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Stopping Wars Is More Important Than Formalities

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  • Stopping Wars Is More Important Than Formalities

    STOPPING WARS IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN FORMALITIES
    by Vladimir Kazimirov

    DEFENSE and SECURITY
    May 14, 2008 Wednesday
    Russia

    Official Moscow alone made the Karabakh agreement possible

    WARRING SIDES IN THE NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT RESUME CONTACTS;
    The Western community is jealous of the part Russia played in the
    Karabakh conflict settlement.

    The conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh is the only one on the territory
    of the erstwhile USSR where the warring sides resume contacts.

    OSCE Minsk Group chairman (Russia, United States, France) arranged
    a meeting between Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers Edward
    Nalbandjan and Elmar Mamedjarov in Strasbourg on May 6. Foreign
    ministers of the two countries met for the first time. Both, however,
    went to Strasbourg with an eye to arranging a meeting between
    presidents Serj Sarkisjan and Ilham Aliyev in St.Petersburg in early
    June. Wary of the new team in Yerevan, Baku is biding its time. It
    does not force the issue of a summit and bears in mind Armenia's
    domestic problems.

    Nalbandjan and Mamedjarov met in Strasbourg on the eve of a momentous
    jubilee - 14 years since the truce agreement (May 12). This
    unprecedented agreement was reached with Russia's help because
    Russia has always stood for the suspension of hostilities as the
    first priority. The suspension of hostilities and seven cease-fire
    accords are owed precisely to Moscow.

    Fatigued and aware of the relative parity, all three involved
    parties (Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia) wised up in no time
    at all. Fierce fighting near Terter north of Stepanakert in spring
    1999 threatened everyone with a new catastrophe. Had the Armenians
    fought their way to the Kura River, they'd have cut the northwestern
    part of Azerbaijan off the rest of the country (they had done so by
    reaching the Araks in 1993). Baku was aware of the implications. It
    no longer put forth any preliminary conditions. It was prepared to
    accept a long-term truce.

    One would say that the conditions for an agreement were ripe but
    every minute could ruin everything. The Azerbaijani leadership wanted
    a cease-fire signed with Yerevan but the Armenians refused to do so
    without Stepanakert's direct participation. Additional consultations
    and talks would have taken too long and could spoil everything in
    case of any changes on the front line. The Kremlin had to forget
    about the involved parties' whims for the time being and have them
    sign any agreement they cared to sign.

    The three-page long text was repeated for every signatory's
    signature. This document Moscow had spared neither time nor effort to
    make possible became the cease-fire agreement. Once the warring parties
    were satisfied that both texts were absolutely identical, Moscow as
    the intermediary proclaimed the agreement come into force as of May 12.

    To stop the war, Russia did without the usual legal paraphernalia:
    a common date and location of the signing, the original with three
    signatures, seals, a nice folder, a vault for sake-keeping, and so
    on. Jealous of the cease-fire because of Russia's part in it, the
    Western community tried to ignore it at first but eventually listed
    it in OSCE documents as an "unofficial" agreement. These days, they
    simply pretend that it does not exist at all. Granted that certain
    problems are important, there is nothing in the settlement process
    as vital as the cease-fire regime and the agreement to tackle the
    matter by peaceful means.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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