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ISTANBUL: Turkey and Russia should take lead in resolving NK conflic

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  • ISTANBUL: Turkey and Russia should take lead in resolving NK conflic

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 21 2012


    Turkey and Russia should take lead in resolving Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

    by Jeffrey Mankoff & Mehmet Fatih Öztarsu*
    21 November 2012 / ,

    Even though the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan has remained
    largely frozen since the cease-fire was signed in 1994, the potential
    for renewed fighting is growing.

    Outside powers, especially Russia and Turkey, should take a more
    active role in getting the peace process back on track. Above all,
    both Ankara and Moscow will have to take a harder line with their
    respective allies in the South Caucasus and prioritize ending the
    conflict over zero-sum geopolitical maneuvering. After two decades,
    memories of the conflict's horrors have faded, especially among a
    younger generation that has no memory of the Soviet collapse.
    Moreover, authorities in Baku, Yerevan and Stepanakert are all taking
    steps that make a resumption of hostilities more likely. The windfall
    from Azerbaijan's oil and gas reserves has helped fuel a significant
    military buildup. Azerbaijan's defense budget for 2013 is projected to
    be $3.7 billion, which is more than Armenia's entire state budget and
    more than four times Armenian military spending. Azerbaijani officials
    have at times threatened to use Azerbaijan's military superiority to
    overturn the status quo, and President Ilham Heydar oglu Aliyev has
    repeatedly warned that his patience with the status quo is limited.
    Although the balance of power is shifting against Armenia, domestic
    politics have conspired to limit Yerevan's flexibility at a moment
    when the danger of renewed conflict is growing. The influence of
    Karabakh-based politicians has always made it difficult for Yerevan to
    offer concessions. The situation is even worse now that the conflict
    between the Karabakh faction around President Serzh Azati Sarksyan and
    former Prime Minister Robert Kocharyan and a younger Yerevan-based
    group has broken into the open.

    Increased skirmishes and tension

    Moreover, Armenia is an ally of Russia through the Collective Security
    Treaty Organization (CSTO), and Russia maintains around 5,000 troops
    in Armenia, mostly at the 102nd Military Base in Gyumri. Russia has
    also transferred advanced weaponry to Armenia, including the S-300 air
    defense system. Many Armenian officials believe that the presence of
    Russian troops and Yerevan's military alliance with Moscow will deter
    an Azerbaijani attack, which in turn limits their willingness to seek
    a negotiated peace with Azerbaijan. Not only does the Russian presence
    reinforce Yerevan's intransigence, it has increasingly turned Armenia
    into a satellite of Russia, limiting its ability to cooperate with
    either the West or Turkey. The Russian military presence near the
    Turkish border is also a source of tension with Ankara and with NATO,
    which worries that Armenia lacks the ability to follow an independent
    foreign policy line.

    Even as politics in both Baku and Yerevan have hardened, the situation
    on the ground in Nagorno-Karabakh has become increasingly dangerous.
    Incidents across the line of contact in Nagorno-Karabakh and along the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani border have gotten worse in recent months. A
    skirmish between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces in June left nine
    dead. Meanwhile, sporadic shootings continue. At least 63 people were
    killed along the line of contact between the start of 2011 and
    mid-2012. Many observers in the region fear that in the current
    climate of mistrust, a local incident along the border could escalate
    into a wider conflict. Despite the worsening situation on the ground,
    a basic framework for peace exists in the form of the so-called Madrid
    Principles, which require Armenia to withdraw its forces from
    Nagorno-Karabakh in exchange for a future referendum on the region's
    status and for an opening of the border with Turkey. Unfortunately,
    the inept diplomacy of the last few years has made a solution on the
    basis of the Madrid Principles more difficult as well.

    Baku is willing to grant a high degree of autonomy to Nagorno-Karabakh
    within Azerbaijan, but it insists on a return of the (mostly ethnic
    Azerbaijani) refugees who fled Nagorno-Karabakh during the violence of
    the early 1990s. Armenia, which is being asked to give up its gains
    from that conflict, has always been the harder case. The Madrid
    Principles held out the carrot of a normalized relationship with
    Turkey (which closed its border with Armenia in 1993 as a result of
    the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh) as an inducement for Yerevan to make
    concessions. Unfortunately, the normalization process went off track
    because Azerbaijan was left out when Turkey and Armenia signed a
    protocol in 2009 laying out a path to normalization; in response,
    Ankara agreed to Baku's demand that progress on Nagorno-Karabakh be a
    sine qua non for any discussion of normalized relations. Armenian
    officials now argue they are being asked to make concessions without
    any firm guarantee that withdrawal will lead to normalization and an
    opening of the border. Some observers worry that Armenia's inability
    to accept the Madrid Principles may give Azerbaijan cover to launch a
    war that could improve its bargaining position even if, as is likely,
    it fails to recover Nagorno-Karabakh by force.

    Managing the conflict remains the responsibility of the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe's (OSCE) Minsk Group,
    co-chaired by France, the United States and Russia. The Minsk Group
    has been in place since 1992, but has failed to create a sustainable
    peace process. Since the early 2000s, Washington and Paris have ceased
    playing an active role as co-chairs, preferring to defer to Moscow.
    Today, the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is an unwelcome distraction from
    more pressing problems (the eurozone crisis, the withdrawal from
    Afghanistan and the continuing unrest across the Arab world). Neither
    Paris nor Washington is likely to take on a leading role in seeking a
    longer-term solution to the conflict. That leaves the third co-chair,
    Russia, along with Turkey as the most important players in the
    region's immediate future. Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
    pushed hard for a deal, but was unable to make much progress. Despite
    Medvedev's replacement by Vladimir Putin, who has so far been less
    focused on Nagorno-Karabakh, Moscow -- along with Baku and Yerevan --
    remains central to any effort at crafting a solution, as does Ankara.

    The conflict's effect on the region

    Apart from Armenia and Azerbaijan themselves, it is Russia and Turkey
    that would be most directly affected by a resumption of hostilities,
    which could set off new refugee flows, further damage Russo-Turkish
    relations and create instability in a sensitive region along both
    countries' borders. On the positive side, Russia would like to improve
    its relationship with Azerbaijan, which is emerging as an important
    energy and logistical hub and whose economy continues to grow rapidly.
    Turkey's aspirations to become a bridge between the Caspian and Europe
    would also be advanced by an opening of the Turkish-Armenian border.
    Turkey's diplomatic influence, which has suffered over the course of
    the Arab Spring, would also benefit from more constructive engagement
    in the South Caucasus.

    Moving forward will require greater flexibility all around, but
    especially on the part of Moscow and Ankara. Russia will have to push
    the Armenians harder to accept a deal along the lines of the Madrid
    Principles, while making clear that its alliance commitments are
    conditional on Yerevan making a good faith effort to implement the
    Madrid agreement. Azerbaijan too will need to be open to reasonable
    offers of compromise and should tone down its war-like rhetoric in
    order to create an environment more conducive to negotiations. While
    Turkey will continue to demand that Armenia fulfill its obligations
    under international law to uphold Azerbaijan's territorial integrity
    by returning Nagorno-Karabakh (and other territories occupied in the
    course of the early 1990s fighting), it should relax its demand that
    withdrawal precede any progress on Turkish-Armenian normalization.
    Turkey will also have to convince Baku that progress on normalization
    will have to come up front as part of any comprehensive agreement.
    Mostly, all of the players have to accept that the status quo is
    unsustainable and that all stand to lose from a resumption of
    hostilities.


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    *Dr. Jeffrey Mankoff is a fellow at the Center for Strategic and
    International Studies - CSIS.

    Mehmet Fatih Öztarsu is an analyst at the Strategic Outlook Research Center.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/news-298925-turkey-and-russia-should-take-lead-in-resolving-nagorno-karabakh-conflictby-jeffrey-mankoff-mehmet-fatih-oztarsu*.html



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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