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Approcahing Karabakh From Three Directions

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  • Approcahing Karabakh From Three Directions

    APPROACHING KARABAKH FROM THREE DIRECTIONS
    by Nikolai Filchenko

    WPS Agency
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    November 7, 2008 Friday
    Russia

    Presidents of Russia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan sign a joint declaration

    PRESIDENTS OF RUSSIA, ARMENIA, AND AZERBAIJAN DISCUSSED
    NAGORNO-KARABAKH; Presidents of Russia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan
    discussed Nagorno-Karabakh settlement.

    Dmitry Medvedev, Serj Sargsjan, and Ilham Aliyev signed a joint
    declaration on Nagorno-Karabakh. It became the first document since
    1994 leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan signed together. Observers
    say meanwhile that this was all Moscow's diplomacy accomplished.

    Preparations for the trilateral summit began almost immediately after
    the Five Day War with Georgia that badly damaged Russia's image of a
    peacekeeper in the eyes of the international community. A week after
    recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia (on September 2), President
    Dmitry Medvedev met with Sargsjan in Sochi and discussed the idea of
    a Karabakh summit in Russia with him. Medvedev called Aliyev in Baku
    several days after that and informed him of the idea. Details of the
    summit were discussed during Aliyev's visit to Moscow and Medvedev's
    own trip to Armenia in September.

    The summit took place in Castle Maiendorf near Moscow. The negotiations
    resulted in the trilateral declaration which Russia appraised as "a
    document of paramount importance". According to Russian Chairman of
    the OSCE Minsk Group, Yuri Merzlyakov, this was the first agreement
    the concerned parties signed after 1994.

    Signatories pledge the resolve "to facilitate improvement of the
    situation through political settlement of the Karabakh conflict on
    the basis of the international law." They agree that "accomplishment
    of peaceful settlement should be accompanied y legally binding
    international guarantees" and emphasize that "presidents of Azerbaijan
    and Armenia decided to continue efforts aimed at political settlement
    of the conflict."

    The declaration caused a great deal of comments in Armenia and
    Azerbaijan. Recognizing importance of the signing, observers in Yerevan
    and Baku found numerous faults with the document. Azerbaijani political
    scientist Vafa Guluzade called it "a pointless document" that committed
    signatories to nothing. Independent expert Rasim Musabekov emphasized
    the absence of the non-use of force clause in the document.

    Armenian observers meanwhile decided that the document recognized
    existence of sovereign Nagorno-Karabakh. "Two presidents pledge
    to abide by the international law. The birth, proclamation,
    and existence of Artsakh corresponds to it," political scientist
    Levon Melik-Shakhnazarjan said. Speaking of the shortcomings of the
    document, Melik-Shakhnazarjan pointed out that it did not recognize
    Nagorno-Karabakh as a concerned party.
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