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  • Nagorno-Karabakh balances between peace and war

    Nagorno-Karabakh balances between peace and war
    13:47 - 09.07.11

    Haykaram Nahapetyan


    Despite an agreement among the U.S., Russian and French presidents at
    the G-8 summit in Deauville, France, that it is time for a peaceful
    settlement to the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenian President
    Serzh Sargsyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev failed to make
    much progress when they met in Kazan, Russia, last week. U.S. State
    Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland called the meeting
    "disappointing," though she added, the parties "had improved their
    understanding on a number of issues."

    The dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh has its roots in Soviet-era
    boundaries that located the Armenian-populated enclave as an
    autonomous region within Soviet Azerbaijan in 1921. Since then, the
    inhabitants have been demanding secession from Azerbaijan and a union
    with neighboring Armenia. However, the modern period of conflict began
    in 1988 with the Soviet Union's democratization and perestroika, and
    has escalated in the years since. In 1991, Nagorno-Karabakh declared
    independence. One year later, Armenia took control of the Lachin
    corridor connecting the province to Armenia geographically. The
    majority of military hostilities ended in 1994, with Armenia
    controlling the vast majority of the former autonomous enclave and
    several adjacent districts referred to as a buffer zone.

    Since then, negotiations mediated by the Minsk Group, co-chaired by
    Russia, the U.S. and France, have centered on returning several
    districts of the buffer zone to Azerbaijan in exchange for a mutually
    satisfactory political status for Nagorno-Karabakh. Though Armenia and
    Azerbaijan came close in 1997, 1999 and 2001, a final resolution has
    never been reached.

    "The basis of the negotiations is that nothing is agreed until
    everything is agreed," says Jeff Goldstein of the Open Society
    Institute, who has been personally involved in the talks. "At the
    Nagorno-Karabakh negotiations, very often agreeing on the first 90-95
    percent of terms is not that hard. But there is always a hard core
    that remains unresolved."

    And in the absence of a settlement, the standoff has at times flared
    into border skirmishes that risk dragging the two sides into a
    shooting war. According to the International Crisis Group, last year
    Aliyev made at least 10 military threats relating to restarting
    military operations in Nagorno-Karabakh. Since 2003, Azerbaijan has
    increased its military budget 20-fold. And a few days ago, Aliyev
    proclaimed at a military parade, "The war in Karabagh isn't finished
    yet."

    Tom de Waal, of the Carnegie Endowment foundation in Washington,
    thinks the chance of war is increasing. "The Kazan meeting was
    supposed to be 'the moment.' With every year it becomes easier to have
    a war," he said.

    Sergey Markedonov, a Russian analyst at the Center for International
    and Strategic Studies, does not anticipate military hostilities in
    near future, however. Neither does Goldstein, "unless accidental shots
    on the frontline unexpectedly rekindle a large-scale hostility," he
    says.

    The conflict is complicated by the junction of multibillion-dollar
    regional hydrocarbon projects that involve the geopolitical interests
    of Russia and, to some extent, Turkey and Iran. Considering the events
    of 2008, when Russia took advantage of Georgia's attacks on South
    Ossetia to change the facts on the ground there and in Abkhazia,
    Washington-based analysts do not exclude the possibility that a
    renewed Armenian-Azerbaijani clash in Nagorno-Karabakh may lead to a
    similar scenario. Moscow may back up Yerevan, considering that Russia
    has a military base in the country and that both parties are members
    of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO). Though some
    analysts argue that the treaty does not refer to Nagorno-Karabakh, but
    rather the territory of the Republic of Armenia, there is no
    definitive evidence either way.

    Meanwhile, Russian Gen. Andrey Tretyak was described as saying that
    Russia's refusal to intervene last summer in Kyrgyzstan, also a CSTO
    member, should not be seen as a precedent for Karabakh. This has led
    some to conclude that Moscow may step in if war breaks out.

    A new Caucasian war would jeopardize not just the existing oil and
    natural gas pipelines -- Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and Baku-Erzurum - but
    also the European Union's Nabucco project, which is supposed to
    deliver Central Asian and Azerbaijani gas to European markets.

    The three Minsk Group co-chairmen have proposed that the resolution of
    the conflict be based on three main principles: self-determination,
    territorial integrity and the non-use of force. Yerevan and Baku still
    have major disagreements about the first two principles. During a June
    visit to Washington, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Eldar (Elmar)
    Mamedyarov stated in a talk at the Atlantic Council that his country
    is ready to acknowledge the right of self-determination of
    Nargono-Karabakh's Armenians without compromising Azerbaijan's
    territorial integrity. However, for Baku, autonomy does not mean
    independence. From the Armenian perspective, Nagorno-Karabakh had
    already established autonomy during the Communist era. "The
    territorial integrity of Azerbaijani Republic has nothing to do with
    Nagorno Karabagh, as [it] never was a part of independent Azerbaijan,"
    says Robert Avetisyan, the representative of Nagorno-Karabakh to the
    U.S.

    The Armenian president has, however, offered to concede to the third
    principle, relating to the non-use of force. "I propose, through you,
    the media, to appeal to Azerbaijan to sign an agreement not to use
    force," Sargsyan said during an interview with Euronews. "And under
    these conditions of trust we would begin the negotiations for a
    settlement."

    However, with no progress at Kazan even on this proposal,
    Nagorno-Karabagh continues to hang in the balance between war and
    peace.


    Tert.am


    From: Baghdasarian
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