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Armenia Become Weaker, While Azerbaijan Grown Stronger: Ter-Petrossi

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  • Armenia Become Weaker, While Azerbaijan Grown Stronger: Ter-Petrossi

    ARMENIA BECOME WEAKER, WHILE AZERBAIJAN GROWN STRONGER: TER-PETROSSIAN TO MATTHEW BRYZA

    epress.am
    09.06.2011 10:57

    In a Aug. 8, 2009 meeting with US Deputy Assistant Secretary (DAS)
    Matthew Bryza, former Armenian President Levon Ter-Petrossian (LTP)
    said that when it comes to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, "ten years
    had been wasted, during which Armenia has become relatively weaker"
    while Azerbaijan has grown relatively stronger. According to an Aug.

    17, 2009 confidential cable written by former US Ambassador to Armenia
    Marie L. Yovanovitch recently released by WikiLeaks, Ter-Petrossian
    believed Azerbaijan would get more now from a negotiated settlement
    than it could have five years ago.

    "As for his Armenian National Congress (ANC), LTP said they would
    not create obstacles to a settlement. If there were no solution now
    according to the Basic Princples, the next solution on offer would be
    still worse, or there would be war. However, he said that if Sargsyan
    turns out to have negotiated a bad solution, ANC would do all in its
    power to prevent it. Moreover, if the authorities did not release the
    remaining 23 of 'our friends still in jail,' the ANC would have to
    fight against Sargsyan using every legal means and on all topics. LTP
    said it was a 'huge mistake' that the President didn't release all
    political prisoners through the amnesty. Sargsyan still had legal
    means to extend the amnesty to those remaining in prison, he said, and
    urged Bryza to act as an intermediary in securing their release. 'If
    the political prisoners issue is not solved, we will have to mobilize

    against the government,' he said, and quickly added 'by constitutional
    means only'," reads the cable.

    On the matter of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement being
    considered by the Minsk Group, Bryza said it would become known to
    Ter-Petrossian, "once details became known." Yovanovitch notes that
    "In fact, the step-by-step approach LTP had championed as president
    was the foundation of the current proposed settlement."

    In terms of possible impediments to settlement, Bryza named a "lack
    of courage or strength, particularly on the part of Sargsyan." When
    Ter-Petrossian asked whether Russia would be an impediment, Bryza
    noted that Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has been "helpful," while
    Russian PM Vladimir Putin's comments the day before, that Russia was
    playing a major role on NKR settlement, "suggested that he wants to
    be seen as leading, and is thus invested."

    "LTP said that if Russia did not want it, it would not happen. Bryza
    said that now it seems that Russia wants a solution, perhaps because
    it wants to improve its reputation following what was, for them,
    the shocking fallout from the Georgia war. Perhaps more importantly,
    Russia may be trying to improve its position in the Caucasus. Since
    it views its position in Armenia as unassailable, it can only improve
    its strategic position in the region by improving relations with
    Azerbaijan. Russia

    believes helping with a settlement could help pull Azerbaijan toward
    it. The USG [United States Government] is more than happy to let Russia
    move the process forward as far as possible. LTP worried that Russia
    does not actually want a solution, but rather a lingering problem
    that leaves both Armenia and Azerbaijan dependent on Russia," reads
    the cable.

    The parties also discussed the Millennium Challenge Corporation's
    (MCC) extension of the operational hold on funding for road
    construction. Ter-Petrossian said "he wanted to see pressure on the
    authorities, especially related to democratic backsliding, but not
    in a way that made regular people suffer," adding, however, that the
    MCC suspension was a minor issue and not a huge loss since Armenia
    had received "huge new loans" and the MCC loss was "one drop."




    From: A. Papazian
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