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Armenia, Azerbaijan `Close To Karabakh Deal'

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  • #31
    Secretary’s Phone Calls: Upcoming Kazan Talks

    Taken Question
    Office of the Spokesman
    Washington, DC
    August 25, 2005
    Question Taken at the August 25, 2005 Daily Press Briefing


    Secretary’s Phone Calls: Upcoming Kazan Talks


    Question: What did Secretary Rice discuss during her phone calls to Presidents Aliyev and Kocharian?


    Answer: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice spoke briefly this morning with President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan and President Robert Kocharian of Armenia. She did so in order to stress to them the importance that the United States attaches to their upcoming meeting in Kazan, and to express our hope that the two Presidents will make the compromises necessary in order to reach a settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.


    Both leaders were upbeat about the prospects for making progress.


    The Secretary stressed to President Aliyev the importance of free and fair parliamentary elections this November in Azerbaijan, and noted his important role in this.


    The Secretary also told President Kocharian she hoped Armenia would make progress toward enacting a package of constitutional reforms now before the parliament.
    "All truth passes through three stages:
    First, it is ridiculed;
    Second, it is violently opposed; and
    Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

    Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

    Comment


    • #32
      AZERBAIJANI JOURNALISTS CALLS FOR ERADICATION OF "ARMENIAN PROBLEM"

      AZERBAIJANI JOURNALISTS CALLS FOR ERADICATION OF "ARMENIAN PROBLEM"

      YEREVAN, AUGUST 25. ARMINFO. Armenians and Azerbaijanis cannot live
      as neighbors in Nagorny Karabakh, writes a certain A.Asalyati in
      an article on the web-site MiK "Country is me, you and all us!" The
      article was not so against Armenia as against their own authorities.

      He says that as wise people Armenians are well aware that co-residence
      in Karabakh in impossible that is why they do not yield in the issue of
      separation from Azerbaijan, and will never do. He calls the authorities
      to stop feeding the people with false promises and primitive lie. "Now
      the authorities decided to do the same with Karabakhi Armenians, open
      your eyes wider, it won't work with Armenians!" "Karabakh problem has
      become a chewing gum for repeated use for our deserving the title of
      politicos at the best. Unfortunately, chewing of the problem will not
      put an end to the historical caries of our dignity!" The journalists
      writes: "the only way out is to eradicate this disease which has not
      allowed us to live calmly for over 200 hundred years."
      "All truth passes through three stages:
      First, it is ridiculed;
      Second, it is violently opposed; and
      Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

      Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

      Comment


      • #33
        Armenia says meeting with Aliyev on Karabakh was “positive”

        Armenia says meeting with Aliyev on Karabakh was “positive”



        27.08.2005, 17.54



        KAZAN, August 27 (Itar-Tass) -- Armenian President Robert Kocharyan and Azerbaijani President Ilkham Aliyev conferred for about two hours in Kazan on Saturday in a bid to find a solution to the Karabakh conflict that has been the cause of confrontation between the two countries since the beginning of the 1990s.

        Confidentiality is one of the conditions of the Karabakh talks, and neither side has disclosed the details of the negotiations or agreements.

        However Kocharyan’s spokesman, Viktor Sogomonyan, said, “The Armenian side assesses the meeting in Kazan positively and considers it a positive development in the negotiating process.”

        He said the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers, who also took part in the meeting, will “continue the work based on the agreements reached in Kazan”.

        Also participating in the meeting were the co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group, Yuri Merzlyakov of Russia, Bernar Facier of France, and Thoman Mann of the United States.
        "All truth passes through three stages:
        First, it is ridiculed;
        Second, it is violently opposed; and
        Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

        Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

        Comment


        • #34
          No major progress between Azeri, Armenian leaders - minister

          No major progress between Azeri, Armenian leaders - minister

          ANS TV, Baku
          27 Aug 05



          [Presenter] The last meeting between Azerbaijani President Ilham
          Aliyev and Armenian President Robert Kocharyan on the Nagornyy
          Karabakh problem has been held in Kazan. The presidents first had a
          tete-a-tete meeting and then were joined by the co-chairmen of the
          OSCE Minsk Group.

          During the talks which lasted for about an hour, an exchange of
          opinions was also held on some issues agreed upon at a meeting between
          the Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers, Elmar Mammadyarov and
          Vardan Oskanyan, in Moscow on 24 August.

          Tatarstan's Kazan-inform news agency says that both Ilham Aliyev and
          Robert Kocharyan, as well as the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen,
          positively assessed the talks. President Ilham Aliyev's plane landed
          at Heydar Aliyev airport about 30 minutes ago, which marks the end of
          his visit to Tatarstan.

          In an interview with ANS, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
          Mammadyarov positively assessed this meeting.

          [Mammadyarov] We should now analyse the results. In general, I cannot
          say that there has been any major progress or breakthrough. We did not
          reach any agreement. But, in general, certainly, talks between the two
          presidents are always important and they try to make their positions
          correspond each other. I think that we, both Armenia and Azerbaijan,
          need a couple of weeks to analyse the thoughts voiced by the two sides
          and think what the results may be and whether we are prepared for any
          progress or not.

          [Passage omitted: Kazan-inform says all official meetings at the CIS
          summit have ended]
          "All truth passes through three stages:
          First, it is ridiculed;
          Second, it is violently opposed; and
          Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

          Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

          Comment


          • #35
            No Karabakh Accord Announced After Armenian-Azeri Summit

            No Karabakh Accord Announced After Armenian-Azeri Summit

            Radio Free Europe 29/08/2005 21:36

            Armenia and Azerbaijan have made contradictory statements on their presidents’ weekend meeting in Russia which international mediators hoped will mark a turning point in their protracted search for a solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.




            Presidents Robert Kocharian and Ilham Aliev did not speak to journalists after their talks in the Russian city of Kazan on Saturday and it is not known if they reached any formal or informal agreements on Karabakh. Reports from Kazan said the two leaders conferred in a tête-à-tête format for an hour before being joined by French, Russian and U.S. diplomats spearheading the peace process.

            Kocharian, according to his spokesman Victor Soghomonian, came away satisfied from the meeting held on the sidelines of a summit of the Commonwealth of Independent States. “The Armenian side assesses the meeting in Kazan positively and considers it a positive development in the negotiating process,” the Itar-Tass news agency quoted Soghomonian as saying.

            The official added that Foreign Ministers Elmar Mammadyarov of Azerbaijan and Vartan Oskanian of Armenia will continue that process “based on the agreements reached in Kazan.” He did not say what those agreements are.

            “In general, I cannot say that there has been any major progress or breakthrough,” Mammadyarov said for his part, according to the Azerbaijani ANS television. “We did not reach any agreement.”

            “I think that we, both Armenia and Azerbaijan, need a couple of weeks to analyze the thoughts voiced by the two sides and think what the results may be and whether we are prepared for any progress or not,” he added.

            Mammadyarov and Oskanian held talks in Moscow earlier in the week to prepare for the Armenian-Azerbaijani summit and appeared satisfied with their results. Highlighting the importance of the Kazan meeting, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice telephoned Aliev and Kocharian on Thursday to urge them to make mutual concessions that will pave the way for a Karabakh peace deal.

            Diplomatic sources in Yerevan told RFE/RL last month that the parties have already agreed on the key points of a peace deal that could be formalized as early as this year or at the beginning of next. They said it is based on the idea of a referendum in which the Karabakh Armenians will decide whether they want to be independent, become a part of Armenia or return under Azerbaijani rule. Speaking to RFE/RL in Moscow last week, Mammadyarov admitted that such a peace formula is being discussed by the parties.

            Regional observers believe that Aliev and Kocharian will not announce any compromise deals until November which will see parliamentary elections in Azerbaijan and a constitutional referendum in Armenia. It is widely assumed that opposition groups in both countries would exploit unpopular concessions on Karabakh in their struggle against the ruling regimes.

            The Karabakh peace process has always been highly confidential. Kocharian and Aliev’s late predecessor and father Heydar, for example, did not announce any agreements after a meeting in Paris in March 2001. But Armenian officials claimed afterward that the two presidents agreed on the key principles of a peace accord that nearly ended the bitter dispute.
            "All truth passes through three stages:
            First, it is ridiculed;
            Second, it is violently opposed; and
            Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

            Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

            Comment


            • #36
              Azerbaijani president satisfied with Karabakh settlement talks

              --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              Jun 30 2005 5:07PM
              Azerbaijani president satisfied with Karabakh settlement talks
              BAKU. June 30 (Interfax) - Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has said he is satisfied with the progress of Karabakh settlement negotiations.

              "Negotiations between Azerbaijan and Armenia are developing well," he told a joint press conference with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Baku on Thursday.

              "The recent boost in negotiations gives us hope. Negotiations would have been unnecessary without this hope," he said.
              "All truth passes through three stages:
              First, it is ridiculed;
              Second, it is violently opposed; and
              Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

              Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

              Comment


              • #37
                PACE commission on Karabakh to meet on September 12

                PACE commission on Karabakh to meet on September 12

                24.08.2005 17:28

                YEREVAN (YERKIR) - The Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) ad hoc commission on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict is to hold its meeting in Paris on September 12, Armenpress reported.

                The ad hoc commission was established following PACE 1416 resolution in this January and calls on the OSCE Minsk Group states to apply more efforts to reach a peaceful settlement of the conflict.

                The commission is comprised of the heads of the OSCE Minsk Group countries in the PACE as well as heads of the Armenian and Azerbaijani delegations, chairmen of political and monitoring commissions, members of Armenian and Azerbaijani opposition parties.
                "All truth passes through three stages:
                First, it is ridiculed;
                Second, it is violently opposed; and
                Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

                Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

                Comment


                • #38
                  Baku Demands Karabakh In Exchange

                  BAKU DEMANDS KARABAKH IN EXCHANGE FOR DEPLOYING
                  AMERICAN BASES IN ITS TERRITORY

                  By David Petrosyan

                  August 30, 2005


                  The position of Azerbaijan in the forming system of political
                  co-ordinates is fairly ambiguous. On the one hand, the country started
                  operating the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, conducts negotiations
                  for joint projects with Ukraine and is a member of GUAM (Georgia,
                  Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Moldova), i.e. Azerbaijan is actually considered
                  to be part of the "orange belt." On the other hand, it is quite
                  obvious that Baku has not evidently reached the level of democratic
                  development achieved by Ukraine, Moldova or Georgia.

                  The next parliamentary elections will be held in Azerbaijan in
                  November, during which the Azerbaijani opposition hopes to strengthen
                  its position at the minimum and to make the Heydar Aliyev-founded clan
                  leave the political scene at the maximum. At the same time, it should
                  be noted that the current leadership of the country is under quite
                  strong pressure of European structures, which in the person of the
                  PACE President Rene van der Linden made it quite clear that Baku will
                  face strict sanctions in the event that facts of rigging or other
                  serious violations are revealed at the forthcoming parliamentary
                  elections. As for the US, the American Ambassador in Baku Reno Harnish
                  paid a series of visits to regions and had meetings with
                  representatives of the opposition. Now, it can be said that during the
                  parliamentary elections in the autumn, the Azerbaijani authorities
                  will have to withstand far more serious pressure of the internal
                  opposition supported by a pressure from outside. There is an impression
                  that the matter will not necessarily end in toppling Ilham Aliyev's
                  regime from power.

                  On the whole, Ilham Aliyev and his political team have to work out
                  a political line in a pretty complex system of co-ordinates connected
                  with:

                  - the upcoming elections to parliament, i.e, the issue related to
                  the direct retaining of power;

                  - the Karabakh conflict settlement;

                  - a possible exacerbation of contradictions between the US and
                  Iran (the well-known tough statements of President Bush about the
                  possibility of solving "the problem of Iran" also by force), which
                  makes the issue of a possible repetition of the Iraqi scenario in the
                  immediate vicinity of Azerbaijan's borders (and Armenia's as well) a
                  topical one. In light of this, there is an issue of deploying American
                  military bases in the territory of Azerbaijan (in mobile or some other
                  version), including the bases which are likely to be withdrawn from
                  Uzbekistan.

                  Exceeding the time permitted for a move, Ilham Aliyev finally
                  voiced his position in an interview to the British television company
                  Sky News on August 24. From the above mentioned list, I. Aliyev
                  undoubtedly considers the issues related to keeping his power as the
                  most important ones. In view of this, his theses are quite obvious:

                  - Baku intends to solve the Nagorno Karabakh problem only by
                  peaceful means,

                  - Azerbaijan's aspiration to settle the Karabakh conflict by
                  peaceful means gives it the right to address other countries (for
                  example, the US - our remark) with the proposal to also "refrain from
                  any violence" (including against Iran).

                  It follows from the context of I. Aliyev's statement that the
                  Azerbaijani leadership is connecting the possiblity of its military
                  cooperation with the US with the position of the Bush Administration
                  on the issue of Nagorno Karabakh. To put it simply, if Washington
                  makes the Armenians leave the territories under their control in the
                  "security zone" around Nagorno Karabakh, Baku will allow to establish
                  American military bases in its territory and will take sides with the
                  US in the conflict with Iran.

                  Thus, in response to the blackmail of the West, and first of all
                  the US, frightening the Azerbaijani leadership with an "orange
                  revolution," Ilham Aliyev steers the conversation into an entirely
                  different plane, as if brushes aside the possibility of any
                  revolutions and combines in one package the issue of deploying
                  American military bases in Azerbaijan, the Nagorno Karabakh problem
                  and the conflict around Iran's nuclear program.

                  One should assume that such a strict stance on the part of
                  I. Aliyev became possible after President Islam Karimov had demanded
                  that the US withdraw its air base from Uzbekistan within 180 days.

                  Washington evidently believes that like in the case of
                  Kyrghyzstan, whose leaders accepted the help offered by Washington and
                  kept the military base in Gansi, the old trick - dollars - will play
                  its role in Azerbaijan: the US has already announced that it intends
                  to spend in the coming decade over 100 million dollars on the "Caspian
                  Guard Program" aimed at establishing police and special purpose forces
                  (SpetsNaz) capable of reacting efficiently to "various emergencies" in
                  the Caspian region. This program is only for Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan
                  where America intends not only to build command-and-staff centers but
                  also to establish centers for air force and navy secret operations.
                  Prior to it, in 2003-2004, the US already held with Baku two joint
                  military trainings. In this situation, Russia is making an attempt to
                  seize the initiative from the US and proposes estalishing Joint Rapid
                  Reaction Forces in order to ensure security in the Caspian Sea basin.
                  (Kazakhstan and Iran support the Russian proposal).

                  Until now the official Baku avoided giving a direct answer to the
                  question about American military bases, and some Azerbaijani officials
                  deny the very fact of negotiations around this subject, although the
                  number of mutual visits paid by American and Azerbaijani military men
                  to each other leaves no doubt that they have a subject to discuss.

                  The demonstrative support of the Azeri opposition leaders is
                  becoming more pronounced with the approach of the parliamentary
                  elections, with Washington maintaining at the same time good relations
                  with Ilham Aliyev. Everything possible is done so than he can feel "a
                  breath at the back." Yet Aliyev, however strong his desire to be on
                  friendly terms with the US is, avoids giving his consent for the
                  full-fledged military bases to be deployed, since, quite naturally,
                  Russia and Iran are displeased with the activity shown by Americans in
                  the Caspian Sea.

                  For the time being, the region, as last year, is being shaken by
                  military trainings. In August, a military training - the most
                  large-scale one since the end of the war, was held in Abkhazia. Now
                  the August maneuvers are taking place in the Caspian region under the
                  leadership of Russia, and the command-and-staff training
                  "Eternity-2005" was in Tbilisi (during which the Georgian, Azeri and
                  Turkish sub-units were working out on maps and computers their
                  cooperation activities to protect the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil
                  pipeline). September will open with the already traditional
                  Armenian-Russian training in Armenia. All this is indicative of tha
                  fact that the situation in the region continues to be difficult and
                  complicated. In parallel with the intention to tie up the issues of
                  keeping his power and the solution of the Karabakh problem with the
                  deployment of American military bases in the territory of Azerbaijan,
                  Ilham Aliyev is engaged in another game connected with the
                  Kremlin. The Kremlin does not promise to solve the Karabakh problem
                  but Moscow promises another thing: in case of refusal to deploy
                  American military bases in its territory, Ilham Aliyev's regime will
                  be provided the maximum support. Retention of power is a priority
                  task for the ruling clan, whereas solving the Karabakh problem is a
                  secondary one. We suppose the Azerbaijani leadership will most
                  probably accept the Kremlin proposals, especially as Ilham Aliyev's
                  entourage obviously believes that the official Baku does not lack
                  resources to put down the post-election confrontations with the
                  opposition.
                  "The Noyan Tapan Highlights" N33 , August, 2005
                  "All truth passes through three stages:
                  First, it is ridiculed;
                  Second, it is violently opposed; and
                  Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

                  Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Anca Sets Record Straight

                    Armenian National Committee of America
                    888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
                    Washington, DC 20006
                    Tel: (202) 775-1918
                    Fax: (202) 775-5648
                    E-mail: [email protected]
                    Internet: www.anca.org

                    PRESS RELEASE

                    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
                    August 30, 2005
                    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
                    Tel: (202) 775-1918

                    ANCA SETS RECORD STRAIGHT IN FACE OF CONTINUED AZERBAIJANI
                    MISINFORMATION ABOUT NAGORNO KARABAGH

                    "At the heart of this issue is Nagorno Karabagh - a
                    democracy defending itself against a corrupt monarchy
                    that blockades its neighbors and abuses its own
                    citizens." - ANCA Memo to Congress, August 26, 2005

                    WASHINGTON, DC - In letters sent last week to every Member of Congress,
                    the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) responded to the
                    recent escalation of Azerbaijani Embassy's misinformation campaign
                    by outlining the long-standing United States record in support of
                    Nagorno Karabagh.

                    In an August 26th memo to Congressional offices, ANCA Executive
                    Director Aram Hamparian explained that, "the Azerbaijan government -
                    on the defensive about its own record on democracy and freedom - is
                    again resorting to misstatements and outright falsehood to advance its
                    agenda." The ANCA letter came in response to an August 17th letter
                    by Azerbaijani Ambassador Hafez Pashayev, which misrepresented
                    the progress of democracy and free elections Nagorno Karabagh.
                    Erroneous statements in the letter included false assertions that
                    "Nagorno Karabagh was never independent nor a part of Armenia,"
                    as well as untrue charges about Armenian aggression.

                    The ANCA memo highlighted several key points concerning United
                    States support for Nagorno Karabagh:

                    * Declassified CIA reports from the seventies, eighties, and
                    nineties reveal a pattern of official -although confidential-
                    acknowledgement that Nagorno Karabagh is a historic part of
                    Armenia. (www.anca.org/docs/cia1-website.pdf)

                    * In the late 1980's, the United States welcomed Nagorno
                    Karabagh's historic challenge to the Soviet system and its leadership
                    in sparking democratic movements in the Baltics and throughout the
                    Soviet empire.

                    * The U.S. Senate, in November of 1989, adopted S.J.Res.178,
                    recognizing that "Nagorno-Karabagh has continually
                    expressed its desire for self-determination and freedom."

                    * The U.S. State Department's representative to the OSCE
                    "Minsk Group" regularly visits Nagorno Karabagh, which is
                    an official party to the peace process, and consults with its
                    democratically elected leaders.

                    * The U.S. Government, since 1992, has been on record
                    officially condemning Azerbaijan's blockades and other uses
                    of force against both Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh
                    (Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act).

                    * The U.S. Government, over Azerbaijan's protests, has
                    provided direct humanitarian assistance to Nagorno
                    Karabagh since 1998.

                    On August 3rd, Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank
                    Pallone (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) initiated a Congressional
                    letter to President Bush, drawing attention to "the important
                    progress being made by the people of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic,
                    Artsakh, towards freedom, peace and prosperity." This letter,
                    which is currently gaining signatures during the Congressional
                    recess, notes that, just as, the U.S. champions "freedom for all
                    peoples around the world, we should also continue supporting the
                    aspirations of the people of Artsakh to live in freedom,
                    particularly in the strategically important South Caucasus."

                    ANCA chapters and activists have been contacting their legislators
                    over the past month in support of the Congressional letter to
                    President Bush, set to delivered to the White House on September
                    30th.

                    #####
                    "All truth passes through three stages:
                    First, it is ridiculed;
                    Second, it is violently opposed; and
                    Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

                    Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Nkr President: Behavior Of Baku Authorities More And More Postpone Day Of Karabakh Co

                      NKR PRESIDENT: BEHAVIOR OF BAKU AUTHORITIES MORE AND MORE POSTPONE DAY OF KARABAKH CONFLICT'S RESOLUTION

                      STEPANAKERT, SEPTEMBER 2. ARMINFO. Baku authorities try to conceal the successes of Nagorny Karabakh in construction of a legal and democratic state from Azerbaijani people by all means possible, not allowing their citizens to visit NKR and communicate with Karabakh people. It is not accidental, however, such behavior has no prospects, a it is even more postpones the day of full and mutually advantageous resolution of the conflict. NKR Presiden Arkady Ghouakssyan made such an address on the occasion of the 14th Anniversary of NKR Independence.

                      According to ARMINFO's special correspondent to Stepanakert, in his address NKR President said that such acts by the Azerbaijani leadership as well as its unwillingness to negotiate with the Karabakh conflict cast a serious doubt on the prospects of the conflict's settlement by civil methods on the basis of reasonable compromises. That is why the fact of the unsettled conflict remains a factor threatening with new destabilization in the region, Arkady Ghoukassyan thinks. He once more assured all those present that NKR leadership adheres exclusively to the peace settlement of the conflict. "At the same time our people must be sure that no one will be able to deprive us from the independence gained by means of irreplaceable losses. The All National NKR Defense Army is able to give a proper counteraction to all those who will dare to encroach upon our Motherland. We have all the necessary means and possibilities for it," NKR President says.
                      "All truth passes through three stages:
                      First, it is ridiculed;
                      Second, it is violently opposed; and
                      Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

                      Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

                      Comment

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