Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

BAKU: Quantity Of Meetings Does Not Necessarily Give Qualitative Eff

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

  • BAKU: Quantity Of Meetings Does Not Necessarily Give Qualitative Eff

    QUANTITY OF MEETINGS DOES NOT NECESSARILY GIVE QUALITATIVE EFFECT - ANALYST

    nes.az
    July 1 2011
    Azerbaijan

    News.Az interviews Andrey Makarychev, Professor, Institute for East
    European studies, Free University of Berlin.

    Do you share the opinion of some observers that the negotiations on
    Karabakh entered a deadlock after the meeting in Kazan during which
    the documents on basic principles of the settlement process have not
    been signed?

    The trilateral summit on Nagorno-Karabakh held a few days ago in
    Kazan', seems to be another confirmation of Russia's desperate lack
    of effective means for influencing the conflict resolution in one of
    hottest point in CIS, the area which - ironically - Russia considers
    to constitute the sphere of its vital interest.

    The only sign of change this time was mostly rhetorical: Russian
    comments after the summit were a bit more explicit in pointing to
    Armenia as a conflict party that prevents the implementation of the
    Madrid proposals.

    Is there a need to review the format of mediators in process
    of settlement, if the current format of co-chairs does not give
    necessary results?

    The Kazan summit clearly confirmed that quantity of meetings does
    not necessarily give qualitative effect. Seen from a more general
    perspective, this situation raises the pivotal issues of efficacy of
    the international society (as exemplified by either mediators like
    Russia or institutions as the Minsk group) in regional conflicts
    marked by persisting relations of mutual enmity.

    Perhaps, the time is ripe for searching more creative solutions: if
    the Minsk group fails to effectively perform its functions, how about
    trying other possible institutional arrangements that might give a
    stronger voice for countries like Turkey or, perhaps, even China?

    Aspirants for "alternative" world leadership abound, but unfortunately
    by now neither of them appears to be keen to contributing to conflict
    resolutions in Eurasia - a task much more significant than playing
    the balancing games against the West.

    What do you think about prospects of further active, I would say,
    a sole mediation in Karabakh settlement?

    As far as Russia is concerned, the question Moscow has to bear in
    mind is whether it may stay militarily aloof in an unfortunate yet
    not completely unthinkable case of the eruption of armed conflict
    over Nagorno Karabakh.

    Perhaps, the key argument for Russian neutrality could be the fact
    that this territory is not even recognized by Armenia - thus why
    Russia has to commit its resources and risk the life of its soldiers
    for the sake of protecting the legally non-existing unit?

Working...
X