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Armenia, Azerbaijan Talks Produce Little Progress

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  • Armenia, Azerbaijan Talks Produce Little Progress

    ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN TALKS PRODUCE LITTLE PROGRESS
    LYNN BERRY

    Associated Press
    MANSUR MIROVALEV
    Friday, June 24, 2011

    MOSCOW (AP) - The presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan failed on
    Friday to approve a set of basic principles for a peaceful settlement
    to their long-standing dispute over the breakaway territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, despite U.S. and Russian efforts to mediate the
    conflict in the strategic Caucasus region.

    The war over the predominantly ethnic Armenian enclave inside
    Azerbaijan ended in 1994 leaving 30,000 dead and more than 1 million
    displaced. Since then, talks to resolve one of the most worrisome
    "frozen conflicts" in the former Soviet Union have dragged on with
    the enclave controlled by Armenian and separatist forces.

    Hopes were high for Friday's Kremlin-hosted talks in the Volga River
    city of Kazan on approving the set of basic principles, but after
    three hours of talks the parties reported little progress.

    Azerbaijan's Ilham Aliyev and Armenia's President Serge Sarkisian said
    they "reached an understanding on a number of issues" but provided
    no details.

    Both leaders face fierce domestic pressure not to compromise, but their
    countries also have been eager to overcome the consequences of the war.

    President Barack Obama spoke to the leaders by telephone on Thursday
    and urged them to endorse the basic principles and take a "decisive
    step toward a peaceful settlement."

    Ambassador Robert Bradtke, the U.S. diplomat involved in international
    efforts to find a peaceful solution to the conflict, described the
    talks as "probably the most important point in the process since 2001,
    when there were efforts made to get a peace agreement at Key West."

    Both separatist and Azeri governments report sporadic skirmishes and
    shootings of each other's servicemen on the border.

    Azerbaijan, an energy-rich, predominantly Muslim country on the Caspian
    Sea, has struggled to cope with the hundreds of thousands of people
    driven out of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas that also fell
    under Armenian control.

    Impoverished, landlocked and mostly Christian Armenia has been hurt
    economically by Turkey's closing of the border in 1993 in support
    of Azerbaijan. Turkey shares close ethnic and linguistic ties with
    Azeris. An agreement between Turkey and Armenia in 2009 intended
    to open the way to diplomatic ties and the reopening of the border
    foundered over Turkey's demand that Armenian troops withdraw from
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    In the Communist era, Nagorno-Karabakh was an autonomous region within
    Soviet Azerbaijan. Nagorno-Karabakh is a Russian-Turkish term that
    means "mountainous black garden." Ethnic Armenians that now account
    for virtually the entire population, call the region Artsakh.

    Before becoming part of czarist Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan had
    long been dominated by Iran and Ottoman Turkey.

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