EXPERT: YEREVAN, MOSCOW TO TRY TO GAIN SIGNING OF DOCUMENT ON NONAGGRESSION BY ALIYEV
PanARMENIAN.Net
March 4, 2011 - 13:29 AMT 09:29 GMT
Director of Caucasus Institute, political analyst Alexander Iskandaryan
said that during the upcoming meeting in Sochi the Armenian and Russian
Presidents will try to gain signing of a document on nonaggression
by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.
Commenting on the March 5 meeting between the Armenian, Russian and
Azerbaijani Presidents in Sochi, Iskandaryan told a press conference
in Yerevan: "The Armenian and Russian parties will try to gain signing
of a document by Aliyev as a maximum or his promise about a peaceful
resolution of the Karabakh conflict as a minimum. But I do not see
reasons, due to which Aliyev will agree to it," the political analyst
said, adding that hostilities have not been launched in Karabakh yet
only due to the lack of a similar desire in Armenia, Nagorno Karabakh
and Azerbaijan.
According to Iskandaryan, the Russian party currently tries to
maintain the existing process, while the other OSCE Minsk Group's
co-chair countries gave a carte blanche to Moscow for it.
From: A. Papazian
PanARMENIAN.Net
March 4, 2011 - 13:29 AMT 09:29 GMT
Director of Caucasus Institute, political analyst Alexander Iskandaryan
said that during the upcoming meeting in Sochi the Armenian and Russian
Presidents will try to gain signing of a document on nonaggression
by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.
Commenting on the March 5 meeting between the Armenian, Russian and
Azerbaijani Presidents in Sochi, Iskandaryan told a press conference
in Yerevan: "The Armenian and Russian parties will try to gain signing
of a document by Aliyev as a maximum or his promise about a peaceful
resolution of the Karabakh conflict as a minimum. But I do not see
reasons, due to which Aliyev will agree to it," the political analyst
said, adding that hostilities have not been launched in Karabakh yet
only due to the lack of a similar desire in Armenia, Nagorno Karabakh
and Azerbaijan.
According to Iskandaryan, the Russian party currently tries to
maintain the existing process, while the other OSCE Minsk Group's
co-chair countries gave a carte blanche to Moscow for it.
From: A. Papazian