Ivanov Stunned The Azerbaijanis;
Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
January 27, 2006 Friday
IVANOV STUNNED THE AZERBAIJANIS;
Baku is not prepared to have Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh
to deal with
by Sokhbet Mamedov
SERGEI IVANOV'S WORDS ON HOW RUSSIAN PEACEKEEPERS COULD HELP WITH
NAGORNO-KARABAKH SETTLEMENT STUNNED OFFICIAL BAKU; Defense Minister
Sergei Ivanov leaves official Baku wondering what Moscow is really
after.
The Kremlin's policy in the Caucasus seems to be getting more active.
At least, this is the impression Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov's
visit to Azerbaijan made on observers. Ivanov made a number of
unexpected and important statements in Baku, yesterday.
His talks with Azerbaijani Defense Minister, Colonel General Safar
Abiyev over, Ivanov told journalists that he did not rule out the
possibility of Russian peacekeepers' involvement in the Karabakh
conflict settlement. "First and foremost, political and diplomatic
settlement of the conflict should be concentrated on," he said.
"Discussions of peacekeeping operations including the ones with the
Russian Armed Forces' involvement should be left for later." By the
accord between Baku and Yerevan, peacekeepers deployed in
Nagorno-Karabakh are not supposed to include contingents of the
armies of the OSCE Minsk Group chairmen Russia being one of them.
Russian defense minister's statements evoked an ambivalent response
in Azerbaijan. Abiyev said that should the talks with Armenia over
Karabakh be disrupted, official Baku would do everything to "liberate
the occupied territories". In other words, the Azerbaijan leadership
is through with the delays in the talks and would not balk at sending
the regular army to reclaim the territories it says belong to it.
Prominent political scientist, Vafa Gulizade, believes that Russia
does not even want peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan. He says that
the Kremlin needs this conflict to remain unsolved because it enables
Russia to promote its geopolitical interests in the southern part of
the Caucasus and that Baku holds Russia responsible for the situation
where Armenia is occupying almost 20% of the territory of Azerbaijan.
That is why Ivanov's offer of Russian peacekeepers for the Karabakh
settlement is taken in Baku as an attempt on Moscow's part to
establish military control over the territory of Azerbaijan.
Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, January 25, 2006, p. 5
Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
January 27, 2006 Friday
IVANOV STUNNED THE AZERBAIJANIS;
Baku is not prepared to have Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh
to deal with
by Sokhbet Mamedov
SERGEI IVANOV'S WORDS ON HOW RUSSIAN PEACEKEEPERS COULD HELP WITH
NAGORNO-KARABAKH SETTLEMENT STUNNED OFFICIAL BAKU; Defense Minister
Sergei Ivanov leaves official Baku wondering what Moscow is really
after.
The Kremlin's policy in the Caucasus seems to be getting more active.
At least, this is the impression Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov's
visit to Azerbaijan made on observers. Ivanov made a number of
unexpected and important statements in Baku, yesterday.
His talks with Azerbaijani Defense Minister, Colonel General Safar
Abiyev over, Ivanov told journalists that he did not rule out the
possibility of Russian peacekeepers' involvement in the Karabakh
conflict settlement. "First and foremost, political and diplomatic
settlement of the conflict should be concentrated on," he said.
"Discussions of peacekeeping operations including the ones with the
Russian Armed Forces' involvement should be left for later." By the
accord between Baku and Yerevan, peacekeepers deployed in
Nagorno-Karabakh are not supposed to include contingents of the
armies of the OSCE Minsk Group chairmen Russia being one of them.
Russian defense minister's statements evoked an ambivalent response
in Azerbaijan. Abiyev said that should the talks with Armenia over
Karabakh be disrupted, official Baku would do everything to "liberate
the occupied territories". In other words, the Azerbaijan leadership
is through with the delays in the talks and would not balk at sending
the regular army to reclaim the territories it says belong to it.
Prominent political scientist, Vafa Gulizade, believes that Russia
does not even want peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan. He says that
the Kremlin needs this conflict to remain unsolved because it enables
Russia to promote its geopolitical interests in the southern part of
the Caucasus and that Baku holds Russia responsible for the situation
where Armenia is occupying almost 20% of the territory of Azerbaijan.
That is why Ivanov's offer of Russian peacekeepers for the Karabakh
settlement is taken in Baku as an attempt on Moscow's part to
establish military control over the territory of Azerbaijan.
Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, January 25, 2006, p. 5
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