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"War Is Not Over": Azerbaijan Resumes Bellicose Rhetoric On Karabakh

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  • "War Is Not Over": Azerbaijan Resumes Bellicose Rhetoric On Karabakh

    "WAR IS NOT OVER": AZERBAIJAN RESUMES BELLICOSE RHETORIC ON KARABAKH AFTER KAZAN
    By Aris Ghazinyan

    ArmeniaNow
    27.06.11 | 12:00

    Photo: www.president.az

    Azerbaijan's so-called Karabakh Liberation Organization held a meeting
    in Baku on June 25 to discuss the "dangerous situation regarding
    Karabakh's future that has formed after the Kazan meeting."

    The resolution adopted as a result of the meeting stated that "the
    futility of the Kazan meeting has once again demonstrated the OSCE
    Minsk Group co-chair countries' pro-Armenian position. Hence, there
    is no point in continuing these negotiations."

    Enlarge Photo With this document the organization is demanding that
    the Azeri authorities "immediately start a war against Armenia".

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev stated on June 26: "Armenia's
    occupation of 20 percent of Azeri territories is temporary and cannot
    last forever. I am strongly convinced that our territorial integrity
    will be recovered by any means it takes. The war in Karabakh is not
    over yet."

    The demonstrative nature of this statement is in the fact that
    it was voiced right after the Kazan meeting, that is after the
    co-chairs stressed once again that a diplomatic settlement is the
    only acceptable settlement of the issue and has no alternative. The
    Azerbaijani president's statement, hence, became a sort of demarche.

    It is symbolic that the statement itself was voiced during a military
    parade in Baku held on Sunday and timed to Armed Forces Day and the
    20th anniversary of Azerbaijan's independence.

    Some 6,000 servicemen took part in the parade demonstrating 400 units
    of military hardware and ammunition.

    S-300 surface-to-air missile systems purchased from Russia, anti-mine
    carriers as well as modern defense technology items of Turkish, Czech
    and Israeli make were paraded during the review. As reported by news
    agencies, for the first time Azerbaijan demonstrated its unpiloted
    planes along with combat helicopters and fighter jets. Besides,
    Azeri-manufactured kinds of riffles were also demonstrated during
    the parade.

    To sum it up: the parade was designed as a show of Azerbaijan's
    military might. The Azeri president attended it in the capacity of
    the Commander-in-Chief, but delivered his speech as president.

    "Our state budget has grown 16 times. Accordingly, our military
    spending has increased 20 times and mas 2,582,959,470 manats ($3.27
    billion), but even that is not our limit. Today Azerbaijan's military
    spending exceeds Armenia's entire state budget by 50 percent. By their
    volume the military expenses will continue being a top priority in
    Azerbaijan's budget until Armenia withdraws from the Azeri lands and
    a peace agreement is signed with this country," Ilham Aliyev stated.

    Baku is traditionally talking about its material-financial superiority
    over Yerevan to make a point that "Armenia is much poorer than
    Azerbaijan". Still Ilham Aliyev's late father and ex-president Heydar
    Aliyev used to say: "Our military budget will soon exceed Armenia's
    total budget."

    In this connection Vahram Atanesyan, head of the NKR National
    Assembly's Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, says that
    although money is important, it is, nevertheless, not the decisive
    factor. "The international experience of recent years has shown that
    even superpowers are unable to solve their issues by force... And
    didn't Artsakh [Nagorno Karabakh] manage to resist multi-million
    Azerbaijan back in the early 1990s?"

    After the Kazan meeting other structures, too, have started to
    talk about the possibility of a new war. Sabine Freizer, the Europe
    program director of the International Crisis Group, said that the
    results of the trilateral meeting of the presidents (of Armenia,
    Russia and Azerbaijan) are disappointing, but there still remains
    a hope that the basic principles of the Karabakh settlement can,
    after all, be agreed upon."

    The problem, she believes, is that there isn't much time left.

    Presidential elections will be held in the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairing
    countries in 2012, and in Azerbaijan and Armenia in 2013; and it would
    be very difficult to reach an agreement over a Karabakh settlement
    during the election campaign periods.

    "If the negotiations on the basic principles fail, the likelihood
    of a new wave of armed clashes between the sides will be very high,"
    she says.

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