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Armenia And Azerbaijan: Arriving At A Fair And Honest Discourse

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  • Armenia And Azerbaijan: Arriving At A Fair And Honest Discourse

    ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN: ARRIVING AT A FAIR AND HONEST DISCOURSE

    http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/foreign-policy/278803-armenia-and-azerbaijan-arriving-at-a-fair-and-honest-discourse
    By Emil Agazade, European Azerbaijan Society -
    01/23/13 11:45 AM ET

    I am writing in response to the article by Harry Semerdjian "Christian
    Armenia and Islamic Iran: An unusual partnership explained". While
    I welcome the author's intention to be unbiased and balanced in his
    explanation of geopolitics of the South Caucasus, I sense that his
    valiant attempt did not quite come off.

    Of course, it's every nation's prerogative and sovereign right to
    choose its friends and allies. Countries are also free to house foreign
    military bases on their soil and choose to be called someone's outpost
    in the Caucasus. Justifying why you choose your friends is also normal
    part of diplomatic or political discourse.

    But the discourse has to be fair and honest if it aims at bringing
    solutions and comes from an academic, not least the Oxford
    University aspirant. I value Semerdjian's stating of the fact that
    Nagorno-Karabakh and the seven surrounding regions of Azerbaijan have
    been taken over by the Armenian forces. Alas, even acceptance of that
    sad reality is often a scarce commodity.

    But there's 'taking over' and there's 'taking over'. It would have
    been fairer on behalf of Semerdjian to add that there are four UN
    Security Council resolutions demanding withdrawal of Armenian forces
    that have been ignored for over twenty years. How many hours did
    it take for the Coalition to move against Colonel Gadhafi after the
    passing of the required resolution?

    Surely, they study what late British foreign secretary Robin Cook
    dubbed 'an ethical foreign policy' at the Fletcher School of Law and
    Diplomacy. After all, it was a pillar on which British involvement
    in the Kosovo campaign and its stand against Slobodan Milosevic was
    based on. But yet again, it's a nation's sovereign right to apply
    that element of ethics in deciding to befriend pariahs or well-behaved
    nations, alike.

    I am not going to disprove or even argue with what Harry referred
    to as several Armenian kingdoms in northern Iran. I will leave that
    to Iranian historians to deal with, as well as the region's Assyrian
    and Nestorian Christian communities. Such anecdotes have long caused
    nothing but wry smiles amongst Georgians and Azerbaijanis. Although,
    it's not at all funny when one of the Armenian presidential candidates
    - Vardan Sedrakian - promises his voters to annex parts of Azerbaijani,
    Turkish and Georgian territory if he wins next month's elections.

    I understand it demands a special effort to think outside of
    century-long prejudices and takes a certain type of courage to look at
    facts and accept reality, rather than form opinions or, God forbid,
    academic research based on what your granny in Glendale or New York
    may have told you. However painful that step may be, this will be
    necessary for a lasting peace in the South Caucasus, and in order to
    end Armenia's isolation, that Harry understandably frets about.

    Whether Harry sincerely believes in some of his arguments or not,
    his reasoning behind his appeal to leaders in Washington to be
    understanding of Armenia's flirtation with a neighboring country
    is pretty clear. I would hate to resort to a classical quote, but in
    matters such as this no-one beats good old Francois de La Rochefoucauld
    who once proclaimed that we are so accustomed to disguise ourselves to
    others that, in the end, we become disguised to ourselves. I reckon
    Harry would have to do much better than what he said in his article
    to embark on and accomplish the Ph.D research at Oxford - and I only
    wish him success in his academic endeavors.

    The author of this blog happened to be a duty editor of a political
    breakfast show on the morning following 9/11. One of the things that
    stuck in my mind from that long and eventful shift was when George W.

    Bush said 'You're either with us or against us'. I guess, not only
    because it was fairly unusual to hear such a Wild West rhetoric coming
    from a head of state.

    Now, you may agree or disagree with the neo-conservatives'
    understanding of the global war on terror, but I sense president Bush
    was right in that respect: there is a time in every man's life or a
    nation's history when you have to choose your side. Azerbaijan has
    chosen its side and has stuck with it. Armenia, on the other hand,
    as the Russian saying goes, is trying to sit on two chairs at the same
    time. It normally ends, as the same saying suggests, with falling down.

    Agazade is a London-based journalist and head of media for the European
    Azerbaijan Society.

    Read more:
    http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/foreign-policy/278803-armenia-and-azerbaijan-arriving-at-a-fair-and-honest-discourse#ixzz2Ios60JUT
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    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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