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Two Men In A Boat

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  • Two Men In A Boat

    TWO MEN IN A BOAT
    by Ivan Sukhov

    Moscow News
    WPS Agency
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    August 12, 2011 Friday
    Russia

    PRESIDENTS DMITRY MEDVEDEV (RUSSIA) AND ILHAM ALIYEV (AZERBAIJAN)
    MET IN SOCHI; Dmitry Medvedev and Ilham Aliyev discussed Karabakh
    conflict resolution.

    President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev and Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev
    met in Sochi this Tuesday. It was their first meeting following the
    Russian-Azerbaijani-Armenian summit last month where no progress at
    all had been made in the matter of the Karabakh conflict resolution.

    No official statements were made after the negotiations in
    Sochi, yesterday. Medvedev said before the talks, "Let us have a
    straightforward discourse on what is to be done now and what turn the
    events might take following our previous meeting in Kazan and other
    analogous meetings."

    A source within the Presidential Administration said that the
    discourse had been straightforward indeed. The leaders did their
    best to understand who or what was impairing the process of conflict
    resolution.

    The trilateral meeting in Kazan this July had been something expected
    with anticipation in Yerevan, Baku, and Nagorno-Karabakh itself. It
    was thought that a framework document on Karabakh conflict resolution
    principles would be signed there. It would have become a crowning
    accomplishment of Russian diplomacy and Medvedev himself. On the
    other hand, this signing would have changed the status quo and that
    could result in another outbreak of hostilities.

    Skeptics had been correct to sneer at the expectations. No documents
    were signed in Kazan. Baku put forth a whole number of new demands. At
    some point all involved parties even feared that the trilateral format
    might actually become history.

    Fortunately, the latest developments and meetings in Sochi dispelled
    these fears.

    Medvedev emphasized in an interview several days ago, on the third
    anniversary of the Russian-Georgian conflict, that however complicated
    ethnic and territorial conflicts might be, even extended negotiations
    were better than actual attempts to settle the matter by sheer
    strength of arms. In fact, Medvedev said that he was talking about
    Karabakh. His words caused a public outcry in Azerbaijan whose state
    officials including Aliyev himself regularly remind whoever cares to
    listen of their readiness to reconquer Karabakh.

    Aliyev was quite non-aggressive in Sochi. "I'd like to thank you once
    again for the efforts to settle the Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict over
    Nagorno-Karabakh," he told the host. "We of Azerbaijan appreciate
    what you have been doing." Aliyev called the Karabakh conflict the
    main threat to regional security.

    A source within the Kremlin said that the period of mutual
    disappointment and frustration with each other seemed to be over.

    Medvedev will meet with his Armenian counterpart Serj Sargsjan at the
    informal summit of the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization
    in Astana (Kazakhstan) scheduled to begin on August 12.

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