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Medvedev Brokers Armenia-Azerbaijan Dispute

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  • Medvedev Brokers Armenia-Azerbaijan Dispute

    MEDVEDEV BROKERS ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN DISPUTE

    International Herald Tribune
    Nov 2 2008
    France

    MOSCOW: President Dmitri Medvedev sought Sunday to underline
    Russia's influence in the Caucasus by bringing together the leaders
    of Azerbaijan and Armenia for talks on the breakaway region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, which has a mostly ethnic Armenian population, broke
    away from Azerbaijan in a war in the early 1990s as the Soviet Union
    collapsed. It now runs its own affairs, with support from Armenia.

    The Armenian president, Serzh Sargsian, and his Azeri counterpart,
    Ilham Aliyev, shook hands before Medvedev opened talks at Meiendorf
    Castle, the official residence outside Moscow.

    After the talks, all three presidents signed a declaration, which
    was read out by Medvedev and said that Aliyev and Sargsian had agreed
    to continue work on "a political resolution of the conflict." Aliyev
    and Sargsian made no comment.

    The war between Russia and Georgia in August appears to have lent
    new impetus to diplomatic efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh
    situation, with Russia trying to show it can act as a broker for
    "frozen conflicts" in the former Soviet Union.

    Georgia sent troops and tanks in August to retake the pro-Russian rebel
    region of South Ossetia, which threw off Georgian rule in 1991-92.

    Russia responded with a powerful counterstrike that drove the Georgian
    Army out of South Ossetia and continued into Georgia proper. Moscow
    then recognized South Ossetia and another of Georgia's rebel regions,
    Abkhazia, as independent states.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of
    Azerbaijan. Armenia provides assistance to the breakaway region,
    though no government, including Armenia's, has recognized it as an
    independent state.

    Fighting between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the area ended in 1994
    when a cease-fire was signed. The two sides are still technically at
    war because no peace treaty has been signed.

    About 35,000 people on both sides were killed in the fighting. More
    than a million people were forced to flee their homes, and almost
    all are still unable to return.

    Along with France and the United States, Russia is one of the co-chairs
    of the Minsk Group, which is mandated to act as an intermediary in
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. But it is unusual for a head of state
    to act directly as mediator.

    The presidents, the joint declaration said, "discussed the perspectives
    for the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict via political
    means, through the continuation of direct dialogue between Azerbaijan
    and Armenia with the mediation of Russia, the United States and France
    as the co-chairmen of the Minsk group."

    Armenia is considered Russia's strongest ally in the Caucasus, but
    it is also being courted by the United States and the European Union
    in a struggle with Moscow for influence over a transit route for oil
    and gas from the Caspian Sea area.
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