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US Concerned About Fighting In Nagorno-Karabakh

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  • US Concerned About Fighting In Nagorno-Karabakh

    US CONCERNED ABOUT FIGHTING IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH
    By David Gollust

    Voice of America
    March 5 2008

    The United States Wednesday expressed concern about this week's
    outbreak of fighting between Azerbaijani and Armenian soldiers
    near the disputed Armenian-held territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. A
    senior U.S. envoy is in the region discussing the issue with Azeri
    and Armenian officials. VOA's David Gollust reports from the State
    Department.

    The Nagorno-Karabakh fighting is described as the most serious of
    its kind in several years and it has prompted an appeal for restraint
    from the State Department, which says there is no military solution
    to the issue.

    Azerbaijan and Armenia are blaming each other for the clash, which
    broke out Tuesday along the cease-fire line in the disputed region,
    and reportedly killed four Azerbaijani and 12 Armenian soldiers.

    Officials said Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs
    Matthew Bryza - ordered to the region earlier this week because of
    post-election political unrest in Armenia - has also been discussing
    Nagorno-Karabakh with the two parties.

    Tom Casey (file photo) In a talk with reporters, State Department
    deputy spokesman Tom Casey said the United States is concerned by
    the violence and wants to see that Tuesday's incident is not repeated:

    "Clearly all this does is show the need for the parties to engage
    with the Minsk Group chairs, and work on resolving this conflict,"
    said Tom Casey. "I know it's one that's been out there for a long time,
    but there is absolutely no military solution to this issue.

    It's one that has to be dealt with through a diplomatic process."

    Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic-Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan, declared
    independence in 1988, triggering a six-year conflict that claimed
    35,000 lives.

    The Minsk Group, chaired by France, Russia and the United States,
    was created in 1992 and since then has been leading diplomatic efforts
    to settle the conflict.

    Armenia has accused Azerbaijan of taking advantage of its election
    crisis to foment the latest trouble.

    Azerbaijan, meanwhile, alleges that militant ethnic-Armenians in
    Nagorno-Karbakh have been encouraged by international recognition of
    Serbia's breakaway former province, Kosovo.

    Asked about that comparison, State Department spokesman Casey said
    majority-ethnic Albanian Kosovo, a scene of ethnic cleansing by Serb
    forces a decade ago, was a unique situation:

    "Its status was managed under a specific U.N. Security Council
    resolution, with an understanding in that resolution that final
    status was something that was going to be decided by the international
    community at an appropriate time," he said. "And that's where we are
    now. Kosovo is not a precedent and should be seen as a precedent for
    any other place out there in the world. It certainly isn't a precedent
    for Nagorno-Karabakh."

    Casey said U.S. envoy Bryza began his mission in Baku with talks with
    Azerbaijani officials and was due in the Armenian capital Yerevan
    on Friday. He said Bryza has already discussed the Nagorno-Karabakh
    situation in a telephone call to Armenia's foreign minister, Vardan
    Oskanian.
    From: Baghdasarian
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