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Will Serbia Be Able to Sober Azerbaijan?

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  • Will Serbia Be Able to Sober Azerbaijan?

    WILL SERBIA BE ABLE TO SOBER AZERBAIJAN?

    Monday, 19 January 2015 17:19


    The calendar year of 2015 has come into force, like the
    political year. What will it bring to the process of the
    Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict settlement, can we hope for some
    progress in the issue's solution, and are there the necessary
    prerequisites for this? To answer these questions, we should cast a
    retrospective glance at the past year.

    It should be recognized that the negotiation process,
    which hadn't either been extremely dynamic previously and had been in
    a state of chronic slippage, experienced an obvious regression in
    2014. We believe that Switzerland, which chaired the OSCE last year,
    is less likely to be blamed for the failure of the settlement process.
    In early 2014, OSCE Chairman-in-Office, Minister of Foreign Affairs of
    Switzerland Didier Burkhalter stated that the Karabakh conflict would
    be among the most important priorities of the OSCE. "We are well aware
    that progress cannot occur instantly and that no settlement can be
    achieved until the parties to the conflict wish it themselves", said
    the former head of the OSCE. And we cannot but agree with him. He, as
    the OSCE Chairman-in-Office, can be just chided for his complacent
    attitude to the authorities of Azerbaijan, which is precisely the
    party, which does not seek the settlement.

    The situation in the settlement process was really quite
    shaky and blurry last year, however, the gross violations of the
    ceasefire by Azerbaijan, its repeated acts of sabotage on the border
    with Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, which led to human losses,
    escalated extremely the situation. These actions, actually, reflect
    the policy of the ruling regime in Azerbaijan, which, regardless ofthe
    appeals by the co-chair states of the OSCE Minsk Group for a peaceful
    resolution of the conflict, continues its militaristic policy that
    threatens the whole region. Realizing the extreme danger of the
    consequences of such a policy of official Baku, Russia, the USA and
    France, as co-chair states of the OSCE Minsk Group, initiated last
    year meetings between the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan for
    preventing dangerous developments and a new round of hostilities.

    To be fair, it should be noted that the efforts of the
    mediators allowed, to a certain extent, to defuse the situation, but
    just two weeks after the last meeting of Serzh Sargsyan and Ilham Alev
    in Paris, the Azerbaijani party downed a helicopter of the NKR Defense
    Army, which was carrying out a training flight. The incident with the
    helicopter became the culmination of the provocative and hostile
    actions of Azerbaijan and, one might say, nullified the situation in
    the conflict settlement process. The question whether the negotiation
    process can be revived is very difficult, especially given the armed
    provocations and sabotages by the Azerbaijani party, which have
    recently intensified and even acquired a permanent character. This
    question is to be answered by Serbia, which took over from Switzerland
    in 2015 and headed the OSCE.

    Before taking the position of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office,
    Serbian Foreign Minister Ivica Dacic stated, "The Nagorno Karabakh
    issue will be a priority for the Serbian chairmanship at the OSCE.
    Surely, it is yet early to talk about a new format, but we will work
    objectively with all parties. I ... will make every effort to reach
    the conflict settlement". Attention is drawn to certain restraint by
    Dacic, who did not assume any overrated commitments, and his words can
    be considered as a "protocol of intents". But, it is also worth
    considering his idea of willingness to work with all parties. As we
    know, the previous Chairmen-in-Office of the OSCE, in favor of
    official Baku, didn't want to change the current deformed format of
    negotiations, which lacks the major party - the Nagorno Karabakh
    Republic, which distorts the real configuration of the conflict.

    In any case, the achievement of the conflict settlement,
    noted by the Serbian Minister of Foreign Affairs, will largely depend
    on whether the international community and, in particular, the
    co-chairing states of the OSCE Minsk Group, will manage to sober the
    Azerbaijani authorities and to encourage them to engage in a
    constructive dialogue based on objective perception of the post-Soviet
    realities. The question is equally topical and difficult, as official
    Baku does not display even the slightest desire to move away from its
    unrealistic position. According to the recent statements by President
    Aliyev, the actions of official Baku convincingly prove Azerbaijan's
    refusal to settle the conflict on the principles proposed by the OSCE
    Minsk Group Co-Chairmen. Moreover, at the January 10 meeting of the
    Government, Aliyev criticized the Minsk Group, accusing it of failure,
    without wishing to notice that this failure is a consequence of his
    tough and dangerous policy relying on a military force. After all, in
    spite of the mediators' proposals, Baku offers to determine the status
    of Nagorno Karabakh exclusively within the territorial integrity of
    Azerbaijan, which contradicts the concept of settlement and is fraught
    with a new war.

    To be objective, it should be noted that an important
    factor, impacting the Karabakh settlement process, is also the
    political situation in the region and in the world. It is obvious that
    against the background of the events related to the dangerous
    processes in the Middle East, in particular, to the activities of
    theIslamic State terrorist organization, as well as to the Ukrainian
    crisis and thedeterioration of relations between the West and Russia,
    the Karabakh conflict isfalling by the wayside. Despite the complexity
    of the geopolitical situation, theNKR, nevertheless, should strengthen
    its sovereign statehood and seek theinternational recognition of its
    independence in 2015.


    Leonid MARTIROSSIAN
    Editor-in-Chief of Azat Artsakh newspaper
    http://artsakhtert.com/eng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1673:-will-serbia-be-able-to-sober-azerbaijan&catid=3:all&Itemid=4

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