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Armenia: Out Of The Game - OpEd

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  • Armenia: Out Of The Game - OpEd

    Eurasia Review
    December 26, 2014 Friday

    Armenia: Out Of The Game - OpEd

    By Fuad Huseinzadeh


    In the recent years there have emerged three very promising platforms
    of trilateral cooperation in the Black Sea-Caspian Sea region that
    consist in the following partnerships: Azerbaijan-Turkey-Georgia,
    Azerbaijan-Turkey-Iran and Azerbaijan-Turkey-Turkmenistan.

    For Azerbaijan, developing relations with foreign partners at
    bilateral and trilateral levels coincides with Baku's official posture
    and its foreign policy strategy of non-alignment to any particular
    bloc. It was not by any coincidence that Azerbaijani President Ilham
    Aliyev, speaking at an official reception to mark the Republic Day on
    May 28, noted the great importance of all these formats of trilateral
    interactions: "These formats have a very great significance for
    regional security and cooperation and safeguarding our political and
    economic interests. We shall, of course, continue these tripartite
    meetings in the future, which have already become regular" the head of
    state commented.

    In this regard it is notable the latest trilateral meeting of the
    Foreign Ministers of Azerbaijan, Turkey and Georgia - Elmar
    Mammadyarov, Mevlut Cavusoglu and Tamar Beruchashvili - which took
    place in the Turkish city of Kars. The Kars Declaration was the crown
    of the meeting, which was the fourth one held in this format. In the
    declaration, the foreign ministers said that the three countries had
    the same views regarding principles of their cooperation and the
    future of the region.

    According to the document, the foreign ministers stressed the
    importance of trilateral cooperation in the region in accordance with
    the documents adopted earlier - the Trabzon declaration of June 8,
    2012, the Batumi joint communique of March 28, 2013 and the Ganja
    statement of February 19, 2014.

    The ministers pointed out the importance of implementing joint
    projects in energy and transportation, in particular the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway project and the TANAP gas project, stressed
    the importance of the Trilateral Sectorial Cooperation Action Plan for
    2013-15 as an effective means of political dialogue, and stated the
    need to continue meetings in this format and to expand trilateral
    cooperation in other areas, including international organizations.

    Along with this, the political component of this trio seems no less
    significant, given the geopolitical situation in neighboring
    countries.

    The developments in Ukraine or, to be precise, the ambiguous
    interpretations by some countries of the territorial integrity of this
    country, have clearly left an imprint on the final document adopted as
    a result of the meeting in Kars. "Azerbaijan, Turkey and Georgia have
    reaffirmed their firm support for one another's territorial integrity
    and sovereignty and in this regard they have once again called for a
    speedy settlement of the Nagorny Karabakh conflict in Azerbaijan and
    the conflict in Georgia's Abkhazia and Tskhinval (South Ossetia)
    regions in accordance with fundamental principles and norms of
    international law, in particular on the basis of respect for
    sovereignty, territorial integrity and inviolability of
    internationally recognized borders of states," the declaration
    stresses.

    At their final news conference, the foreign ministers stated in unison
    that they were confident that the transport and energy projects
    Baku-Tbilisi-Kars, Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum, and
    Southern Gas Corridor will give an impetus to the implementation of
    new economic projects in Europe and Asia. However, regional security
    gained a greater emphasis once again. Elmar Mammadyarov said that
    Armenia's aggressive policy against Azerbaijan threatens peace and
    development in the region. It was noted that this policy by Armenia is
    contrary to international legal norms. Noting that all conflicts in
    the world are a crime against humanity, Mevlut Cavusoglu said that
    Turkey will continue with its efforts to establish peace between
    countries and peoples.

    Stressing the great importance of the three parties' participation in
    international organizations and regional integration projects,
    Minister Tamar Beruchashvili said that the trilateral relationship
    will continue to meet the interests of our countries and peoples.

    However, subsequent statements by the foreign ministers are
    noteworthy. Tamar Beruchashvili said that every country can take part
    in regional projects if it recognizes, first of all, the territorial
    integrity of a neighboring state and renounces all acts of violence.
    In turn, the Turkish minister was more specific in identifying the
    listeners of those statements. Cavusoglu said that as long as Armenian
    armed forces do not leave Azerbaijan's land, that country will remain
    out of regional projects. "We support the territorial integrity of
    Azerbaijan and Georgia. We hope that Armenia would respect the borders
    of neighboring states and becomes a nation like one of ours. In that
    case, the missing link will be where it belongs," Turkish media quoted
    Cavusoglu as saying.

    In the meantime, "the missing link", as the saying goes, does not care
    a straw. Just like previously, Yerevan continues to be concerned not
    about real things, the socio-economic situation in the country that
    seems to be worsening further and, as a consequence, mass migration,
    but the same mythical benchmarks as before - international recognition
    of the 1915 "genocide" and "re-creation of the Great Armenia".
    Armenia, the indefatigable neighbor of Azerbaijan, Turkey and Georgia
    not only rejects the calls for good neighborly relations in return to
    non-aggression but also continues to lay territorial claims on them
    and tries to impose on them something they did not do.

    There is only one thing that this policy promises Armenia - an
    increasingly deeper immersion into crisis and isolation in the region.
    The geopolitical state of affairs in the region, which has until
    recently suited Armenia, is going to change, and not in favor of
    Armenia.

    Azerbaijan is increasingly stepping up its cooperation with Turkey.
    Last week, the head of the public and political department within the
    Azerbaijani Presidential Administration, Ali Hasanov, said that Baku
    should create a single political block with Ankara. He said Turkey is
    now one of the world's 20 largest economies, and Azerbaijan is also
    steadily moving towards high economic indicators.

    But while for Armenia the strengthening of allied relations between
    its two sworn enemies is not a big surprise, the increasingly
    worsening relationship between Russia and the West, and Iran's
    rapprochement with Azerbaijan are fraught for Armenia including the
    loss of its most important allies in the region. The recent visit by
    Iranian President Hassan Rouhani to Baku confirmed the determination
    of the sides to eliminate former problems and to clarify everything,
    and the Russian president's visit to Turkey and agreements reached
    during the visit to strengthen bilateral relations against the
    backdrop of the confrontation between Moscow and the West have even
    allowed some observers to predict the creation of a new geopolitical
    axis - Azerbaijan-Turkey-Russia.

    "The Russia-Turkish agreements may seriously change the geopolitical
    architecture, primarily in the South Caucasus. In this regard, a new
    line of cooperation between Turkey-Azerbaijan-Russia - is possible,
    which in the long term may be expanded to include Iran, especially
    given Moscow's attempts to increase its presence in India," stated for
    R+ magazine, Nadana Friedrichson, a political analyst with EurAsEC
    Institute.

    Thus, while Armenia is a hostage to important processes running around
    it but without any of its involvement, Azerbaijan and also Turkey and
    Georgia are not only depending on a geopolitical agenda but are also
    actively shaping it.

    Kars is actually a very symbolic place for the history of the
    relationship between Turkey and the South Caucasus countries. We
    should recall that the Treaty of Kars on friendship between the
    Azerbaijani, Armenian and Georgian SSRs on one side and Turkey on the
    other was signed in this city in 1921. The document extended to the
    trans-Caucasus soviet republics the main provisions of the Treaty of
    Moscow. The Treaty of Moscow provided for establishment of trade
    relations and regulation of financial and economic issues. The Treaty
    of Kars added several provisions to the Moscow Treaty - on
    facilitation of border crossing by residents of the border zone and on
    giving them the right to use pastures located on the other side of the
    border. The Treaty of Kars effectively helped remove friction between
    Turkey and the trans-Caucasus soviet republics. However, the
    present-day Republic of Armenia does not recognize the treaty because
    it assigned to Turkey the cities of Kars and Ardahan, which Armenians
    covet, as well as the Mount Agridag which they call Ararat.

    History, as we know, does not repeat itself. And almost a century
    after the treaty was signed, the region's future is being decided
    without Armenia's involvement.

    The post Armenia: Out Of The Game - OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

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