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Problems Remain Unsettled After The OSCE Summit

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  • Problems Remain Unsettled After The OSCE Summit

    PROBLEMS REMAIN UNSETTLED AFTER THE OSCE SUMMIT
    Karine Ter-Sahakyan

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    06.12.2008 GMT+04:00

    All the statements in the declaration are given in the subjunctive
    mood, which, as we all know, is a most suitable form to conceal one's
    inability of affecting the developments in the South Caucasus region.

    The meeting between the OSCE Foreign Ministers in Helsinki is
    already over. As expected, the major issues to be discussed at the
    summit were the situation in the Caucasus region, particularly the
    problem of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict regulation, and, naturally,
    the Russian-Georgian relations. It would, of course, be naive to
    expect anything new in the Karabakh problem, in spite of the fact
    that certain forces in Armenia and Azerbaijan hurried with their
    conclusions concerning the dates of regulation.

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Most apparently, the reason for these conclusions was
    the statement of the OSCE CiO's Special Representative Heikki Talvitie,
    who claimed that the year of 2008 proved useful for resolution of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. "Next year Greece will assume the OSCE
    presidency and much will depend on how Athens will integrate into the
    process of the Karabakh conflict regulation," said Talvitie, adding
    that the meetings between the Armenian and Azerbaijani Presidents
    can be viewed as important steps towards the conflict settlement.

    If we convert the diplomat's words into common language, it proves
    that neither changes, nor progress can be observed in the regulation
    process, because all the statements in the declaration are given in
    the subjunctive mood, which, as we all know, is a most suitable way
    to conceal one's inability of affecting the developments in the South
    Caucasus region. It happened in Georgia in the August of 2008, and
    it is what we have been experiencing in Karabakh for 20 years already.

    Meanwhile, Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov declares:
    "The Foreign Ministers of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chair states
    have submitted some changes in Madrid principles concerning the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. I am sure that either a ministerial
    or a presidential meeting will follow a thorough analysis of these
    changes." By the way, the Armenian Foreign Minister in no way commented
    on Mammadyarov's statement. Thus, either the statement is true or it
    is the Azeri Foreign Minister's heart's desire... And the changes are
    quite incomprehensible like the principles themselves, which aren't
    yet made public. Most likely, there are some secret things about
    which it is still rather early to speak, but shouldn't the Armenians,
    or to be more exact, the Karabakh people know about it? After all,
    it is their fate that is at stake. Here one may unwittingly draw
    an analogy with the pact Â"Molotov-RibbentropÂ", whose particulars
    became known only 50 years later.

    In the meantime, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian informs
    the OSCE Ministerial Council that Azerbaijan misinterprets all the
    provisions of the Moscow Declaration. "Baku goes as far as stating,
    in particular, that the peaceful settlement does not exclude use of
    force. I wonder if there is any other state here, around this table,
    which could have such interpretation of the very clear notion of the
    'peaceful political settlement'," Nalbandian notes.

    According to RA FM, despite all this Armenia would like to hope that
    the two sides of the conflict will be able to maintain the spirit
    and the positive momentum of the Moscow declaration and will advance
    towards the resolution of the conflict. "This was also the vision
    of the declaration made yesterday by the three Co-Chair countries in
    framework of our Ministerial meeting," the Minister said.

    The declaration signed in Helsinki by the Co-Chair countries of
    the OSCE Minsk Group says: "The Moscow Declaration opened a new and
    promising phase in our shared endeavor to expand peace in the South
    Caucasus. In that declaration, the Presidents reaffirm their commitment
    to advancing a peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
    in the framework of the Basic Principles developed by the Minsk Group
    Co-Chairs in collaboration with the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan
    on the basis of their proposals advanced last year in Madrid. We
    call on the parties to work with the Co-Chairs to finalize the Basic
    Principles in coming months, and then begin drafting a comprehensive
    peace settlement as outlined by those agreed principles. We reiterate
    our firm view that there is no military solution to the conflict and
    call on the parties to recommit to a peaceful resolution."

    In a word, it is one of those usual non-binding and pointless
    documents, of which the Karabakh people have seen a lot in the long
    process of the conflict Â"regulationÂ".

    --Boundary_(I D_5QKIGCEbEX5zOjCU0CaU3Q)--
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