the Nagorno Karabakh dispute.

    Frozen in bloody time In February 1988, with the rise of Gorbachev's
    glasnost and perestroika, Armenians began demonstrating for the
    return of Nagorno Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian enclave that the
    Soviet Union had handed over to Azerbaijan in 1923 as an autonomous
    oblast within Soviet Azerbaijan. At the time, Nagorno Karabakh was
    95 percent ethnic Armenian.

    The fallout was devastating, leading to pogroms of Armenians in the
    Azeri city of Sumgait and a war that would last until 1994.

    With the collapse of the Soviet Union, national passions in both
    Armenia and Azerbaijan were allowed to surface with all their oppressed
    gusto, and the early 1990s proved particularly bloody.

    In 1994, the Armenian forces from Armenia proper and ethnic Armenian
    forces from Nagorno Karabakh had managed to violently expel the Azeri
    Turk minority from Nagorno Karabakh and went as far as to annex parts
    of Azerbaijan that bordered the enclave for security reasons.

    Today, the de facto independent republic - which was declared
    independent after a 1991 referendum but was never recognized, not
    even by Armenia - officially remains a part of Azerbaijan, and is
    connected to Armenia by the Lachin Corridor, a piece of land the
    Armenians forcibly annexed from Azerbaijan in 1992.

    International mandate The adoption of the non-binding resolution by
    the UN General Assembly was followed by a rather unexpected turn
    in Azerbaijan's policy. Baku officially started an unprecedented
    campaign of criticism against the US, Russia and France for their
    failure to support Azerbaijan's position both at the UN and in the
    mediation process.

    Azerbaijan accused the three superpowers of being "unbalanced" in the
    negotiation process. Polad Bul-Bul Ogly, the Azerbaijani ambassador
    to Russia, was quoted by the Russian daily Nezavisimaya Gazeta on
    25 March as saying that Azerbaijan may seek other mediators to act
    along with or instead of the current ones.

    The Minsk Group was formed in 1992 by the Council of Security and
    Cooperation in Europe (later reorganized as the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe, OSCE) with the aim of holding a
    conference in Minsk to discuss possible political solutions for the
    Nagorno Karabakh conflict. The group consists of Armenia, Azerbaijan,
    Belarus, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, Russia, Slovakia,
    Sweden, Turkey and the US.

    In an interview with ISN Security Watch, Vladimir Kazamirov, the
    Russian envoy for the Karabakh issue in 1994-1996, pointed out that
    the Minsk Group had no formal mandate other than its members were
    obliged to attend the conference.

    The CSCE December 1994 summit in Budapest established the institute
    of the Minsk Group co-chairmen "to ensure a common and agreed basis
    for negotiations," as 12 countries could not act as mediators.

    Formally, the co-chairmen are appointed by the CSCE/OSCE
    chairman-in-office, but in reality, the chairmanship is given to
    specific countries ("co-chairs"), and the latter appoint this or
    that diplomat to represent the countries. Initially, there were two
    co-chairmen (representatives of Italy, and later Sweden, both with
    Russia as the second co-chair).

    The current three co-chair countries have not been changed since 1997,
    but each country - Russia, France and the US - has changed at least
    five diplomats as their representatives. During this time, the three
    "superpowers" have managed to act as a single team, presenting the
    conflicting parties with the necessary support to reach a consensus.

    Until now, these chairs have largely been viewed as objective and
    equally representing the quarreling parties.

    Baku's new tactic Armenia, for one, believes that the ultimate goal
    of Azerbaijan is to dissolve the Minsk Group.

    Azerbaijan is correct in saying that the efforts of the co-chairs
    have been so far fruitless, but a new mediator will not likely bring
    any positive change.

    "After all, the experience the current co-chairs gained in these
    years is valuable," Kazamirov said, mentioning that few have a good
    knowledge of the Nagorno Karabakh problem, and a new mediator would
    face serious difficulties.

    Over the course of the past 11 years, the co-chairs presented many
    proposals - all of them rejected by at least one party to the conflict.

    Armenia (which in recent years has represented both itself and Nagorno
    Karabakh at the negotiations) supports the concept that the people
    of Nagorno Karabakh have the right of self-determination, based on
    the December 1991 referendum. The Armenian parties claim that the
    occupied territories around Nagorno Karabakh will be freed and their
    former Azeri inhabitants will be allowed to return if the right of
    self-determination of Nagorno Karabakh is recognized.

    Azerbaijan claims the region to be an inseparable part of its territory
    and is offering a high level of autonomy inside Azerbaijan.

    The co-chairs were meant to act as neutral brokers. Under the latest
    version of the so-called Basic Principles, presented by the mediators
    in November 2007 in Madrid, this right to self-determination is
    expected to be realized through a form of plebiscite in Nagorno
    Karabakh.

    However, in recent weeks, Azerbaijan accusations that the Minsk Group
    co-chairs are "not neutral" - meaning they do not recognize Nagorno
    Karabakh as a part of Azerbaijan, officially - may throw a wrench in
    what is already a complicated process.

    "Some people in Azerbaijan do not want to negotiate about the
    compromise regarding the future status of Nagorno Karabakh. If they
    don't want to negotiate about this point, then there is no sense for
    negotiations to be continued at all. You can't judge the outcome of
    the negotiating process until you go to the negotiation," APA agency
    quoted US co-chair Matthew Bryza as saying on 27 March.

    But perhaps, as pointed out by Robert D Kaplan in his book, Eastward
    to Tartary, Azerbaijan knows that its ship has sailed. "The Armenians
    [...] were never going to give up Karabakh in negotiations. No one
    gives up what has been captured in battle when the area is occupied
    overwhelmingly by one's own ethnic group and the rest of the population
    has been violently expelled, with barely a murmur from the Great
    Powers or the global media," Kaplan writes.

    Azerbaijan's hardening position The Armenian side believes that there
    are two reasons for Azerbaijan's sudden hardening of its position. The
    first reason is the fairly wide international recognition of Kosovo's
    17 February unilateral declaration of independence.

    Indeed, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on 4 March overwhelmingly
    approved a proposal to recall the country's Kosovo platoon. At the
    same time, Aliyev confirmed that Azerbaijan was still considering a
    military option for the settling of the Nagorno Karabakh issue.

    The other reason, according to Armenian officials, is the recent
    political crisis caused by the 19 February presidential elections,
    which created an impression of instability in Armenia. (Serzh Sarkisian
    defeated Levon Ter-Petrosyan and protests turned bloody, leaving at
    least eight people dead after an unexpectedly violent crackdown by
    security forces.)

    "Azerbaijan made an attempt to test our toughness. I do doubt that
    if they are convinced that Armenia and Karabakh have weakened, they
    will again make an attempt to achieve success," Armenian President
    Robert Kocharian told a 20 March press conference.

    Kocharian warned that if Azerbaijan continued to undermine the
    peace process, Armenia may officially recognize the Nagorno Karabakh
    Republic to ensure its security. Bryza immediately reacted by calling
    on Armenia not to take such a step, according to the 22 March issue
    of the New York-based Armenian Reporter newspaper.

    The Armenian side says that Azerbaijan's real aim with its most recent
    maneuverings is to halt status negotiations for Nagorno Karabakh.

    The mutual trust deficit Kazimirov says the conflict in Karabakh
    has several features which increase the risk of stability. First,
    there are no separating or peacekeeping forces, and the ceasefire
    fully depends on the conflicting parties.

    Second, the establishment of the ceasefire was not followed by a
    withdrawal of troops to a safe distance, and the positions of the
    conflicting parties are sometimes several hundred meters from each
    other.

    However, the most serious danger is probably the deficit of mutual
    trust and war rhetoric.

    "In no other conflict in the world can one find such a mood for
    a forced revanche that is seen in the case of Karabakh, and it is
    declared openly by the top leaders. In no other place can you see
    this number of incidents along the contact line as in Karabakh. The
    growth of military budgets, especially in Azerbaijan, is also alarming,
    as they also can create dangerous illusions," Kazimirov said.

    Haroutiun Khachatrian is an editor and an analyst for Noyan Tapan
    news agency and editor-in-chief of the Noyan Tapan Highlights weekly.

    He is based in Yerevan.
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