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Azerbaijan: It's Back To The Drawing Board For Karabakh Talks

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  • Azerbaijan: It's Back To The Drawing Board For Karabakh Talks

    AZERBAIJAN: IT'S BACK TO THE DRAWING BOARD FOR KARABAKH TALKS
    Rovshan Ismayilov

    EurasiaNet
    April 16 2008
    NY

    Tensions have subsided between Azerbaijan and the mediation group
    charged with overseeing talks with Armenia over the breakaway region
    of Nagorno-Karabakh. Even so, any progress that had been made toward
    a lasting peace settlement appears to have been lost.

    At an April 15 meeting of the regional cooperation bloc GUAM (Georgia,
    Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Moldova) in Baku, Foreign Minister Elmar
    Mammadyarov said that Azerbaijan expects new proposals from the current
    international mediators for continuing the negotiations with Armenia on
    a Karabakh settlement. Mammadyarov also expressed willingness to meet
    with Armenia's newly appointed foreign minister, Eduard Nalbandian.

    "If the ministers will come to an agreement, the meeting of the
    presidents could happen," Mammadyarov said, referring to Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliyev and recently inaugurated Armenian President
    Serzh Sarkisian. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    In recent weeks, Azerbaijani officials have complained about
    deficiencies in the peace process, venting much of their frustration
    on the OSCE Minsk Group, the entity co-chaired by France, Russia and
    the United States. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Now Baku may be willing to engage Armenia in the so-called Prague
    Process, but the Azerbaijani government insists that peace talks must
    start from scratch. At several points in recent years, it appeared
    that Baku and Yerevan had sketched out the parameters of a deal. That
    no longer seems to be the case.

    "It is important for us that Armenia will accept the conflict
    resolution principle within the framework of Azerbaijan's territorial
    integrity. The international community accepted it, and Armenia
    has to do the same," Mammadyarov said. Autonomy for Karabakh within
    Azerbaijan is one possible topic for discussion, he continued. In
    the past, Karabakh's separatist leaders and Armenian officials in
    Yerevan have categorically rejected such an arrangement.

    Chances for any discussion getting off to a dramatically fresh start
    appear slim, as enmity between the two neighbors remains high. For
    example, Aliyev refused to meet with Sarkisian at the April 2-4
    North Atlantic Treaty Organization summit in Bucharest. In addition,
    each side blames the other for a series of cease-fire violations in
    February and March. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    While Baku has refuted reports that it intends to push for the
    mediators' immediate replacement, some experts believe that the
    government is keeping its discontent in reserve, to bring pressure
    on the Minsk Group in the future as needed.

    Public and government frustrations with the mediators have not
    abated since all three Minsk Group co-chair countries voted against
    a March 14 United Nations resolution that recognized Karabakh as
    part of Azerbaijan. In an interview with the Interfax news agency,
    Aliyev stated that Azerbaijan had expected the countries to abstain,
    not to oppose the measure.

    Political analyst Rasim Musabekov believes that the UN resolution was
    the result of Azerbaijan's dissatisfaction with the latest proposed
    terms for a conflict resolution, including continuing Armenian control
    over the Lachin corridor linking Karabakh with Armenia.

    "Azerbaijan does not agree with these proposals and the UN resolution
    in fact toughened its position," Musabekov said.

    While maneuvering on the diplomatic front, Azerbaijan is proceeding
    with a rapid military buildup. An increase in state revenues means
    that the government plans to increase military spending in 2008 from
    an initially planned $1.3 billion to $2 billion, Aliyev announced at
    an April 14 cabinet meeting.

    Musabekov contends that a $2 billion military budget is a factor
    that both Armenia and the Minsk Group mediators will need to take
    into account. As energy revenues continue to flow, Baku's military
    spending is only likely to increase. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive]. The spending will put Azerbaijan within range of
    larger countries such as Ukraine, "which obviously has a much larger
    military capacity," he said.

    Sizeable military spending does not mean a move in the near future to
    retake Karabakh by force, experts said. "An imitation of negotiations
    will continue for some time, the presidential elections in Azerbaijan
    will happen, and so on," commented Elkhan Shahinoglu, director of
    the Atlas political research center.

    Government officials have not responded to a March 25 comment by US
    Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs
    Matthew Bryza that "some political forces in Azerbaijan for some reason
    are trying to create tension in relations between Baku and Washington."

    Experts have dismissed the remark as "not serious."

    "Most likely it was a diplomatic move aimed to reduce tension and to
    switch public attention in Azerbaijan from criticism of the Minsk Group
    to debates over the existence of some pro-Western and anti-Western
    forces in the government. It is not serious," Shahinoglu said.

    Rasim Musabekov agrees: "Of course, there are champions of closer
    relations with the United States [within the Azerbaijani government]
    and those who are against it. However, in the context of the UN
    resolution and generally the Karabakh conflict, Baku's dissatisfaction
    with Russia is much higher than with the United States."

    "We have a wide partnership in many areas and it is developing,"
    Foreign Ministry spokesperson Khazar Ibrahim stressed.

    Editor's Note: Rovshan Ismayilov is a freelance correspondent based
    in Baku.
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