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Azerbaijan May Use Force In Karabakh After Kosovo

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  • Azerbaijan May Use Force In Karabakh After Kosovo

    AZERBAIJAN MAY USE FORCE IN KARABAKH AFTER KOSOVO
    By Lada Yevgrashina

    Reuters
    March 4 2008
    UK

    BAKU, March 4 (Reuters) - Azerbaijan's president said on Tuesday his
    country was ready to take back breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh by force
    if need be and was buying military equipment and arms in preparation.

    President Ilham Aliyev linked his comments to the newly-declared
    independence in Kosovo which he said had emboldened ethnic Armenian
    separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh.

    In a sign of disapproval of Kosovo's independence Azerbaijan's
    parliament later voted to withdraw a 33-strong Azeri peacekeeping
    team that has been serving there under NATO command since 1999.

    Former Soviet Azerbaijan has been trying to restore control over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, where ethnic Armenian separatists threw off Azeri
    rule in the 1990s in a war that killed about 35,000 people.

    "We have been buying military machinery, airplanes and ammunition to
    be ready to liberate the occupied territories, and we are ready to
    do this," Turan quoted Aliyev as saying.

    He added the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with neighbouring Armenia
    could be resolved only on the principle of Azerbaijan's territorial
    integrity.

    The fragile peace between Azerbaijan and Armenia has held thanks to
    a ceasefire announced in May 1994 whan large-scale hostilities ended.

    But as Aliyev spoke, local television channels reported that two
    Azeri soldiers died in an exchange of fire near Nagorno-Karabakh's
    border earlier on Tuesday.

    Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sarksyan, who will become the next
    president after winning a Feb. 19 election, blamed Azeri soldiers for
    attacking Armenian forces but said he hoped for a peaceful solution
    to the stand-off.

    "I'm full of hope that normal and civilised logic will prevail in
    the end," he told reporters in the Armenian capital.

    "The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will be solved by peaceful means and
    I rule out a military solution to this conflict."

    "ILLEGAL" PRECEDENT

    After mainly ethnic Albanian Kosovo declared independence from Serbia
    last month, Nagorno-Karabakh said this would help its own drive for
    international recognition.

    The United States, major European Union powers and Azerbaijan's close
    ally Turkey have all backed Kosovo's independence, but Baku views it
    as illegal.

    "You see how norms of international law are violated in the world,"
    Aliyev was quoted as saying.

    "And this has a negative impact on the settlement of the
    (Nagorno-Karabakh) conflict. The force factor remains decisive,
    and we will achieve this (Nagorno-Karabakh's reintegration)."

    An Azeri official acknowledged that the pull-out of peacekeepers had
    clear political overtones due "to the changed political situation"
    after Kosovo's independence.

    Azerbaijan's economy, propelled by windfall revenues from booming
    Caspian Sea oil exports, has shown double-digit growth, and Aliyev
    said the nation's $1.3 billion military budget was set to expand
    further in the years to come.

    Aliyev said he believed Azerbaijan's growing military could nudge
    talks towards a diplomatic breakthrough. "A time will come when the
    Armenians will agree to that (settlement)," he said.
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