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Medvedev wades into Karabakh conflict

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  • Medvedev wades into Karabakh conflict

    The International Herald Tribune, France
    October 22, 2008 Wednesday



    Medvedev wades into Karabakh conflict

    YEREVAN, Armenia


    President Dmitri Medvedev of Russia, projecting Moscow's diplomatic
    clout in the Caucasus, pushed Tuesday to bring the leaders of Armenia
    and Azerbaijan together for talks on the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh
    region.

    Ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan in a
    war as the Soviet Union fell apart and the region now runs its own
    affairs, with support from Armenia. It has declared its independence
    but is not recognized by any state.

    President Serge Sargsyan of Armenia and his counterpart from
    Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, last met on the issue in early June, but the
    war in Georgia in August appears to have lent fresh impetus to
    diplomatic efforts to resolve the conflict.

    The war in Georgia erupted when Moscow sent troops to crush a bid by
    Georgian troops to reassert control over the breakaway region of South
    Ossetia, another ''frozen conflict'' arising from the breakup of the
    Soviet Union.

    Visiting Armenia, a staunch ally, Medvedev said the war in Georgia had
    shown the need to resolve disputes ''on the basis of international
    principles and by negotiations.''

    Armenia and Azerbaijan have never signed a peace treaty, and
    Azerbaijan has not ruled out using force to restore its control over
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    ''I hope we are in an advanced stage now,'' Medvedev said after talks
    with Sargsyan.

    ''Both sides are ready to seek solutions,'' he said, adding that he
    hoped to meet together with Sargsyan and Aliyev ''in the very near
    future.''

    ''I hope such a meeting will take place in Russia.''

    Turkey, a NATO member and ally of Azerbaijan, had taken the diplomatic
    lead on Nagorno-Karabakh in the wake of the August war. The initiative
    by Medvedev will be seen as a response, in a region where Russia and
    the West are vying for influence over vital energy transit routes from
    Central Asia to Western markets.

    Diplomats say that, without Russia, little headway can be made on the
    frozen conflicts.

    The war between Russia and Georgia deepened concern in the West over
    the reliability of the Caucasus energy corridor.

    Armenia is considered Russia's strongest ally in the region, but is
    also being courted by the United States. Yerevan is a member of the
    NATO Partnership for Peace program and hosted alliance exercises over
    the past three weeks.
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