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  • West Tries To Seize Initiative

    WEST TRIES TO SEIZE INITIATIVE
    Vardan Grigoryan

    Azat Artsakh Daily
    05 Dec 08
    Republic of Nagorno Karabakh [NKR]

    Having begun in Helsinki yesterday, the Council Session of the Foreign
    Ministers of the OSCE member states turned into the successive
    discussion devoted to the implementation of the strategy program
    aimed at speeding up the efforts towards achieving the settlement of
    the Karabakh peace talks.

    Following the Russian-Georgian war and the presidential elections
    in Azerbaijan, the OSCE has sharply increased its activeness, with
    the aim of making 2009 a year dedicated to the settlement of the
    Karabakh conflict.

    The optimistic statements made by Finnish Foreign Minister and OSCE
    Chairman-in-Office Alexander Stroub testify to the fact the OSCE is
    preparing to undertake the initiative of speeding up the settlement
    process by filling the obscure clauses of the Moscow Declaration with
    concrete and clear contents.

    Whereas the Moscow Declaration reflects Russia's political concerns
    over extending its influence in the region.

    Judging by all, in the global maneuvers around the South Caucasus, the
    West has already chosen the tactics of gradually extorting concessions
    from Moscow by way of using economic pressures against it and resuming
    the Russia-NATO dialogue. And this is first of all evidenced by the
    undisguised attempts of keeping Moldova off the mutual concessions
    elaborated by Russia, speeding up the process of signing a framework
    agreement on the Madrid Principles and at the same time delaying
    the solution of the issue of deploying peace-keeping forces on the
    borders of Karabakh.

    In the meantime, on December 3, the European Union officially
    introduced to Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and
    Ukraine the European Committee's proposal on "Eastern Partnership". The
    document envisages economic cooperation, without considering the
    issue of the EU membership.

    Thus, on the eve of the session of the Ministers of the OSCE member
    states, the activeness of the West and the obvious cautiousness of
    Russia again became apparent. This time, however, the "peculiarity
    of the moment" was that unlike the proposals submitted in 2000-2001
    (during the Key West discussions, the previous stage of the Karabakh
    settlement process), the Madrid Principles had been discussed so
    much that the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group will not have any
    difficulty inventing some resolution envisaging mutual concessions.

    A question arises as to whether this means that the conflict
    is really close to its settlement and whether such settlement
    is really inevitable. We believe not, because the existing
    international-political consensus over the principles discussed does
    not mean consensus over the possibility of conflict settlement. It
    is at this point that the mutual cooperation tactics of the
    mediators comes to be replaced by the cl ear-cut and undisguised
    strategic confrontation. One of its manifestations is the process of
    strengthening the CIS Collective Security Treaty and changing it into
    a peace-keeping structure

    This means that Russia is not going entrust anyone with the task
    of carrying out a peace-keeping mission on the borders of Karabakh,
    and upon necessity, it is ready to give clear-cut security guarantees
    to Armenia, one of the state parties to the CIS Collective Security
    Treaty. This also means that Azerbaijan relies on delays and the
    prospect of getting rid of Moscow with the help of the Western
    pressures and Turkish interventions.

    In such conditions, it is becoming clear why the European human rights
    defenders have again recalled the issue of the investigation of the
    March 1-2 incidents. And it is also becoming clear why the Russian
    experts express pessimism over the prospect of settling the Karabakh
    conflict in the nearest future.

    And after all, it is becoming clear why A. Stoub's prediction on
    the probability of signing a declaration on the Karabakh issue in
    Helsinki was replaced by the ready-made and uncertain statements of
    the Russian and French foreign Ministers and the US Deputy Secretary
    of State. The only important clause of the document is the appeal to
    the parties for ruling out the possibility of the military settlement
    of the Karabakh conflict and "reiterating their willingness to achieve
    the settlement o f the conflict through peaceful methods".

    As seen from the Foreign Ministers' successive appeal addressed to
    the conflicting parties on December the 4th, the Co-Chairs have no
    intention to take joint responsibility for the implementation of the
    Madrid Principles.
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