(MENAFN- AzerNews)
By Orkhan Amashov
With the tiniest bit more rigour, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan
could have cut a better, less of a dissembler type of a figure at
the UN on 22 September. With a swot's enthusiasm, he croaked out,
as if by rote, the Armenian account of the 12-14 September state
border escalation, fired off a few sly barbed darts at Baku's
coercive negotiating stance and stated that Yerevan would recognise
Azerbaijan's territorial integrity, if the latter would
reciprocate.
As was the case in his latest parliamentary addresses at home,
Pashinyan emphasised“the integrity of Armenian territory across
29,800 square kilometres”. In New York, he went further, and asked
Baku for the map showing the boundaries of Armenia according to
Azerbaijani rationale. This was cunning, perhaps so cunning that
one could have put a tail on it and called it a weasel, or maybe a
beleaguered polecat. But this move was not exceedingly wise. In
fact, this posturing is a negotiating stance which simply says
“what is ours is ours, what is yours is a subject for further
negotiations”, befitting a victor dictating the tempo, and thus not
for Pashinyan to assume.
It is also unwise because the real question is if Armenia is
ready to recognise Azerbaijan's territorial integrity across 86,600
square kilometres, including Karabakh. In fact, he never openly
made such an unambiguous statement.
The taxonomy of Armenia's future recognition that Karabakh
belongs to Azerbaijan is still under gestation and has only been
comprised of feigned admissions made at different points, to date.
Whenever Pashinyan came close to uttering the essential rhetoric,
or said something akin to the obligatory, the wrath of the domestic
opposition and the Diaspora was heaped upon him, making him retract
or imbue nuances of a different meaning to divert away from a
trepidatious move towards a comprehensive deal.
As sure as the Pontiff retains his Catholicism, the point about
the mutual recognition of each other's territorial integrity is
integral to the peace agenda, and constitutes one of the five
principles that Baku offered in February and with which Yerevan
acquiesced in March. In New York, Pashinyan remonstrated that a
peace deal must be a real, and not phantom, demanding some
“concreteness” as to 'reciprocity'.
If it is clarity he is after, then it should also be said that
the Armenian illegal armed formations have not yet left Karabakh,
in contravention of Article 4 of the 10 November 2020 trilateral
declaration. Pashinyan's“we are ready to recognise Azerbaijan's
territorial integrity” or“we already recognised it in 1992” lines
entail nothing but sordid, long-practiced creative ambiguity. As
long as uncertainty will prevail regarding this principal focal
point, Azerbaijan is under no obligation to reciprocate in so many
words.
It remains a sad fact of life that the state border between the
two belligerents remains undelimited and undefined. It is partially
due to the lack of progress in the delimitation track of the
negotiations that these recurrent escalations prove deadly and
unpredictable. Pashinyan's view of the Zangazur Corridor remains
one of stodgy annoyance. His whole argument is still based on
superficiality, which is that the term“corridor” is absent in
Article 9 of the ceasefire deal. The substance is not of primary
importance, but merely one externally visible word that is fuelling
his obstreperousness.
Yerevan envisions a peace process as pootling along whilst
spurning momentums. This is the core reason obstructing the
negotiations. In this vein, the recently intensified diplomatic
efforts of Washington seem to be worthy of particular note. On 26
September, UN National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan tweeted that
he had hosted the meeting between Hikmat Hajiyev, Foreign Policy
Adviser to the President of Azerbaijan, and Armen Grigoryan,
Secretary of Armenia's National Security Council, and emphasised
the parties, inter alia, discussed“the importance of pursuing
time-bound and focused negotiations”.
The word“time-bound” is critical here. Yerevan's
flip-floppiness and disregard for deadlines need to be addressed.
The argument that the first duty is to avoid the possibility of
escalations and then work on a peace agenda is misleading. The two
objectives should be fulfilled simultaneously. As the experience of
the past two years has shown, if the negotiations are slackened,
escalations will continue to erupt with more regularity.
To be more succinct, so long as the Armenian forces remain in
hiding under the protection of the Russian“peacekeepers” in
Karabakh, there will be ongoing tensions within or near the
temporary zone. At the same time, the undelimited zone at the
intersection of the two states will continue to witness
escalations.
Having said all this, one should also reflect on the gradual
transformation of Pashinyan, which is slow and tempered by the
pressure exerted on him by the peace-resistant forces within the
Armenian world.“The status is not the goal, but the means to
guarantee the security and rights of the Armenian population of
Karabakh”, proclaimed by him in April, was a significant step.
Following the 12-14 September escalation, in a parliamentary
address, he expressed his readiness to sign a document, which would
guarantee Armenia's integrity across 29,800 square kilometres, even
if such a course would see him thrown out of office. Despite being
somewhat retracted later, the utterance of the original point was
also a move in the right direction.
Then, in New York, whilst addressing the UN General Assembly, he
reiterated his willingness to recognise Azerbaijan's territorial
integrity, if Baku does the same in relation to Armenia. This was
another step. Cumulatively, these points constitute an irrefutably
vague and nebulous domain that has yet to evolve into a solid
political position.
Finality will be achieved when a sufficient degree of antedating
statements will form the fertile ground for a definitive Armenian
recognition that Karabakh is Azerbaijan. Such a finality could be
achieved by other means, if Pashinyan decides to budge from his
current position, as is his wont.
To extricate itself from this execrable state of affairs,
Armenia needs to adopt the most effective trajectory and avoid
falling into a new nadir. If it fails to do so, no piper will play
a lament and only crocodile tears will be shed. So long as Yerevan
is not signed up to recognising and respecting Azerbaijani
territorial integrity, Armenia's own borders will be subject to
clarification, and Armenians will be unable to sleep soundly in
their beds.
---
Follow us on Twitter
MENAFN28092022000195011045ID1104938877
Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.