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Armenia: Karabakh Talks Poses Big Challenge For Armenian-Turkish Rap

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  • Armenia: Karabakh Talks Poses Big Challenge For Armenian-Turkish Rap

    ARMENIA: KARABAKH TALKS POSES BIG CHALLENGE FOR ARMENIAN-TURKISH RAPPROCHEMENT
    Haroutiun Khachatrian

    Eurasia Insight
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/ar ticles/eav100609a.shtml
    10/06/09

    Recent comments by Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan on the status of
    the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh suggest that the peace
    process remains at an impasse. That, in turn, could complicate
    Armenian-Turkish reconciliation efforts.

    In a September 21 interview with the Russian state-run RTR television
    channel, Sargsyan for the first time publicly voiced Yerevan's
    interpretation of the so-called Madrid Principles, which contain a
    framework for an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace pact on Karabakh.

    The Principles, first proposed in late 2007 by mediators Russia,
    France and the United States, call for the return of Armenian-occupied
    regions surrounding Karabakh to Azerbaijan control; the return of
    Azerbaijani Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) to Karabakh; and,
    finally, an agreement on a mechanism, likely a referendum, to decide
    on the territory's future status.

    Sargsyan made clear that Armenia sees these steps happening in the
    reverse order; namely, that both the handover of regions bordering
    Karabakh to Azerbaijan and the return of Azerbaijani IDPs can occur
    only after Karabakh's final status is determined. To support his
    position, Sargsyan argued that allowing IDPs to return before a
    determination of the territory's status was made "would cause new
    clashes."

    Sargsyan described the Madrid Principles as "the holding of a
    referendum to define the final status of Nagorno-Karabakh, the
    return to Azerbaijani control those territories which you named [as
    under Armenian army control] and which Karabakh and we both call the
    'security zone,' and the normalization of all our relations."

    "My position has been expressed many times, including to [Azerbaijani
    President] Ilham Aliyev and to the co-chairs [of the Minsk Group
    overseeing the talks], and it amounts to the following. Of course, the
    Azerbaijani refugees from Karabakh have the complete right to return
    to their native places, their places of residence, but they can do
    this after the final definition of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh,"
    Sargsyan said. "Why? Because there has not yet been a single similar
    conflict where the return of refugees ahead of time did not cause new
    clashes. And we are heading toward a resolution -- for the purpose
    of what? For the purpose of peace, of stability, so that each person
    will know where he will live."

    Sargsyan expressed thanks to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev,
    who, according to Sargsyan, had helped President Aliyev and him
    "almost agree on the first point," which the Armenian leader earlier
    listed as "the holding of a referendum to define the final status
    of Nagorno-Karabakh."

    How Sargsyan's comments will impact Armenia's budding reconciliation
    with Turkey remains unclear. Turkish officials have repeatedly
    stressed that Turkey will reopen its border with Armenia only if
    progress acceptable to Baku is made on a Karabakh peace pact. Ankara
    closed its border with Armenia in 1993 to support Azerbaijan in its
    war with Armenia over the territory. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    "We will not take steps contradicting Azerbaijan's interests," Turkish
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a September 28 interview
    with Azerbaijan's Trend news agency. "We can accelerate the process
    of the adoption of the agreement [with Armenia], but that will depend
    on the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict."

    On October 10, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and Armenian
    Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian are scheduled to sign protocols
    that set the stage for reopening the Turkish-Armenian border and
    reestablishing diplomatic ties. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    Turkish officials, to date, have not reacted publicly to Sargsyan's
    RTR comments.

    Azerbaijani leaders, however, have indicated that Sargsyan's position
    is a non-starter with Baku. In an interview with RTR during the summer,
    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev asserted that if the issue of
    Karabakh's final status "is brought up again as a precondition for
    coordination of positions, we will not achieve anything."

    Aliyev named the withdrawal of Armenian troops from the regions
    bordering Karabakh as "the first step." Discussion of Karabakh's final
    status can occur only after Azerbaijani IDPs return to the territory,
    he emphasized.

    Armenian officials have long insisted that the two issues -- the
    Karabakh peace process and Turkish reconciliation efforts -- are
    separate. The Minsk Group, the triumvirate of Russian, American and
    French envoys overseeing the Karabakh negotiations, has echoed that
    assessment.

    Armenia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs declined to comment on
    Sargsyan's comments to RTR. "I can only remind you that Armenia
    has always stressed that the core of the Karabakh problem is the
    issue of Nagorno-Karabakh's status," said ministry spokesperson
    Tigran Balaian. The idea that a withdrawal should take priority over
    determining Karabakh's status is only the Azerbaijani point of view,
    and one that is "not necessarily shared" by Armenia, he added.

    Many Armenians continue to worry that the agreement on reconciliation
    with Turkey includes a "hidden" condition that Armenia makes Karabakh
    concessions. Sargsyan has dismissed that fear as groundless.

    One political analyst termed Sargsyan's interpretation of the Madrid
    Principles "quite natural."

    "The Madrid Principles by themselves are a very vague document and
    allow [for] different interpretations," said Alexander Iskandarian,
    director of Yerevan's Caucasus Institute. "There is no surprise that
    the sides interpret it in such a different manner."

    "I think that the Karabakh settlement process has its own logic,
    and it can be accelerated or delayed artificially," he continued.

    Other aspects of the Karabakh talks also appear open to differing
    interpretations. Speaking with members of Armenian Diaspora in Paris
    on October 2, President Sargsyan stated that finding a resolution to
    the Karabakh problem "still requires significant work." Reason exists
    "to believe that signing an agreement about the resolution of this
    problem is not realistic," Armenian news agencies quoted him as saying.

    On the same day, speaking in Nakhichivan City in Azerbaijan,
    Azerbaijani President Aliyev told Turkish President Abdullah Gul,
    Kazakhstani President Nursultan Nazarbayev and Kyrgyz President
    Kurmanbek Bakiyev that talks with Armenia about Nagorno-Karabakh
    "are in their final stage."

    The two leaders will meet on October 8 in Chisinau, Moldova, for
    additional discussions on the Karabakh issue.

    Editor's Note: Haroutiun Khachatrian is an editor and freelance writer
    based in Yerevan.
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