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  • Agreed To Disagree

    AGREED TO DISAGREE

    WPS Agency
    What the Papers Say (Russia)
    January 26, 2010 Tuesday
    Russia

    BYLINE: Andrei Odinets, Irina Granik, Gamid Gamidov

    HIGHLIGHT: NEGOTIATIONS BETWEEN THE AZERBAIJANI AND ARMENIAN LEADERS IN
    SOCHI LEAD NOWHERE; Meeting in Sochi ended with nothing to show for it.

    The summit in Sochi became the first meeting between Dmitry
    Medvedev Enhanced Coverage LinkingDmitry Medvedev -Search using:
    Biographies Plus News News, Most Recent 60 Days (Russia), Ilham Aliyev
    (Azerbaijan), and Serj Sargsjan (Armenia) this year. Arranging the
    meeting, Moscow clearly intended to remind the international community
    that it remains a leading intermediary in the process of Karabakh
    conflict resolution.

    Making arrangements for the meeting, Moscow spent longer negotiating
    with Armenia than it did with Azerbaijan. Foreign Minister Sergei
    Lavrov visited Yerevan to discuss Karabakh on January 13. Armenian
    Defense Minister Sejran Oganjan and Karabakh President Bako Saakjan
    visited Moscow then. Medvedev and Sargsjan themselves met on January
    18. Last but not the least, Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan flew
    over to Moscow where he met with Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir
    Putin. Karabakh was discussed, among other matters.

    Diplomats involved in preparations for the meeting, however, admitted
    that nobody had expected a breakthrough - or even progress.

    Azerbaijani negotiators were in a particularly bleak mood. Shortly
    before the meeting in Sochi, they had discovered on Sargsjan's official
    web site a map of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh that listed occupied
    Azerbaijani territories as Armenian. The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry
    issued a formal protest, and the map was adjusted.

    The meeting lived up to all these expectations - or to the lack
    thereof. The presidents never even met with journalists afterwards.

    Presidential Aide Sergei Prikhodko's briefing was cancelled. It
    was Lavrov who finally talked to the waiting media. He said that the
    presidents had discussed principles of the Karabakh conflict resolution
    formulated by the OSCE Minsk Group in December 2007 (the so called
    Madrid Principles). Lavrov flatly refused to outline moot points.

    "By and large, they will merely put down whatever they disagree
    over on paper, and that will be that," to quote a source close to
    the negotiations. It is known meanwhile that the negotiating parties
    cannot agree on the interim status of Karabakh, procedures that will
    determine its ultimate status, width and status of the Lachi corridor
    connecting Armenia with Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Source: Kommersant, No 12, January 26, 2010, p. 8
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