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ANKARA: History Of Peace Process Disruptions: Starring Armenia

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  • ANKARA: History Of Peace Process Disruptions: Starring Armenia

    HISTORY OF PEACE PROCESS DISRUPTIONS: STARRING ARMENIA

    Today's Zaman
    July 14 2011
    Turkey

    The last several years of ongoing negotiations regarding
    Nagorno-Karabakh have seen intense emotions brought to both sides of
    the conflict. Mediated by several countries within the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe's (OSCE) Minsk Group's framework and
    outside it, including the United States, Russia and Iran, the peace
    talks have yet to yield substantial results, not only in resolving
    the territorial conflict but in rebuilding trust between the two
    neighboring nations of Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    A great deal of blame is laid upon the conflicting parties each and
    every time talks are held with the participation of the leaders of
    OSCE Minsk Group co-chair states. The recent Kazan meeting was no
    exception. As though it had been predetermined that the talks were
    bound to fail, officials, analysts and the media are always prepared
    to storm the mass media with terms like "cease-fire violations,"
    "unconstructive stance" and "disruption of the peace talks." The
    abundance of such language in the media in the days following a round
    of talks causes inescapable moral nausea.

    More normal would be to hear both sides of a conflict accuse each
    other of unconstructive positions during peace talks, with mediators
    stopping short of blaming either side. However, the magnitude of the
    growing accusatory rhetoric from both the Armenian and Azerbaijani
    sides makes us wonder which side is more likely to sabotage and disrupt
    the peace process. A short list of disruptions to the peace process
    in this particular conflict begins very early, before the Soviet
    Union officially ceased to exist, and has a lot to offer for analysis.

    In late 1991, three-and-a-half years after the Armenian Soviet
    Socialist Republic (SSR) unilaterally announced its unconstitutional
    annexation of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO), a part of
    the Azerbaijan SSR, the leadership of the sovereign Russian Federation
    led by Boris Yeltsin and Nursultan Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan spearheaded
    a peacemaking mission to resolve the escalating bloody conflict in
    Nagorno-Karabakh. The agreement was finally reached after a four-day
    visit of the Russian-led peacemaking team to Baku, Ganja, Khankendi
    (Stepanakert) and Yerevan, and under it the Armenian government led by
    Levon Ter-Petrossian formally renounced all of its territorial claims
    in Azerbaijan. These accords, signed on Sept. 23, 1991 and later to be
    known as the Zheleznovodsk Accords, committed both sides to peaceful
    resolution of the conflict, disarming the conflicting parties, and
    allowing for the return of refugees and internally displaced persons
    (IDPs) and the restoration of law and order while the peacemakers
    continued to seek ways of resolution.

    Everything seemed to work out fine until one cold November night. On
    the evening of Nov. 20, 1991, a Soviet helicopter carrying a
    peacemaking team of 22 high-ranking officials from Kazakhstan, Russia
    and Azerbaijan, along with journalists and crew members, and excluding
    any Armenian officials, was shot down by Armenian militants over the
    Azerbaijani village of Qarakend in the Khojavend district. All on
    board died. After the public burial of the victims in Baku on Nov. 22,
    Azerbaijan would cease all negotiations with Armenia and abolish the
    autonomous status of NKAO on Nov. 27, establishing its own direct
    rule over Karabakh.

    The disruption of the Zheleznovodsk Accords led to an escalation of
    the conflict. In early December, Kerkijahan, a suburb of Khankendi,
    saw extreme violence against the Azerbaijani civilian population. The
    shooting down of civilian helicopters transporting Azerbaijani
    civilians to and from Shusha would follow in January 1992.

    Renewed efforts to mediate peace talks between Azerbaijan and Armenia
    were initiated by Iran in early February 1992 in what came to be
    known as "shuttle diplomacy" in the Caucasus. Foreign Minister Ali
    Akbar Velayeti visited Baku, Yerevan and Khankendi, trying to strike
    a peace deal between the warring parties amid the eruption of military
    activity and alleged ethnic cleansing of Azerbaijani civilians in the
    villages of Qaradaghli, Malibeyli and Qushchular in Karabakh. However,
    the peace talks were to stop with the escalation of war crimes,
    when 613 Azerbaijani civilians were massacred by Armenian forces
    in the town of Khojaly and its outskirts, just a short drive north
    of Khankendi. Under pressure from the opposition and the public,
    Azerbaijani President Ayaz Mutalibov was forced to resign, halting
    all mediated negotiations with Armenia.

    The peace mediation efforts were renewed with Velayeti revisiting
    both countries in March, and eventually arranging a trilateral
    meeting in Tehran on May 7, 1992. At that meeting interim Azerbaijani
    President and Parliament Speaker Yagub Memmedov, Armenian President
    Ter-Petrossian and Iranian President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani signed
    the Joint Statement of Heads of State, otherwise known as the Tehran
    Communique, which sealed the commitment of both parties to peace,
    inviolability of borders and finding a solution to the refugee crisis.

    However, as the meeting was taking place, Armenia was making different
    plans, preparing for a major assault on Shusha, the only remaining
    Azerbaijani-populated town in Nagorno-Karabakh. On May 8, pending a
    peace deal, undefended Shusha was attacked by and fell to Armenian
    forces.

    Although the Iranian envoy, Mahmood Vaezi, travelled to Baku to urge
    a return to negotiations in mid May, Armenia proved its inability to
    sustain peace with its occupation of Lachin on May 18, 1992. Betrayed
    by this disruption of the peace process, Iran discontinued its
    mediation efforts with a harshly critical message condemning Armenia's
    action in changing its border by force. All peace talks were suspended.

    Given this reputation for disruption and sabotage of the peace process,
    some experts tend to place the Armenian parliament shooting of October
    1999, which followed compromises from both sides earlier that year in
    an US-sponsored peace talks in Key West, in the category of activities
    targeted to undermine the peace process.

    Although military activities have largely ceased except for the
    occasional exchange of sniper fire, and all terrorist activity is
    at an end, the fact that the Armenian leadership has not worked
    credibly to build consensus and trust between the parties shows its
    lack of will to commit to peace. Hence the continuous disruptions
    of the peace process in various shapes and forms which interfere
    with regional development at large. All mediation efforts by Russia,
    Iran and the US have so far been in vain. Armenia, which was ranked
    by Forbes magazine after Madagascar as the second worst economy in
    the world just this month, should seriously reconsider its position
    within the peace process for the sake of its own economy and its so
    far unpromising future among developing countries.

    *Yusif Babanly is the co-founder and secretary of the US Azeris Network
    (USAN) and a member of the board of directors of Azerbaijani American
    Council.

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