Mind the gap! The diplomats mediating between Armenia and Azerbaijan realise that the gap between them and the Presidents is not simply the huge empty table between them.

Diplomats representing the OSCE Minsk Process are in the region this week for another round of meetings with the leadership of Armenia and Azerbaijan and other interested parties. Yesterday the diplomats representing France, Russia and the United States, as well as the Swiss Presidency of the OSCE, met in Baku with the Azerbaijani leader, Ilham Aliev.

There was no official statement by either side, but the US representative, Ambassador James Warlick, described the meeting as "very good". Not for the first time, a photo of that meeting showed the four diplomats meeting with President Aliev around a huge empty table. The empty space between the President and the diplomats has started representing the huge gap that still remains between what the mediators are proposing and what the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders are ready to concede in order to break the current impasse.

Ambassador Warlick told APA news agency after the meeting that the Foreign Ministers of the two countries are discussing "the key issues surrounding the conflict. And it is not easy to have these discussions. It is not easy to find the way forward. But these are negotiations and what we want to see in these negotiations is not acceptable compromise made by one side or the other. What we want to find is a way forward for both countries to see a victory, a success; a way forward when both countries can stand up and say, 'Yes, this will lead to new era of peace and prosperity for our people'".

As Ambassador Warlick, who has joined the process only recently, is quickly finding out, reaching that elusive point is more difficult than one thinks.

The gap between mediators and Presidents, symbolised by the huge empty table, remains difficult to bridge. Meanwhile, for those on the line of contact, whose misfortune it will be to die in the next days, weeks and months whilst this diplomatic process continues, time is running out.

source: commonspace.eu

photo: President Ilham Aliev with diplomats from the OSCE Minsk Process in Baku on 4 February 2014.

Related articles

Editor's choice
News
Borrell tells the European Parliament that the situation in Afghanistan was critical, but the EU will remain engaged

Borrell tells the European Parliament that the situation in Afghanistan was critical, but the EU will remain engaged

Borrell underlined that the European Union will make every effort to support the peace process and to remain a committed partner to the Afghan people. "Of course, we will have to take into account the evolving situation, but disengagement is not an option.  We are clear on that: there is no alternative to a negotiated political settlement, through inclusive peace talks.
Editor's choice
News
Mask off

Mask off

Bidzina Ivanishvili, founder and honorary chairman of the Georgian Dream party, addressed a large crowd of supporters in Georgia's capital Tbilisi on Monday, 29 April as the standoff between Government and opposition continues. In a fiery speech, considered as the most radical of his political career, Ivanishvili lambasted the US and NATO, accusing them of seeing Georgia only as cannon fodder. He slammed the country's opposition and civil society and promised a heavy handed approach towards the opposition following next October elections. The mask that had hid the true Ivanishvili for the last twelve years finally fell. Ivanishvili accused NGOs of trying to organise a revolution and threatened all those who oppose him. He said "I know many of our supporters were dissatisfied that we did not punish the United National Movement enough. Even though many of their leaders spent time in prison and their leader [Saakashvili] is still in prison, it is true that we did not pass the UNM in a tribunal as such, did not condemn it as a treasonous, criminal entity that it is. Why did not we do it? Because we were under tremendous pressure. In fact, UNM was appointed the opposition [in 2012] just like they were appointed as government [in 2003] by the global party of war. The Georgian people should decide the country’s fate. After the [victory in] elections, we will issue a strict political and legal condemnation to the collective UNM [meaning NGOs and political opponents]; it will get the due punishment it deserves. They will pay for all the crimes against the Georgian people."

Popular

Editor's choice
News
Mask off

Mask off

Bidzina Ivanishvili, founder and honorary chairman of the Georgian Dream party, addressed a large crowd of supporters in Georgia's capital Tbilisi on Monday, 29 April as the standoff between Government and opposition continues. In a fiery speech, considered as the most radical of his political career, Ivanishvili lambasted the US and NATO, accusing them of seeing Georgia only as cannon fodder. He slammed the country's opposition and civil society and promised a heavy handed approach towards the opposition following next October elections. The mask that had hid the true Ivanishvili for the last twelve years finally fell. Ivanishvili accused NGOs of trying to organise a revolution and threatened all those who oppose him. He said "I know many of our supporters were dissatisfied that we did not punish the United National Movement enough. Even though many of their leaders spent time in prison and their leader [Saakashvili] is still in prison, it is true that we did not pass the UNM in a tribunal as such, did not condemn it as a treasonous, criminal entity that it is. Why did not we do it? Because we were under tremendous pressure. In fact, UNM was appointed the opposition [in 2012] just like they were appointed as government [in 2003] by the global party of war. The Georgian people should decide the country’s fate. After the [victory in] elections, we will issue a strict political and legal condemnation to the collective UNM [meaning NGOs and political opponents]; it will get the due punishment it deserves. They will pay for all the crimes against the Georgian people."