Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Experts Say Karabakh Talks Calmed Down Azerbaijan And Upped Russia's

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Experts Say Karabakh Talks Calmed Down Azerbaijan And Upped Russia's

    EXPERTS SAY KARABAKH TALKS CALMED DOWN AZERBAIJAN AND UPPED RUSSIA'S PRESTIGE
    by Anastasia Kirilenko

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

    RUSSIA PLAYED PEACEKEEPER IN THE MATTER OF KARABAKH SETTLEMENT; Russia
    brokered Azerbaijani-Armenian negotiations over Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Aleksei Malashenko of the Moscow Carnegie Center said there were
    two ways of looking at the talks between three presidents. To begin
    with, the negotiations marked Russia's undeniable success. "Seeing
    Medvedev between Sargsjan and Aliyev was something without precedent,"
    Malashenko said.

    As for the settlement itself, the involved parties worked out five
    clauses. "Practically all of them are vague," Malashenko said. "Clause
    Four is particularly interesting, the one on non-use of weapons. It
    is the fact of the talks that counts here. This is the first time
    after the war with Georgia that Russia played a peacekeeper. Along
    with everything else, Russia confirmed that the OSCE Minsk Group
    exists and that Russia does not aspire to the right to make any
    single-handed decisions because there is also France, United States,
    and so on. It is a success of Russian diplomacy, particularly from
    the standpoint of what we've been seeing since August."

    As for the promises made by the first president of Armenia Levon
    Ter-Petrosjan who said that the Karabakh conflict would be settled
    inside of 2-3 months, Malashenko commented that no impending settlement
    of the conflict should be counted on.

    Aleksei Vlasov, Director of the Center for Studies of Sociopolitical
    Processes in the post-Soviet zone, said it would be possible to
    gauge efficiency of the talks when "preliminary agreements evolve
    into something more fundamental and serious." "Matter of fact, nobody
    expected from the first meeting any documents that would have become
    a practical solution to the problem," Vlasov said.

    The expert said that activization of Russia in the region stemmed from
    several reasons: firstly, "Karabakh conflict settlement with Russian
    involvement in whatever capacity will show the Russian leadership
    capable of using diplomacy of words as effectively as it used strength
    during the South Ossetian conflict."

    The second factor comes down to Moscow's reluctance to permit other
    players to strengthen their positions in the region. "Russia's
    withdrawal from Karabakh conflict settlement might have persuaded
    Azerbaijan to try and settle the matter by force. Or else, it
    might have strengthened United States' position as an arbiter and
    broker of the negotiations between Azerbaijan and Armenia," Vlasov
    added. "Moreover, even Armenia that is known as Russia's traditional
    ally in the region is ready to advance cooperation with the United
    States."

    Last but not least comes understanding that latent conflicts are
    dangerous. "The example of Abkhazia and South Ossetia plainly shows
    that these conflicts stop being latent sooner or later," Vlasov
    said. "The situation we have in the northern part of the Caucasus
    would have affected its southern part, and the nature of this effect
    would have been hard to predict."
Working...
X