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ISTANBUL: The Caucasian Winter

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  • ISTANBUL: The Caucasian Winter

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    July 8 2011


    The Caucasian Winter

    Friday, July 8, 2011
    ZAUR SHIRIYEV


    The Middle East is at the top of the international community's
    political agenda: The `Arab Spring' and developments in Libya remain
    priorities. On June 24, however, the world was looking to the Russian
    city of Kazan, where the Russian, Armenian and Azerbaijan presidents
    were meeting to discuss the long-running Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Before the meeting, local analysts had
    expressed anxiety about a new war. They spoke of a `Caucasus Winter,'
    suggesting that political relations between regional countries were
    becoming increasingly frosty and that the region might return to the
    international spotlight. Other analysts have given exclusive focus to
    the issues raised by the Arab Spring revolutions as they might be
    transferred to the Caucasus, but the question of this possible
    `Winter' carries far more urgency.

    Before the Kazan meeting, the international community shared these
    fears about the re-opening of the conflict and Kazan was described as
    the `last chance for peace.' These hopes for the Kazan meeting
    followed what many consider to be an unprecedented joint statement by
    the United States, Russian and French presidents, at the G8 Summit in
    Deauville, France on May 26. The presidents of Armenia, Russia and
    Azerbaijan issued a joint statement after Kazan, to say the parties
    have recorded progress on the Basic Principles of Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict resolution.

    It seems the main unresolved and contentious issues between the
    parties involved are the `basic principles' of the `Madrid
    Principles,' proposed by the OSCE Minsk Group in 2007. After years of
    debate between the relevant parties, there is still some way to go
    before the `Madrid Principles' are accepted as the basis for peaceful
    political resolution. However, the procedural parameters for the
    settlement as described in the Madrid Principles are clear. This is
    the basic formula that has underpinned all previous attempts to
    negotiate a deal and which has been publically accepted by the
    Azerbaijani government, although Baku has attempted to compromise by
    offering to give Nagorno-Karabakh the `highest level of autonomy'
    within its territory (much as Tatarstan functions inside the Russian
    Federation). There is certainly a feeling within government circles in
    Azerbaijan that the current process is payback for the past years of
    `failed hopes,' and in the absence of pressure on Armenia by the
    international community, the peace process has served only to support
    and solidify the status quo. This is why Azerbaijan saw the Kazan
    meeting as a key opportunity to establish a concrete peace process.
    The fear was that if this discussion fails to provide any further
    developments, as they have in the past, Azerbaijan may boycott future
    meetings.

    In order to fully understand the dynamics of the peace negotiations
    and the current stalemate, it is important to consider the underlying
    basis of the Armenian position. On a practical level, Yerevan is under
    pressure from both Nagorno-Karabakh's de facto authorities and the
    Armenian Diasporas, notably in the U.S. These groups are more
    nationalistic and less willing to compromise than opposition parties
    within Armenia itself, due in the former instance to `frontier
    spirit,' in the latter, to the luxury of distance. These groups
    exercise financial, political and ideological leverage over the
    Armenian government and are certainly not beholden to its policies.
    Any pledge by Armenia to withdraw from the districts surrounding
    Karabakh will face staunch opposition in Khankendi (Stepanakert) and
    could push the Nagorno-Karabakh separatist's military to launch
    attacks against Azerbaijan, as a means of disrupting the peace
    process. The fact that Armenia is building an airport in the occupied
    territories of Azerbaijan constitutes a real provocation; if
    Azerbaijan responds with military action, then it will be easier for
    Armenia to argue that Azerbaijan poses a threat to peace. The risk is
    that that the resolution framework will be abandoned and replaced by
    unilateral - and potentially military - approaches by both sides. This
    was demonstrated in a recent BBC Russia interview with Ter-Petrosyan,
    former president and the current leader of Armenia's opposition. He
    argued `the Karabakh conflict has not been resolved because the people
    of Karabakh demonstrated a maximalist approach - they decided that
    this was not enough, they could push harder and get more... And not
    just people in Karabakh,' said the ex-president, who was forced to
    resign in February 1998, less than half a year after presenting his
    vision for ending the conflict.

    It might reasonably be asked: Is this process about delineating the
    terms of a fair peace agreement, or is it about sustaining the status
    quo?

    Obviously, each time the peace process has been restarted, we have
    heard the same kinds of hopeful statements from the OSCE Minsk Group
    Co-chairs and the same counsel from political analysts. Each time we
    have been told that those who criticize the Armenian position are
    `opponents of peace.' But each time, this flawed political process has
    brought us no closer to a workable solution. Perhaps it is time to
    imagine a different process, one that takes seriously both the
    security concerns of Karabakh Armenians and the rights of Karabakh
    Azerbaijanis, as seriously need be. In other words, the ultimate
    objective of the settlement process is to elaborate and define a
    political model and legal framework for the status of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh region within the internationally recognized borders
    of Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan believes the process of defining any such
    status shall take place in normal peaceful conditions with direct,
    full and equal participation of the region's entire population, namely
    the Armenian and Azerbaijani communities, with constructive
    interaction with the government of Azerbaijan and within the framework
    of a lawful and democratic process.

    Last but not least, what the peace process procedure needs is a change
    in its `location'; it does not need to change its current format, only
    strong support and innovation can lead to resolution. Otherwise, the
    international political agenda will feature the war of the `Caucasus
    Winter,' war and chaos as seen in August 2008, or a continued silence
    of `no war, no peace,' as is seen internationally. The international
    community must bring `Spring' to the Caucasus and this means peace,
    constructive discussion (as in the 2001 Key West and 2006 Rambue
    talks). What we do not need is fruitless discussion based on
    copy-pasting of the Arab demonstrations. In the near future, the
    involvement of the international community in the peace process is a
    source of optimism; that is to say, the U.S., and France as a
    representative of the EU could bring a breath of `fresh air' to the
    process.

    * Zaur Shiriyev is a Foreign Policy Analyst at the Center for
    Strategic Studies in Baku, Azerbaijan and the Executive Editor of
    Caucasus International journal.

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