Hearing :: Conflicts in the Caucasus: Prospects for Resolution

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Commission on Security & Cooperation in Europe:  U.S. Helsinki Commission

Conflicts in the Caucasus:  Prospects for Resolution

Witnesses:
Tom de Waal
Senior Associate,
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Fiona Hill,
Senior Fellow,
Brookings Institution

Wayne Merry,
Senior Fellow,
American Foreign Policy Council

The Hearing Was Held From 2:30 p.m. to 4:38 p.m. in Room Number B-318, Rayburn 
House Office Building, Washington, D.C., Representative Michael Burgess (R-TX) 
Moderating 

Wednesday, December 7, 2011


Transcript by
Federal News Service
Washington, D.C. 
REPRESENTATIVE MICHAEL BURGESS (R-TX):  I want to welcome everyone to this 
briefing of the Helsinki Commission.  I especially want to thank our staff and 
our witnesses who are going to be providing us some information today.  
Chairman Smith is not able to join us.  I'm Mike Burgess, member from Texas, 
and we will be hearing from Mr. Smith through the testimony he's prepared that 
Mr. Ochs is going to present to us.  But again, let me welcome you all and 
thank you for being at the hearing.

The Helsinki Commission has an important role to play in advancing peace and 
democracy throughout the world.  Unfortunately today, even in what might be 
considered an enlightened time, many people still face war and oppression in 
their homes.  One of the regions that still witnesses much conflict is the 
Caucasus, with disputes in Georgia, Russia, Chechnya and others.  The quest for 
peace is ongoing and certainly a worthwhile goal.

Today, I hope to hear from the witnesses about the latest developments in the 
Caucasus.  I would like to hear about what actions the countries within the 
region are taking to ease tensions.  I'd also like to learn what the other 
Helsinki Commission countries are doing to help, as well as what the role the 
witnesses believe that us here in the United States House of Representatives, 
where we could be helpful.

Again, my thanks to Chairman Smith for organizing the briefing, and let me 
recognize then first Mr. Ochs for Mr. Smith's statement.

MICHAEL OCHS (policy adviser, Helsinki Commission):  Thank you very much, 
Congressman, and welcome to this Helsinki Commission briefing on unresolved 
conflicts in the Caucasus.

2011 marks the 20th anniversary of the breakup of the USSR, and many institutes 
are examining the legacy of that historic event.  Just last week, the Carnegie 
Endowment hosted an excellent conference on all aspects of the development of 
Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia over the last two decades.  Today, we'll be 
focusing on Nagorno-Karabakh, Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

You might be wondering where we're not looking at Transnistria.  The answer is 
simple:  The commission devoted a session to that issue in June, which leaves 
us free to spend all our time today on the Caucasus.

Let me start by noting that analysts have strong views about how to 
characterize these disputes.  Some call them frozen, others prefer 
"protracted," and still others use other terms.  Perhaps our witnesses today 
will elaborate on the differences among these terms and why the distinctions 
are important.

What is clear, however, is that they are unresolved.  Despite the efforts of 
the OSCE Minsk Group and the occasional exuberant claims of imminent success, 
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict looks little different than 15 years ago.  Things 
are different in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, of course, where matters 
languished unchanged for many years until the 2008 Russia-Georgia war.  Today, 
Moscow would claim that these conflicts are basically over because the two 
territories have become independent, but that is a decidedly minority view.

Apart from Russia, only Nicaragua, Venezuela and the tiny island statelets of 
Vanuatu and Nauru have recognized their independence.  The rest of the 
international community has refused to do so.  This includes all the members of 
the CIS, which have so far resisted Moscow's threats and blandishments.  
Obviously, they understand that if Russia, which has never implemented the 
cease-fire plan and instead established military bases in these territories, 
can truncate Georgia, it can do the same to them.  As for the U.S. government, 
Washington echoes Tbilisi's view that Russia is occupying Georgian territory, 
so from that perspective, nothing has been resolved at all.

These conflicts, at least in their most recent incarnation, erupted in the late 
1980s when the Soviet Union was breaking up and various minority groups decided 
they did not want to be part of the union republic they had been part of during 
the Soviet period.  This created contradictions between two Helsinki 
principles:  territorial integrity and self-determination.  To this day, after 
two decades of mediation, the parties refer to these two principles as their 
guiding lights and justification.  Neither the negotiators nor the 
international community have been able to bridge the gap.

Meanwhile, the conflicts have threatened the stability and security of the 
entire region.  The war of 2008 showed how quickly supposedly frozen conflicts 
can heat up, adding to the already huge number of refugees produced in the 
early 1990s.  At the same time, all the countries and peoples of the Caucasus 
would benefit from economic integration and using natural and human resources 
for purposes of development.  Instead, significant assets are being devoted to 
military purposes.

Maybe we shouldn't even expect a settlement, given how long disputes in other 
regions of the world have lasted.  But we are bound to explore if there is a 
way out of what appears to be a dead end, especially if there's reason to worry 
about the possible resumption of military hostilities.

Are there approaches that have not been tried?  Is it possible that the status 
quo, however awful, offers advantages to influential parties that outweigh the 
risks of compromise?  In the case of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, there is an 
inescapable (inaudible).  Are there circumstances under which Moscow would ever 
retract its recognition of their independence?  In other words, would Russia 
ever permit a deal, even if Georgia, Abkhazia and South Ossetia could agree on 
one?  Could other regional dynamics, short as escalating instability in the 
North Caucasus, affect the situation in South Ossetia and Abkhazia?  And what 
can we say about the efforts of the OSCE and the international community to 
broker a resolution?

These are difficult questions, so we thought hard about who best could address 
them.  We have not invited spokesmen for any government to testify today, 
including the U.S. government.  Nobody would be willing to discuss the details 
of sensitive negotiations in any case, and besides, after many years of talks, 
everyone is very well familiar with the public positions of the parties.  So we 
decided instead to hear the views of independent analysts, and thankfully, 
we've been able to assemble a truly expert group of witnesses.  Their 
impressive bios can be found the Helsinki Commission website, so we're not 
going to read them out in full.  Let me just say that Fiona, Tom and Wayne are 
not just highly regarded specialists who have been working these issues for 
many years, they are also old and good friends, so it's a special treat to have 
them here today.

REP. BURGESS:  Thank you, Mr. Ochs.  We are going to hear from our panelists.

Just briefly, Dr. Fiona Hill will be our first panelist, the director of the 
Center for (sic/on) the United States and Europe, and a senior fellow in the 
Foreign Policy Studies Program at the Brookings Institution.  She is a frequent 
commentator on Russia and Eurasian affairs.  Her book with Brookings senior 
fellow Clifford Gaddy, "The Siberian Curse:  How Communist Planners Left Russia 
Out in the Cold," was published in 2003 and her monograph, "Energy Empire:  
Oil, Gas and Russia's Revival," came out in 2004.  From 2006 to 2009, Dr. Hill 
was on leave from Brookings to serve as the national intelligence officer for 
Russia and Eurasia at the National Intelligence Council.

Tom de Waal is a senior associate with Russia and Eurasia program at the 
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington.  A special (sic) on 
the Caucasus, Russia and the Black Sea region, he is the author of the most – 
most recently, "The Caucasus:  An Introduction," published in 2010.  In 
addition, he's the author of "Black Garden:  Armenia and Azerbaijan through 
Peace and War," an authoritative conflict of the conflict – an authoritative 
study of the conflict of a region which has been translated into Russian, 
Armenian and Azeri.  Along with Carlotta Gall, he also wrote "Chechnya:  A 
Small Victorious War."  In the 1990s, Tom de Waal was a journalist in Moscow 
for The Moscow Times, The Times of London and The Economist.  He has also 
worked as a reporter, editor and program manager for the BBC World Service.

Wayne Merry is a senior fellow for Europe and Eurasia at the American Foreign 
Policy Council in Washington.  He's widely published and is a frequent speaker 
on topics relating to Russia, Central Asia and the Caucasus, the Balkans, 
European security and transatlantic regions.  In 26 years in the United States 
Foreign Service, he worked as a diplomat and a political analyst in Moscow, 
East Berlin, Athens, New York and Tunis, and recently served in the State, 
Defense and Treasury departments, as well as on Capitol Hill and with the 
United States Marine Corps.  He studied at the University of Wisconsin, 
Princeton University's Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, and 
the U.S. Army Russian Institute.

We'll begin with Dr. Fiona.

FIONA HILL:  Thank you very much, Representative Burgess, and I'm delighted to 
be here today, and it's good to see that in spite of the very inclement weather 
outside, there are lots of people who have managed to make it for this hearing.

I want to begin my remarks by addressing directly the questions that the 
Helsinki Commission posed to us for the briefing.  The questions, of course, 
were already distributed to all of you in the announcement.  And Michael Ochs 
has already begun to frame the first part of those questions about where the 
conflicts stand today, and he posed the question about the differences in terms 
"frozen," "protracted," "still unresolved."  And I think, you know, I can 
certainly speak on behalf of my other two colleagues here that we cannot call 
these conflicts frozen, and indeed, Michael said that himself; protracted most 
certainly, and yes, still unresolved.

But these are very dynamic conflicts, as all of you in the room know, and the 
situation on the ground, including in Nagorno-Karabakh, which Michael actually 
posed, has much changed in the last 15 years.  In fact, yes, there's been some 
significant changes in all of these conflicts in their on-the-ground 
configuration.  And it's not just been the outbreak of war in Georgia in 2008 
that was the only event here, though perhaps this has been the most notable 
event.  What we saw with the war in Georgia, of course, is that the 
configuration of contested boundaries changed as a result of that war.  And we 
also got some new dimensions to that specific complex of conflicts with South 
Ossetia and Abkhazia.  We have a controversial cease-fire document that has 
become itself a focal point of contestation.  And the recognition of Abkhazia 
and South Ossetia by their handful of rather small states as well as Russia 
that Michael referred to has brought a whole new dimension to this conflict.

We've also had the introduction of new international actors into the broader 
conflict zone.  Previously, of course, the U.N. and the OSCE were the principal 
international players, but now we have the EU, in the form of the EU Monitoring 
Mission in Georgia.  And that also brings, again, a whole array of different 
dimensions to the conflicts in the region.

Now, the only way in which the conflicts can be deemed frozen is that, as 
Michael also said, that the initial parameters for resolution that we laid out, 
which was this desire to try to bridge the demands for self-determination by 
the individual peoples on territories of the conflicted and contested regions, 
with the imperative of maintaining the territory integrity of the respective 
states, has reached an impasse.  It's that concept that has become frozen, if 
anything is frozen at all.

And what we've seen over this last almost 20 years now in terms of thinking 
about these conflicts is that increasingly, and especially now given the 
obvious developments in 2008, Abkhazia and South Ossetia have rejected the 
increasingly elaborate attempts to find a proposal for ensuring their autonomy, 
while at the same time the two principal states that are involved on the other 
sides of the conflict, Azerbaijan and Georgia, have found it very difficult to 
accept proposals that seem, at least have the appearance of falling short of 
the full reintegration of the territories back into their states, all of them 
not seeming to come under their full sovereignty.  So this is really what 
Michael was talking about, about the frozen aspects of it.  And it's really 
impasse that we've reached, the inability to find this bridge.

Now, the other question that was posed here is, is the resumption of armed 
hostilities a serious threat?  I think as we saw in 2008 and we've seen 
continuously since, there is always the risk of miscalculation and of seemingly 
isolated incidents of violence sparking out of control.  Since the war in 
Georgia, we've seen repeated incidents of violence in Georgia itself and in the 
territories of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.  We've also seen at many times what 
looks to be the result of deliberate provocation to up the political ante when 
we've reached critical junctures in negotiations, and that's been, 
unfortunately, very much the case in Nagorno-Karabakh, where we've seen 
consistently relatively large numbers of casualties in cease-fire violations 
and sniper attacks along the line of contact in Nagorno-Karabakh.  And also, 
we've seen a great deal of bellicose rhetoric on all sides, especially at the 
state level in Azerbaijan and also in Armenia, that have further inflamed this 
situation and have increased the potential for violent incidents to get out of 
hand.

And then, as Michael mentioned, although this isn't the specific topic of our 
briefing today, but obviously it's an important component, we have the added 
complication of armed hostilities that are already under way in North Caucasus 
across the border.  There, insurgency and violence are a fact; they're not just 
something of dispute.  And as all of you in this room know, historically, the 
violence in the North Caucasus bled into violence in the South Caucasus.  The 
two areas are intrinsically interlinked in terms of their populations and their 
shared history within both the Russian Empire and in the Soviet Union.  And the 
fact that armed hostilities are ongoing in the North Caucasus really increases 
the level of tension in the South.

And I would say, unfortunately, the situation in the North Caucasus is likely 
to become more, rather than less, tense as we look ahead over the next couple 
of years.  We're seeing now turbulent politics in Russia in the work of the 
recent Duma elections.  We don't know how that is all going to unfold.  We have 
next March's presidential election in Russia, and obviously there's going to be 
a lot of scrutiny on the various regions as to see how people are going to 
engage in the election campaign over the next few months.

And then of course we have the impending event of the Sochi Winter Olympics in 
2014, which has been designated a national priority project by the Russian 
government and has obviously become quite a focal point in the North Caucasus.  
Moscow is extremely concerned about the risks to the Olympic project from the 
ongoing insurgency.  Moscow also, to some degree, was very concerned about the 
implications of Sochi of its ongoing disputes with Georgia, and we can say that 
Sochi was a factor in propelling Georgia and Russia toward war in 2008.  And we 
could also, of course, point to many instances where cross-border insurgency, 
particularly spillover from Chechnya, has resulted in Russia's intervention 
directly in Georgia's internal affairs.

And the Georgian government's quite recent explicit support for North Caucasian 
groups, including those who are concentrated around in Sochi, the – (inaudible) 
– and their grievances against Moscow and against the Russian state have 
certainly caught Moscow's attention and raised the political tension even 
further.  So I would say that unfortunately, over the next couple of years, we 
see potentially even more dangerous situation emanating where North and South 
Caucasus become intertwined.

Now, the other question was raised about what factors impede a settlement.  And 
as I started to put together my bullets for this, I could have gone on perhaps 
for pages, and I know that Wayne – (laughs) – and Tom would also like something 
to say, so I've confined myself to I think it's sort of seven bullets here, 
which is of course not at all exhaustive of all of the different factors.  

Michael already mentioned perhaps the primary fact, of the fact that the roots 
of the conflicts are very long and are intrinsic to the set of the 
administrative structures and the nationality policies of the Soviet Union.  
And as Michael said, the roots of most of the conflicts date back to the 1980s 
and, in some cases, some of the factors for conflict go back to the czarist 
era.  So it makes it very difficult to basically disentangle some of the 
elements of conflict here.

But as most of us know, in any case, the independent modern states of Armenia, 
Azerbaijan and Georgia were never established in their administrative 
configuration to be independent.  They were intended to be interdependent with 
each other, as well as dependent on Moscow, and that is primarily one of the 
problems that we see.  And the Constitution of the Soviet Union in theory, at 
least, provided for autonomous regions like Abkhazia, South Ossetia and 
Nagorno-Karabakh to also appeal to Moscow for a change in their status.  And as 
Michael alluded, some of that was already underway by the late '80s and 
certainly in the 1990s.  And that also includes republics in the North Caucasus 
as well.  So we have a very complicated situation to handle here.

Also, none of the contested territories, or indeed the states themselves, have 
really had any independent existence outside of the framework of the Soviet 
Union or of the Russian Empire, with of course the exception of a very brief 
period of independence after the collapse of the Russian Empire and just after 
World War I.

The other fact that we need to bear in mind is that conflicts do not exist in a 
vacuum.  And Michael already referred to Transnistria and said that that was 
not a subject of a discussion today.  But in addition to strong parallels with 
Transnistria and the conflict obviously that also involves Moldova, there are 
distinct parallels between these conflicts in the Caucasus and conflicts in the 
former Yugoslavia, such as Kosovo, and we could go on in a broader sense there, 
but also Cyprus and indeed the Middle East conflict between Israel and the 
territories of Palestine, the Palestinian territories.

And a lack of settlement in each of these other cases that I've listed here 
provides, in fact, a rather negative example, unfortunately, for the protracted 
conflicts in the South Caucasus.  If there had been, say, a major breakthrough 
in Cyprus or elsewhere, we might have something positive to point to that might 
provide a different frame of reference.  What we've seen instead, 
unfortunately, as of the attempts to resolve the conflict in Kosovo and the 
disputes between Kosovo and Serbia provided, in fact, yet another negative 
factor in the resolution of the South Caucasus' conflicts and can be said to 
also impede a settlement.

The United States government explicitly denied, of course, the existence of any 
parallels between Kosovo and the South Caucasus and the fact that this could 
possibly set a precedent for a Caucasus resolution.  But in fact, what the 
international recognition of Kosovo did, because it was treated entirely 
separately from this, has greatly complicate the situation between Georgia, 
Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and Tom de Waal wrote very eloquently about this at 
various points just after that decision.  The parallels and precedent were 
quite obvious, certainly to people on the ground, and they were explicitly 
used, of course, by the Russian government in its engagement of all the three 
parties to the Georgian complex of conflicts, and also explicitly used by the 
Russian government in their direct involvement in the conflicts and in the war.

Kosovo was used as the point of reference, in fact, for Russia's recognition of 
Abkhazia and South Ossetia's independence, and Abkhazia and South Ossetia now 
assert that, on the basis of the Kosovo precedent and Russia's recognition of 
their independence, even if it hasn't been picked up on an international level, 
that they should no longer be expected to negotiate their relationship with 
Georgia on the old terms.  And clearly Georgia – because nobody else has 
recognized this, and in fact because of, you know, the long nature and details 
of the conflict – naturally refuses to engage with the territories on these 
terms in any way that might suggest some kind of implicit acknowledgement of 
any change whatsoever in their status.  So we've got ourselves into another 
impasse as a result of what happened in Kosovo.

In even the convoluted way that I'm describing it here, you can see that it's 
become difficult for experts like myself to even talk about this without 
raising a whole host of additional questions that we have to prefigure 
everything with, seven or eight bullet points of caveats before we even mention 
the issue.

Now, notably, of course, Russia's not made the parallel between Kosovo and 
Nagorno-Karabakh, nor has it made any attempt to recognize its independence, 
which underscores how much bilateral political antipathy between Russia and 
Georgia has framed Moscow's response to the conflict and to the conflicts in 
general.

Now, another couple of factors just to mention before getting onto the last set 
of questions about the negotiating formats:  One very important factor that we 
see now, and this is where things really have changed in Karabakh and elsewhere 
over the last 15 to 20 years is we've got a whole generation of people who have 
grown up on both sides of each conflict without any experience of interaction 
with each other.  And they obviously have very different attitudes, very 
different experiences, very different expectations and intentions from the 
generation before them.  And new relationships have developed between 
populations in those outside the region.  So we have a whole different 
dimension and a whole different outlook now on the conflicts from what we had 
20 years ago.

Also, local governments, and I mean this both at the level of Abkhazia, South 
Ossetia, Nagorno-Karabakh and then Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia, have also 
had their own problems in establishing and consolidating and keeping a hold of 
their own legitimacy, and the conflicts have become part of this issue.  And 
what we've seen is when there's been a lot of questions about democratic 
developments, whether there have been contested elections, whether there have 
been other questions about the legitimacy of local leaders, the governments 
have often resorted at all different levels to rhetoric about the conflicts to 
compensate for and deflect away from political failings.  South Ossetia, which 
we may get into in the discussion, is a classic case in point, right now after 
a contested and rather disputed election just in the last month.

Now this, of course, has an impact on the negotiating format, this legitimacy 
issue on the part of local governments, because the international negotiating 
mechanisms that were to set up and respond to the armed conflicts of the 1990s 
have now become part of the domestic political scene in each case.  They've 
been around, frankly, as long as the governments have been around, as long as 
the independent states have been around.  They've almost evolved along with the 
conflicts and they're no longer seen as neutral.  And they're often presented 
as different actors on different sides – by different actors on different sides 
in the Caucasus as part of the problem.  They've become very politicized, not 
by the fault necessarily of those people involved in the negotiations, but just 
by being a fact of existing so long.  They use bi-regional leaders frequently 
as an excuse for avoiding compromise.  In the case of Karabakh, you know, for 
example, we frequently hear after failed rounds of negotiations, well, the 
Minsk Group didn't do their job properly.  Nobody says, well, I, the leader of 
this or that entity, couldn't really reach a compromise this time because of X, 
Y domestic factors; this wasn't a good juncture.  It's very easy to blame the 
Minsk Group for them, rather than air out all of the dirty laundry difficulties 
or all the difficulties of your domestic politics that have prevented you from 
being able to move forward in any way.

One of the other issues that we're currently facing also in the negotiations is 
the lack of time and resources on part of the international players.  The Minsk 
Group has been around so long that the world has changed, and now we have the 
inevitable press of other international issues.  And the impact of ongoing 
economic crises on diplomacy, people don't have the same time and effort or the 
same money to expend on these ventures as they did before.

And what we've also seen is the U.S., Europe and all the other international 
entities, the U.N. and OSCE, have all developed their own approaches to 
conflict.  They've all put money into their individual mechanisms.  And 
everyone is now facing the question of what to do with dwindling budgets and 
dwindling cadres of international diplomats about what can they do.  So is it 
possible, for example, to join forces for a concerted effort to push things 
forward?  That's one of the questions about, could we have a new negotiating 
format, and at different points, people have suggested this.

However, I would say that it's not entirely clear, and Wayne and Tom I think 
will have a lot of opinions on this, as to whether setting something new up 
would actually solve the conflicts.  We actually saw in the last year an 
intense personal push, and I would actually say quite a sincere personal push, 
by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Nagorno-Karabakh.  He spent a lot of 
time and effort in bringing the leaders together and trying to push things 
forward.  He didn't really get anywhere.  And it wasn't really the lack of 
effort on his part or the resources that was the problem; it was simply that 
again, this was not the good juncture for the conflicting parties to reach a 
resolution.

So, and my final point is what can the United States or what can others do to 
facilitate a resolution is perhaps we need to go back to the drawing board 
about what do we mean by resolution, because there's not, as I said at the very 
beginning and as Michael has made clear, any status quo ante to refer back to 
or even to go back to, given the nature of the conflicts.  The U.S. and 
everybody else has their own domestic political problems that make it difficult 
always to make a firm push on issues.  We have as many problems in being an 
honest broker as the regional leaders do in really themselves being able to be 
honest about finding a path forward.

And by always pushing for the bridge, the final resolution that we've putting 
everything together, we always set ourselves up for failure.  So the question 
is can we set ourselves a different set of goals, and Tom and Wayne and others 
have been engaged in efforts like this, and it would be good to hear directly 
from them about some of the things we could do.

But one thing where we have seen, where there has been a breakthrough is not on 
the conflicts itself but on (creative pollutions ?), but has been recently on 
WTO and the negotiations between Georgia and Russia.  And maybe this is just 
something that we can think about for moving forward.  

In the case of the WTO negotiations between Georgia and Russia, obviously the 
critical issue of status and the status of Karabakh – of, sorry, of South 
Ossetia and Abkhazia, was a critical issue.  The Georgians are very worried 
that any agreement that they reached would somehow have an implication to the 
conflict.  But what we saw instead was very creative mediation on the part of 
the Swiss.  The United States wasn't out in front; we were leading from behind.

And the final resolution in this – for this very narrow thing was outsourcing 
of the customs monitoring to a private entity.  So the question is, can private 
entities, can these kind of creative solutions play a role where the larger 
negotiation formats have failed?   

MR. TOM DE WAAL:  (Off mike.)  That sounds better.  

Thank you, Congressman, and thank you, Michael, and thank you all for coming.  
Inevitably, I will go over some of the same ground as Fiona, who I think has 
covered a lot of territory very well.  But I'll try and do it in my own way.

As Michael told us, we're currently marking the 20th anniversary of the end of 
the Soviet Union, when the three conflicts we're discussing, Abkhazia and South 
Ossetia and Nagorno-Karabakh, were already breaking out.  That they're still 
unresolved 20 years on shows how intractable and complex they are.  It's worth 
recalling that they all – all three conflicts began before the Soviet Union 
ended, something which makes it even harder to resolve them.  The residents of 
the three conflict regions have never experienced life in independent 
Azerbaijan or Georgia, only in their Soviet-era predecessor republics.  
Generations are growing up ignorant of one another.

It's important to stress an obvious point in our title, which we may run over 
as we move to the content.  These are conflicts, with conflicting sides and 
narratives.  I do not see a moral bias in them towards one side or the other.  
In the case of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the Georgian side basically started 
the conflict in 1990 in South Ossetia and in Abkhazia in 1992.  But both sides 
did terrible things in those two conflicts, and the vast majority of displaced 
people from the conflicts are ethnic Georgians.

For both sides in those conflicts, the experience has been a huge national 
trauma.  Consider that the Abkhaz lost around 4 percent of their entire ethnic 
population in the war of 1992 to 1993 and that around 80 percent of Georgians 
living in Abkhazia before the war are still displaced from their homeland.

When it comes to Nagorno-Karabakh, the Armenians emerged the victor on the 
ground in the 1991 to (199)4 conflict, but both sides paid a heavy price.  Both 
sides have a long list of "black dates," quote-unquote, commemorating what is 
in effect attempts of each to destroy the other.  The Armenian side recalls the 
pogroms in Sumgait and Baku, deportation of Armenians from Azerbaijan, the 
shelling of civilians in Stepanakert, the massacre at Maraga.  Azerbaijanis 
recall the deportations of Azerbaijanis from Armenia, the massacre at Khojaly, 
the expulsion of half a million Azerbaijanis from the seven territories around 
Karabakh in 1992 to (199)4.  

So there are no angels here, and it would be a mistake for the United States to 
assert the morality of one side over the other in any of these conflicts.

A few words about the situation with Georgia's conflicts after the war of 2008: 
 Recognition as independent states by Russia has obviously dramatically changed 
the situation of both Abkhazia and South Ossetia.  From their point of view, a 
Russian military presence means protection from Georgia.  But it has also meant 
de facto annexation by Russia, which makes many people in Abkhazia in 
particular resentful.  In some ways, you could argue that in fact Abkhazia and 
South Ossetia were de facto independent before 2008, are now more dependent, 
even though they've been recognized by Russia.

The trajectories of the two territories are also diverging.  South Ossetia is 
barely viable as a self-governing territory, let alone a state, having a 
population of barely 30,000 people.  Abkhazia is more viable with a population 
of more than 200,000, has working institutions and media, but it obviously 
lacks legitimacy if only, as also in South Ossetia, because of the issue of its 
missing Georgian population.

That means that the policy of nonrecognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia is 
definitely the right one.  But within that framework, I would urge greater 
pragmatism.  The current residents of these territories are not second-class 
human beings.  Their aspirations and insecurities are genuine, if not their 
sovereignty.  They will not go away.  And by their power status, they also 
basically hold hostage the fate of the Georgian IDPs.

South Ossetia is both more isolated and more liable in the future to do a deal 
with Georgia.  It was part of Georgia's economic space up until 2004.  Simply 
opening the border would be a catalyst for normalization.  

Abkhazia is more complex.  People there are more aggressive in setting their 
independence but also genuinely seek engagement with the world beyond Russia 
and Georgia.  A deal with them will be a very long-term process.  Pragmatic, 
status-neutral ways of allowing young Abkhaz to travel and study abroad and 
engage with the outside world would be a win-win arrangement for all.  The 
current Georgian strategy on engagement, despite promising much, has failed to 
deliver that.

A more pragmatic strategy on elections would also be beneficial.  In April 
2010, the United States congratulated, quote, "Mr. Dervis Eroglu for his 
victory in elections held to select the leader of the Turkish Cypriot 
community," unquote.  What is right for one unrecognized entity should be right 
for others.  Recognition of Abkhazia – Abkhaz, Ossetian and Karabakh Armenian 
leaders as local governments is a good step, which will increase engagement and 
leverage.  If Western governments had taken that approach with South Ossetia, 
they would now be able to exert leverage to voice support for the candidate 
there, who has popular backing but whose election was recently stolen, Alla 
Jioeva.

When it comes to Nagorno-Karabakh, the situation gets harder and harder.  There 
is a small but growing risk of renewed conflict, of which I think Wayne will 
tell us a lot more.  In large part, this is because of a growing problem of 
perception.  Armenians believe they have built a de facto state on the ground 
in Karabakh.  There's a new generation that's growing up that has never met an 
Azerbaijani, and there is no going back.  The recognitions of Kosovo, Abkhazia 
and South Ossetia give them hope that their turn may come in the future.

Azerbaijan, by contrast, sees that its economy is six times bigger than in the 
1990s, that it now spends more on its military than Armenia does on its entire 
government budget, and that Azerbaijan is now an international player, which 
will – who will soon be a member of the U.N. Security Council in January.  All 
this makes it much harder to forge a peace than a decade ago.  There's nothing 
wrong in principle with the OSCE Minsk process and the mediation of three 
important global actors, France, Russia and the United States.  But the Minsk 
process also lacks the authority it had in the 1990s, when both sides were much 
weaker.  Changing the Minsk Group format would be a distraction, in my view.  
It would not change the nature of the problem.  Content is more important than 
form, and it is – and the content is defined by the two presidents, who are the 
conductors of the process.  Currently, they basically prefer the status quo to 
the risk of changing it.

A few basic problems why – a few basic explanations why this is so:  The 
presidents prefer a closed process that does not involve Armenia or Azerbaijani 
societies.  This means that the two societies are still stuck in a 
no-compromise mentality, and the presidents have no peace constituency 
supporting them if they want to do a deal.  Important players with a stake in 
the outcome of negotiations – for example, the Karabakh Armenians and their 
elected authorities and also Azerbaijani IDPs – do not have a proper voice in 
the process.

The discourse on the conflict is dominated by two aggressive, competing 
Armenian and Azerbaijani narratives.  A third narrative of peace, compromise 
and peaceful coexistence is not being expressed or heard either locally or 
internationally.  The conflict is the second order of priority of the 
international community, which is reluctant to invest major resources in it 
without an obvious hope of a good result.  Compare the situation to the crisis 
in the Balkans in the 1990s, when both the EU and the U.S. could not ignore it. 
 Finally, there is a lack of clarity as to who will provide peacekeeping and 
post-conflict reconstruction when peace is finally agreed.  This makes the 
parties even more cautious.

So a final recommendation for the Karabakh peace process that paradoxically the 
Minsk Group co-chair countries should offer both less and more.  By less, I 
mean that the mediators must stress that they – must stress that they alone 
cannot solve the conflict and it is fundamentally up to the parties on the 
ground.  This means that they should encourage Armenians and Azerbaijanis to 
take greater ownership of their own conflict in the search for a mutually 
acceptable deal through bilateral negotiations.  The mediators can emphasize 
that they are available for advice and support and will still keep their seats 
by a monitoring function, but they will also take a step back and give more 
responsibility to the parties in crafting the actual nature of the deal.  By 
more, I mean that simultaneously the mediators, led by the U.S. but supported 
by other international bodies such as the EU, U.N. and World Bank, should 
pledge more by more publicly asserting that they will provide the necessary 
resources in terms of peacekeeping, policing and reconstruction to underpin an 
eventual peace settlement.

Thank you.

REP. BURGESS:  Thank you.

We'll hear from Mr. Merry now.

WAYNE MERRY:  Congressman, thank you very much for taking some of your very 
busy day to focus your attention on these issues.  As a former staff member of 
the Helsinki Commission, let me also say it's always a pleasure to return to 
this venue.

I would like to use this opportunity to sound a genuine note of alarm about the 
potential for renewed war over Karabakh.  Whoever came up with the phrase 
"frozen conflicts" has much to answer for.  These conflicts are anything but 
stable.  They are volatile and they are dangerous.

In the months leading up to the August 2008 war, many observers, myself 
included, believed that the Georgian president would resort to military means 
in either Abkhazia or South Ossetia, and the Russian government would respond 
with overwhelming and disproportionate force.  Yet when the war came, our own 
government and many others purported to be surprised by it.  I would hope that 
our government and others would be very conscious of the increasing momentum 
toward conflict in another part of the Caucasus, Karabakh.

In my former official capacities in – starting in 1991 with the State 
Department, the Pentagon and here at the Helsinki Commission, I had what I 
might call vestigial involvement with the Karabakh issue.  Since leaving the 
government, I've certainly maintained an interest in it.  Two years ago, I 
published a somewhat longish article in the British openDemocracy.net vehicle 
discussing the security and military aspects of Karabakh, based in part on what 
I had learned in my Pentagon years.

In recent months, however, I have noted in conversations both with private 
observers here in Washington and with some government officials an increased 
concern that the momentum toward armed conflict is accelerating and the danger 
of a new – of a new war is becoming more real.  With this in mind, I used the 
opportunity of a trip last month to Armenia for an international conference to 
make a trip to Nagorno-Karabakh to see the local situation for myself.

I introduce two important provisos:  first, this trip had no official status 
whatsoever, did not in any way represent a gesture by any official entity of 
the United States; second, the trip was in no way partisan.  I made it clear to 
the Azerbaijani embassy that I would be delighted to make a parallel visit to 
their side of a line of contact.  But I was using the opportunity of my visit 
to Armenia to visit Karabakh simply because I felt I should no longer be in a 
position of writing and talking about this issue without actually seeing it 
with my own eyes.

The focus of my visit to Karabakh, even though I did meet with senior political 
and – political figures and with members of civil society, was on security 
questions.  I spent most of the day with the Karabakh army and was allowed to 
see a great deal, no state secrets but to see a great deal.  I was actually in 
the very front trench on the Aghdam front, less than 200 meters from the 
Azerbaijani front trench.  I saw the Aghdam region, which is, I can tell you, a 
battlefield in the waiting with multiple layers of echelon defenses in depth, 
mine fields, anti-tank barriers, prepared artillery positions, and on and on 
and on.  Most of these things that I saw I was already familiar with from 
satellite photography.  It is quite a different experience to visit a former 
and potential future battlefield at the ground level and to meet some of the 
young men who might become casualties in a renewed war.

My concern about the increased probability of war over Karabakh has five 
components:  first, that the "no war, no peace" situation since 1994 has not 
evolved in anything resembling peace.  The estrangement between the two 
communities has deepened.  The sense of dehumanization of the other side has I 
think become extremely dangerous.  And what we see now is not a quasi-peace; it 
is a quasi-war.

Second, the failure of the mediation efforts by the Minsk Group have led to a 
great deal of frustration on both sides, more understandably, of course, on the 
Azerbaijani side.  Now, being acquainted with diplomacy myself and with most of 
the American participants in the Minsk Group, I understand the fundamental 
problem, that mediators do not negotiate; mediators mediate.  Only parties 
negotiate.  And the parties to this conflict have used the mediation process 
largely to avoid their responsibilities to negotiate and to avoid their 
responsibilities to educate and inform their own populations about the 
compromises that would be necessary to achieve peace.  Nonetheless, the 
expectation among populations on both sides that international mediation by 
three great powers could or should result in peace has obviously led to a very 
great deal of frustration on both sides and a temptation to resort to arms as 
an alternative.

Third, there is a very substantial arms race under way, fueled on the 
Azerbaijani side by its oil and gas revenues, fueled on the Armenian side by 
transfers from the Russian Federation.  This arms race is continuing and is 
reaching, in my view, very, very worrisome proportions, which leads to the 
fourth point, which is the continuing level of cease-fire violations, which 
have become so routine that they are not even reported in the West anymore.  
And yet I can tell you that they have become a normal part of the line of 
contact on both sides and have led to many casualties, many of them civilians.  
Cease-fire violations are something which can get out of hand in a big hurry if 
not better controlled.  The lack of any kind of confidence-building measures, 
the most minimal means of communication across the line of control, are 
lacking.  Things that we regarded as fundamental in the Cold War between the 
United States and the Soviet Union in places like Germany do not exist here at 
all.

And finally, to me the most worrisome thing of all is the increasing level of 
expectations, which I observed on both sides, that a war is inevitable and may 
even be desirable, a view that the war is coming and a view increasingly to be 
heard on both sides that the war would, whatever its cost, resolve the Karabakh 
issue on terms desirable to that side.  Now, clearly, both sides cannot be 
correct in this evaluation, but both can be wrong.  I believe both are wrong.  
I believe they are wrong if for no other reason than the probable nature of a 
renewed war.

A renewed war would not look anything like the 1991-94 conflict.  That war was 
a series of interlocking, basically infantry battles with some degree of 
armored and artillery support.  Since that time, Nagorno-Karabakh has become a 
fortress, a combination of its natural topography, which is often very 
formidable, but also very thoroughly prepared, echeloned defenses in depth.  
Therefore, a battle over Karabakh again would be a siege.

Throughout human history, sieges have been notorious for brutality, bloodshed 
and their costs to civilian populations.  A siege battle has two components, 
usually sequential:  bombardment and assault or engagement.  The two parties 
have been preparing extensively for a major bombardment war, buying or 
acquiring by other means large inventories of multi-launch rocket systems and 
long-range artillery and very extensive munitions.  It is quite clear to me 
that a bombardment war between the two sides would very, very quickly involve 
major civilian casualties.  Indeed, I was told quite clearly by a counterpart 
in Yerevan that the targeting on their side would be, as he put it, "counter 
value," which is to say targeting civilian installations, civilian 
infrastructure.  And I have no doubt that would be the case on both sides.

I think it unlikely that such a brutal bombardment war would remain static for 
long.  Both sides have very significant mobile operational capabilities.  I 
think the Armenian side should not underestimate the extent of improvement in 
the Azerbaijani order of battle and in its operational capabilities.  Likewise, 
the Azerbaijanis should not underestimate the capabilities of their opponents.  
Just to give one example, the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, as it proclaims itself 
to be, has, I believe, the highest ratio of mobile armor equipment per capita 
of any entity on the face of the Earth.  With a population of under 150,000, 
Karabakh maintains, depending on whose sources you believe, something like 300 
main battle tanks and comparable levels of armored personnel systems, mobile 
artillery and so forth.  A mobile war battle could start from either side or 
both sides and become very, very bloody very, very quickly.

Now, the problem is not just Armenians and Azerbaijanis killing each other; the 
problem is that both sides have regional great-power sponsors.  Russia has a 
treaty-based alliance with Armenia.  This does not cover Karabakh.  But in the 
scenario I have just sketched, I think that would quickly become a distinction 
without a difference.  Turkey does not have a legal obligation to Azerbaijan, 
but the political impetus in the Turkish Republic to support their cousins in 
Azerbaijan in such a conflict would become very, very strong I – indeed.  I am 
certainly not predicting that Turkey and Russia would come to blows over 
Karabakh.  But a proxy war fed and supported by regional great powers can 
assume proportions much greater than those that would be calculated by the 
participants themselves.  The consequences of this are, quite literally, 
unpredictable.  

I am not predicting that war is inevitable much less that it is imminent, what 
I am saying that the momentum toward renewed conflict over Karabakh, which has 
been present for several years, is continuing and even accelerating.  It should 
be the subject for genuine concern.

In 2008, the United States government attempted diplomatic jawboning to try to 
prevent a conflict between Russia and Georgia.  That policy failed.  My view is 
that the focus not just of American policy but of the policies of other 
interested powers should focus on real settlement, negotiation not mediation, 
and the fact that great powers have responsibilities to themselves and to each 
other to prevent client states from engaging in behavior which is deleterious 
to the interests of the region and the world as a whole.

In a previous article, I speculated that Karabakh could actually be a 
productive venue for traditional great-power collusion between Russia and the 
United States.  Today, I would add Turkey to that equation.  But regardless of 
the methods undertaken, I would urge that in Washington, Paris, Brussels, 
Ankara, Moscow, even Tehran, complacency should be avoided.  This is a very 
dangerous situation, and it should – and it requires serious attention.

Thank you, sir.

REP. BURGESS:  And thank you, Mr. Merry, certainly very compelling testimony on 
your first-person visit to the Karabakh.  Obviously, I have to say as a 
first-term congressman here in 2004 after a shooting in Beslan, I accompanied 
another congressman from Colorado on a trip over there because we wanted to 
offer just support to the people who were going through that.  And I was 
absolutely unprepared for the level of interference.  As a member of Congress, 
you can't just slip in and slip out of places unknown, but the actual official 
opposition to us even being around was something for which I was unprepared, so 
certainly, kudos to you for getting in and getting us that firsthand, 
on-the-ground report, because that's pretty compelling testimony that you've 
provided for us.

You know, in 2008, in this country we were kind of riveted on a presidential 
election in the summer; stock market hadn't yet melted down.  So what happened 
between Georgia and Russia as a member of Congress, yeah, I could say that I – 
that was a surprise to me.  I guess I didn't appreciate the level of what you 
described as jawboning that was going on between the administration and the 
Russians at that point.  But what is the status of the discussions that are 
occurring presently?  You describe a fairly stark scenario of conflict that may 
be inevitable and, by some parties, even desired.  What is going on right now 
between U.S. and Russian governments to prevent that from happening?

MR. MERRY:  Congressman, as a nonofficial I can't give you any authoritative 
answer to that.  The easy would be to say that that question should be 
addressed to the State Department and the White House.

I will, however, say that I have spoken with some quite senior people in the 
U.S. government since I returned from this trip and found that their concern 
parallels my own.  I am not saying that I think that there is ignorance or 
acquiescence to a continuation of the status quo in the U.S. government.  I do 
feel, however, and in this I must take a different view than my colleague Tom 
de Waal, that the current mechanisms of mediation and negotiation are 
inadequate, that I think that a fundamentally different approach to problem 
resolution on Karabakh is called for.

My own view is that this should involve a negotiation which would lead to final 
resolution of status and rectification of international frontiers.  I'm not 
saying that would be – I'm not saying it would be easy.  I – as a former 
diplomat, I understand that.  I do think, however, that the rather incremental 
step-by-step approach that has been pursued at – with great effort and often 
with the involvement of very senior political levels in the three governments 
of the Minsk Group co-chairs has proven unproductive till now.  And therefore, 
I think one should seriously consider a different approach.

REP. BURGESS:  Tom, in fairness, I need to give you a chance to respond.

MR. DE WAAL:  Yes.  I mean, I would half agree with Wayne.  I think if you 
listen carefully to my testimony, what I am saying is that what the Karabakh 
peace process doesn't need is a redesign with another international 
organization such as the U.N. being brought in, nor a Norwegian mediator and so 
on.  What it does need is reinvigoration.  And my last two recommendations 
mean, one, the negotiators – mediators taking a step back and facilitating more 
genuine negotiations between the parties, as indeed Wayne has just said, and 
also that the – to use a rather Bolshevik word, that the Minsk Group should be 
at the vanguard of a much bigger process with other international 
organizations, EU, U.N., World Bank, many others, offering their resources to 
support the process.  It's a much too narrow process at the moment.  I think we 
can all agree on that.

REP. BURGESS:  Well, thank you very much.

And again, I want to thank all of our witnesses for their testimony.  I, 
unfortunately, have a phone call with a hard time that I have to make, so I'm 
going to turn the questioning over to Mr. Ochs and Ms. Packer for follow-up.  
Thank you.

MR. OCHS:  Thank you, Congressman.

Before we proceed, I'd like to ask if – well, Tom has just responded to Wayne's 
remarks.  I wonder if anyone else on the panel has something to say about your 
colleagues' statements, if there are any statements you'd like to make before 
we begin formal questions and answers.

MR. DE WAAL:  Just one thing:  While I think Wayne spoke very eloquently and I 
would not in any way downplay the long-term trend that he has analyzed about a 
drift towards conflict, I would just add one nuance, which is – was that having 
been in – on the Azerbaijani side in Baku in the summer, there – very much the 
rhetoric there is that the military buildup is not about going to war; it is 
about the metaphor use – and I'm not ascribing anything to this; I'm just 
relaying what I heard in Azerbaijan – the metaphor they use is Reagan and the 
Soviet Union.  It's a military buildup as a way of economically weakening the 
Armenian side in order to extract more concessions out of them.  I noticed that 
there was a distinct lack of war rhetoric in Azerbaijan in the summer.

Now, that could change, and one could argue that there's a kind of structural 
problem there, which is inherently dangerous.  And I would agree with that.  
However, I would say that – and I think Wayne would probably agree with me – 
we're not talking about imminent war; we're just talking about a long-term 
trend which is dangerous.

MS. HILL:  Yeah.  I just wanted to add one thing to this because I think that 
Tom and Wayne have shown that they're not actually in really extreme 
disagreement here but that there's of elements of things that they're both 
saying that we should pay attention to.  I think our biggest problem is 
institutionalizing the reinvigoration of the process of trying to facilitate 
new negotiations, because what we've seen, and both of you have referred to 
this, has been rather the personalization of some of these efforts because it's 
been very much focused on both the presidents, in the case of Karabakh of 
Armenia and Azerbaijan, and of the leaders, but it's also required, as you both 
have said, the intercession of senior figures associated with the Minsk Group 
players.  So we saw President Medvedev, who took a major role in the course of 
this year.  We've seen intercession by Secretary Clinton.  We've seen, in other 
words, larger figures from all the Minsk Group countries stepping up.  

And the problem is when you demand this kind of attention from the senior 
figures, you run into the problem of, as Wayne pointed out, second-order 
considerations here, that Nagorno-Karabakh, unless it looks like the imminent 
breakout of a war tomorrow, doesn't get the attention then that it deserves.  
And I think what Tom was speaking out in favor of there was finding a way of 
institutionalizing this, and that's the real dilemma that we have.

And we're going to be facing in Minsk Group countries, all three of them, 
Russia, France and the United States, elections in 2012.  So we're going to 
have a major problem here.  And we need to then think, how are we going to get 
ourselves through the French, the Russian and the U.S. elections?  And that is 
going to be a real challenge for us, because although we don't see 
Nagorno-Karabakh rising to a first-order election issue, the facts of elections 
and domestic politics and all of the baggage that will be brought out in the 
election campaigns will have an unfortunate affect, no doubt, on Karabakh.

MR. MERRY:  I would note that arms races have a tendency of creating their own 
logic.  During his most recent visit to Washington, I suggested to Azerbaijani 
Foreign Minister Mammadyarov that while an arms buildup can contribute to the 
effectiveness of diplomacy, at some point it becomes counterproductive to 
diplomacy because it creates such a perception of threat on the other side that 
it creates the danger of either preemption from the other side or a felt need 
on the other side to respond to that arms race proportionally or 
disproportionately.

My own view is that the arms race has probably passed that point and that 
further arms buildup on either side, let alone both, do not contribute to 
stability but erode it.  I am also conscious, having been a former professional 
diplomat, that in any environment in which foreign ministries are in 
competition with defense ministries, foreign ministries tend to be overwhelmed 
by the resources and the priorities of military institutions.  It is extremely 
difficult for diplomacy to prevail when you have a momentum of arms buildup.

I would note that it certainly has not been for lack of very senior-level 
involvement from the French republic, from the United States, from the Russian 
Federation that these mediation efforts have not failed.  I quite agree with 
Fiona Hill that President Medvedev invested a very great deal of his time in 
the run-up to the meeting at Kazan.  Both the French and American presidents in 
– were involved in making phone calls.  I can tell you from my own experience 
how difficult it is to get the president of the United States to make an 
international phone call.  This is not a trivial commitment of time and effort 
by a government like ours.  

It is my concern, however, that just – that these, once having been engaged in 
and been unproductive, that the frustration with the unproductiveness of the 
process affects not just the peoples on the respective side of the conflict, 
but invest the governments of the three mediating parties themselves, 
especially as they are all going into political election years.

I would think it very, very difficult to get the kind of high-level involvement 
that was present at Kazan any time in the next 18 months.  And a year or two 
from now, the environment on the ground could become much more, much more 
difficult.

MR. OCHS:  Let me follow up and take the issue that we've been discussing in a 
somewhat different direction.  You've all talked about the danger of renewed 
military hostilities.  Could you talk about what factors are working in the 
opposite direction?

For example, surely both sides – or all the sides involved understand the 
dangers of renewed military hostilities.  Everyone knows that once you start a 
war, you never know where it might go and everyone has a lot to lose, however 
awful the status quo may seem to people.

Is this, you think, not enough to keep war from – to stop the renewed 
hostilities?

MR. DE WAAL:  Well I'm aware that in the spring of 2001, there was a concern 
that one side might be planning – the Azerbaijani side in fact might be 
planning to retake one of the regions outside Karabakh.  This was identified 
both by the Russians and the Americans – I'm told – via satellite photographs.  
And they did concerted diplomacy to stop this happening.

There is obviously a presumption that something similar would happen again – 
that there's a shared international interest in this – in war not breaking out.

However – and one could argue that this could be the moment in fact when, by a 
bit of brinkmanship, the international powers came together to forge a final 
peace, that crisis might forge a final peace.  But that's not something I would 
want to bet my house on.

And we also remember what happens in 2008 when there was also monitors on the 
ground, there was international attention, and yet also war did break out.

So I think there's definitely a need for a stronger early warning system.

MR. MERRY:  Michael, I cannot help but note that today is Pearl Harbor Day.  
Seven decades ago, Japan engaged in a war which its naval staff had carefully 
assessed and knew they could not win.

This is also the 150th anniversary of the beginning of the American Civil War, 
a conflict which also got out of hand in a hurry.  We are approaching the 
centennial of the beginning of the First World War

The notion that rationality will prevail in an area of intense conflict – by 
conflict I don't just mean armed conflict, but I mean rivalry, historical 
hatreds, desire for retribution for past ills – is one that does not make me 
optimistic.

Let me mention one other point from my recent trip.  As people who are familiar 
with the Karabakh conflict will be aware, there was a very great emptying of 
much of the territory now occupied by Nagorno-Karabakh previously occupied by 
predominately Azerbaijani populations who are now living, and have been living 
for most of 20 years, as refugees in Azerbaijan.

It was striking to me, in traveling through some of these regions, how utterly 
empty, how utterly desolate, how utterly wasteful was the emptying out of what 
is some of the best agricultural land in the Caucasus region, where no on now 
lives, which are occupied today merely by mine fields and by trenches and by 
barbed wire.

To go through the town of Aghdam, which had 40,000 people living in it, where 
now there is not a soul living – where it is nothing but empty shells of former 
houses where people lived – is to get a sense of the incredible waste that war 
– on almost any scale – brings to human beings and the continuing waste of 
these lands, these potentially rebuilt homes that have been left without 
occupancy for so long.

I will say only one positive word, and it's to do justice to my host in 
Karabakh, is that I also had the opportunity to visit three of the Muslim 
cemeteries in – on the outskirts of – in the neighborhood of Beslan.  And I can 
testify that while they did suffer some war damage, they have not been 
systematically vandalized.  They have not been destroyed.  Those cemeteries are 
intact, and that may provide at least some symbolic basis for the notion of 
what a future of those territories might look like.

MS. HILL:  I think we have a problem in here, as been articulated, about when 
do people decide to change things because they either think they have nothing 
to lose or something to gain from this?  And I think as Wayne and Tom have made 
it clear, it's very hard to gauge that.

I think our past – the classic example of this is Cyprus.  We have had multiple 
opportunities to resolve the conflict in Cyprus since the 1970s.  And at each 
time, the calculation of the people on the ground has been quite different from 
what we anticipated internationally and on the outside.

And in fact, every step that we've made in the mediation there seems to have 
hardened various positions and made it more difficult because we've introduced 
new elements into the frame of the conflict to resolve things.  Cyprus has now 
become an internal problem of the EU.

And the Cyprus presidency is coming up within the EU, making it virtually 
impossible now to conceive of the EU playing a role as honest broker within 
that conflict.  And there's now a push in this next few months before Cyprus 
takes over the rotating presidency to try to make something move in Cyprus.

And Cyprus, in some respects, is the closest – (inaudible) – in 
Nagorno-Karabakh, although with some interesting twists in the conflicting 
parties.  The Greek Cypriots are in fact more like Azaris than they are like 
Armenians.  And so you have – but you have a very similar structural set of 
problems here.

And frankly, if we can't make any move forward in Cyprus, it's very difficult 
to envision how we can really change things on the ground in Karabakh – not 
withstanding all of the problems.  And if you think back into the 1990s, we've 
reached a very critical juncture with Cyprus as well, when it looked very 
likely that there was going to be an outbreak of conflict.

If you remember, there was a serious of really quite nasty provocations on the 
ground.  And I was in Cyprus on many of these occasions and heard Greek 
Cypriots literally say – Greek Cypriots, you would think, had everything to 
lose.  They had shown themselves to be capable of turning around the economy of 
the Greek part of Cyprus, who was one of the most prosperous parts in the per 
capita income level of the newly would-be accession states to the European 
Union, who literally said we've got to fight now, it's worth losing everything, 
you know, a better view for our national pride and for regaining, again, also 
the West for the lost territories, because they withstand – were able to stand 
on the line of contact with northern Cyprus and look over to the famous city of 
Famagusta and see the place lying in ruins and, you know, very little basically 
happening there.  So the correlate with Ogaden – and obviously not as 
devastated as Ogaden is.

And what it took there was a shift in the international context by them 
suddenly accelerating toward the EU accession to change this.  Now the EU, of 
course, has buyer's remorse.  They made a big mistake.  They felt that this 
would be a positive effect – a positive decision that would have a positive 
effect on the conflict.  It hasn't had that at all.

So I think this is, again, another cautionary tale here.

Now if per chance there is some kind of breakthrough in Cyprus – and I'm afraid 
I'm not holding my breath on this – in the next several months, it might 
actually give us some impetus.  And that's what I was referring to when I 
talked about the Swiss mediation in WTO.  There may be some other suggestions, 
some other ideas out there that fall far short of what Wayne is calling for.  
But they might create a sort of sense of a different perspective on this.

This was actually quite an ingenious solution that was reached.  We'll of 
course see how it works.  But this idea of outsourcing some of the monitoring 
to private entities that don't have any of the great-power connotations – it's 
hard to imagine how that could be foreseen in Karabakh, but it may be, you 
know, be one of the various prospects.

So, you know, I think we've got to be really creative here, because as Wayne is 
saying, time is not on our side.  And that goes for all of the conflicts, not 
just for Karabakh.

MR. OCHS:  We actually have a fair bit of time for questions and answers.  And 
one of the distinguishing features of a briefing, as opposed to a hearing, is 
that members of the audience can pose – oh, excuse me.

We'll start with Winsome Packer of the Helsinki Commission.

Q:     Thank you, Michael.

The depictions of ethnic hatred and violence, both in the Caucasus and the 
Balkans and other regions of the OSCE – other states of the OSCE, clearly had a 
strong role in the origins of these conflicts.  You haven't given a lot of 
focus to that.

In your statements, greater power interests and broader geopolitical interests 
have seemed to have overtaken the issue of ethnic – inter-ethnic tensions.  I'd 
like to ask you to speak a bit a bit about any recommendations – policy 
prescriptions that you might offer in terms of addressing this issue in a 
broader context.

Also, this speaks to the issue of the origin – I mean, the cause of the 2008 
Russia-Georgia conflict.  Russian President Medvedev recently made the 
following statement:  If we had faltered in 2008, geopolitical arrangement 
would be different now and number of countries in respect of which attempts 
were made to artificially drag them into the North Atlantic Alliance would have 
probably been in NATO now.  We have simply calmed some of our neighbors down by 
showing them that they should behave correctly in respect of Russia and in 
respect of neighboring small states.  And for some of our partners, including 
for the North Atlantic Alliance, it was a signal that before taking a decision 
about expansion of the alliance, one should first think about the geopolitical 
stability.  I deem these issues to be the major lessons of those developments 
of 2008.

In the past, the Kremlin officials have said that the war – that they went to 
war to stop Tbilisi's genocide in South Ossetia.  But Medvedev indicates that 
the war was designed to prevent Georgia from joining NATO.  How would you 
assess this admission?  Thank you.

MR. DE WAAL:  Let me – to your first point about the ethnic hatred.  I would 
venture to say I do believe, sort of, ancient hatreds is a bit of a myth that I 
do – I think in the Caucasus, I think most of these conflicts, they're about – 
probably no more than about 100 years old and based on political insecurity 
considerations which have set two different groups against each other, but 
nothing to do with some kind of primordial ethnic reasons.

Certainly, religion plays no factor in the conflicts of the Caucasus.  You only 
have to see that Armenia is on much better terms with a Shi'ite state – the 
Islamic Republic of Iran, than another Shi'ite state – Azerbaijan is – to make 
that point.

Last month I was in Georgia and I visited a village called – (name inaudible) – 
it's just a few miles from the Armenian-Georgian border and it has a mixed 
population – about three-quarters Armenian, one-quarter Azerbaijani.  They live 
in one village.  They speak each other's languages.  Their first – they're all 
bilingual in Armenian and Azeri.  They're third language is Russian and their 
fourth language is Georgian.

Even though their on the territory of Georgia, they live in absolute harmony.  
They go to each others' shops.  They go to each others' weddings and funerals.  
There's absolutely no problem on the territory of Georgia, which tells you that 
it's all about the political context in which these peoples are – so anything 
that facilitate people-to-people contact underneath the kind of big radar of 
big politics I think should be encouraged.

I think Georgia is certainly an underused resource when it comes to the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.

And anything that can also be done within the Georgian conflicts simple to open 
those borders – reopen those borders – there's (administrative words ?) – 
(inaudible) – in South Ossetia to trade, and more people-to-people contact 
should be encouraged.

MR. MERRY:  I would note that by far the most prescient discussion of the 
origins of the Karabakh conflict is Thomas de Waal's own "Black Garden," New 
York University Press, which I recommend highly.

I would note that conflicts don't have to be ancient to be pretty bloody.  The 
American Civil War started within living memory of the foundation of the 
Republic.  It is, however, I think a responsibility of larger states to involve 
themselves sometimes in conflicts which may be marginal to their own direct 
interests, if only because regional conflicts can spread and have a multiplier 
effect.  

I think one of the biggest differences today, from not just 20 years ago but 
even from 10 years ago, is the increasing role in the region, as a whole, of 
Turkey.  And I think no future resolution of either the Karabakh conflict or of 
Abkhazia or South Ossetia will take place without the active involvement of 
Turkey.  Turkey, as a Caucasian state, is playing a role similar to the role 
that Russia plays as a Caucasian state.  

At some point, Iran might play a more positive role as a Caucasian state.  It 
plays a very important economic role today for Armenia, a vital role, I would 
say.  But the rivalry between Tehran and Baku is a point of stress within the 
region.  In many respects, I think a good deal of Washington's diplomacy should 
be focused on Moscow and Tehran, not as adversaries in this region but as 
countries which have roles which we cannot duplicate.  We are not a Caucasian 
regional state.  They both are.  They both have history there.  They both have 
equities there which we do not share.  So in many respects, a collaborative 
relationship between the United States and Turkey and Russia in dealing with 
all of these conflicts I think is an absolute essential starting point for any 
positive contribution the United States should make.

The idea that the United States can be positive by engaging with Georgia or 
Armenia or Azerbaijan or any of them in some way, as an adversary vis-a-vis 
Turkey and/or Russia I think is totally counterproductive.

MS. HILL:  What Wayne has just done now is, I guess, what all of us have been 
doing, which is responding to the question that you put about the great powers 
in rather a bleak way, because what we're all showing here, one way or another, 
we have actually already answered your question, is that policy powers in the 
region, external powers, bring their own baggage to these conflicts.  What you 
saw in the response from Medvedev, which is another re-articulation, 
reinterpretation of why the war in Georgia took place, three years on from the 
conflict, is an example of great-power baggage and everybody else's neuroses 
that we bring to this table.

Another factor, as Wayne has pointed out, you can't get a resolution without 
any of the regional great powers being involved and the U.S. can't possibly 
also help to play an entirely independent role, because we also have our own 
baggage in this.  We have a large Armenian Diaspora, so we're not exactly a 
neutral party in Nagorno-Karabakh.  And you've had plenty of hearings about 
this over the period of time.  

We have interests in the energy exploration in the Caspian Sea, which makes us 
also a party in a different way, with deep commercial interests in the future 
development of the region.  And of course, in Georgia – in the relationship 
with Georgia, there isn't a particularly large Georgian Diaspora.  It was 
really a question of the symbolism of Georgia, of Georgia's aspirations for 
wanting to join essentially the Western alliance, the transatlantic alliance, 
NATO, and also its EU aspirations, which were secondary to this.

And of course, that is an issue that got Russia's attention.  But Russia 
already had a great deal of baggage in the relationship with Georgia.  So 
Medvedev is highlighting the NATO issue for a particular perspective of Russian 
domestic politics at this juncture, because this was in the run-up to the 
election in the Duma, which is always very good, frankly, to fly the flag, the 
anti-NATO, the anti-U.S. flag, because that plays very well in Russian domestic 
politics.

But as I mentioned in my overview, Russia was concerned about the Sochi Winter 
Olympics.  Sochi is simply a few kilometers away from the border with Abkhazia. 
 Russia wanted the issue of Abkhazia resolved because it was intrinsic to the 
development of the territory of Sochi in preparation for the Winter Olympics, 
which is going to be a great showcase of Russia's sporting prowess and Russia's 
role in the international arena.  

Russia is greatly concerned about the relationships between all of the Caucasus 
countries and their counterparts in the North Caucasus.  It's not just the 
Abkhars and the South Ossetians or, frankly, North Caucasian peoples that 
they're concerned about, it's the spill-over populations and the politics, with 
also Azerbaijan and with Armenia.

And we also have Russia's own older rivalries with the old empires in the 
region, which Wayne has already talked about with Turkey, the old Ottoman 
Empire, and Iran as the old Persian Empire.  This is an area where all three of 
them have been picking off the territory for a couple of hundred years.  

And that's what I meant by some of the roots of the conflicts, because the 
great powers have come in, as Thomas said, these are not ancient (territories 
?), but the great powers have certainly come at a different point and stirred 
things up among the peoples of the region for their own purposes.  The 
questions – the various national questions that have been posed in the region 
have largely been enflamed by great powers wanting territory or wanting other 
gains, either for commercial, mercantile or other purposes.  So this is a very 
complex situation.  

There are no angels – as Tom said, there are no angels in the international 
community either, and we have to be very honest with ourselves when we approach 
these conflicts about our own baggage and our own difficulties in tackling them.

MR. OCHS:  As I said, if members of the audience would like to pose questions 
to the panelists, please approach the microphone and identify yourself.  

Q:     Hello, my name's Nassim Aguyev (ph).  I'm counselor with the embassy of 
Azerbaijan.  Thank you, first of all, for very interesting insights into these 
very painful conflicts in our region.  I'll be very brief.

I would like to touch up on the – (inaudible) – proposal tabled by Tom de Waal 
about engaging the separatist leaders in these conflicts.  I will talk about 
Nagorno-Karabakh.  I think it will be just helpful to entrench the current 
status quo in Nagorno-Karabakh, engagement of the separatist leaders in this 
region, because as we all know, a long-standing strategy of Armenia has been 
the preservation of the current status quo by all means.  

And I support, as engagement of separatist leaders would entail – actual 
engagement of the separatist leaders would be understood as a support of the 
Western countries or the international community for the policies they have 
been pursuing since years for the occupation of territories, for the attempts 
to change the internationally recognized borders of Azerbaijan.

Therefore, I think such an engagement would, of course, bring about a kind of 
legitimacy, which they have been yearning for for years.  And that will make 
them more resisting and intransigent to any peace deal, agreement.  I think 
that, at the moment, what we need the most is the establishment, actually – I 
would say resuscitation of dialogue between the two communities of 
Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenian and Azerbaijan communities of Nagorno-Karabakh.  

Tom de Waal mentioned the expulsion of ethnic Azerbaijanis from territories 
around Nagorno-Karabakh.  But the fact is that Nagorno-Karabakh had a 
40,000-strong Azerbaijani community, which was also expelled.  So we need that 
dialogue very much in order to mitigate the peace process, and that would be 
very, of course, helpful to the whole peace talks.  

The Azerbaijan side has recently put forward some initiatives to reestablish 
such a dialogue.  For example, there was an initiative to hold a meeting 
between representatives of two communities of Nagorno-Karabakh in Berlin.  Our 
representatives went there, but regrettably, the authorities on the Armenian 
side did not allow their Armenian representatives to show up in Berlin.  So the 
hope now is that we'll be able to overcome those barriers and we'll be able to 
engage in such a track-two or track-one dialogue in the years to come.  Thank 
you.

MR. DE WAAL:  Thank you, Mr. Aguyev (ph).  It's certainly, I think – and we 
have two representatives from the Nagorno-Karabakh Armenian office here as 
well, who doubtless will have their own say – and also from the Armenian 
Embassy.  But it's a conceptual mine field.  There are real mine fields in the 
Karabakh conflict and there are conceptual mine fields.  And you can build an 
argument that Karabakh – Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia are basically one and the 
same, that Nagorno-Karabakh, as it stands, could not survive without Armenia.  
And that's, in many ways, valid.  

But having said that, there are also differences between the Karabakh-Armenians 
and the Republic of Armenia.  And these people are serious.  I mean, these 
people are so serious that they have, in fact – and I'm only being half-joking 
when they say they've taken over Armenia as well.  These people are very 
serious about fighting for their rights and their right to be different.

So how do we get around these conceptual mine fields?  Well, my approach to 
this is that there are many stakeholders in this conflict, in this peace 
process.  There's Yerevan and Baku, which are the two sovereign states.  But 
there are also the Karabakh-Armenian who have elected officials and they have a 
certain power and possessions on the ground.  And also, as you say, the 
Karabakh-Azerbaijanis who were the minority in Soviet times inside Karabakh who 
have been displaced.

And I think the only way to get around this is issue by issue.  There are 
certain issues in which Yerevan and Baku should be at the table.  There are 
certain issues, for example, on water sharing or some incidents in the line of 
contact that it would make sense for the Karabakh-Armenians in Baku to be at 
the table.  Certain issues – for example, on the issue of – (inaudible) – in 
which Karabakh-Armenians and Karabakh-Azerbaijanis should be at the table.  And 
it should be done issue by issue.  We should try and avoid complete and 
categorical categorization of who should be in the talks, but deal with it 
issue by issue.

Q:     I thank you, Mr. Moderator, both the Helsinki Commission and all three 
prominent – by the way, my name is Valjean Nassesia (ph) and I represent the 
Armenian embassy here – and all three prominent experts on this subject, 
independent experts.  And I very much appreciate all of your in-depth analysis 
about the situation in the region, about the potential pitfalls and inherent 
dangers in this situation.

Well, the good news is that – speaking about the recent situation on 
Nagorno-Karabakh, perhaps the good news is that at their latest OSCE 
ministerial council in Vilnius, just a couple of days ago, the heads of 
delegation of three co-chairs, there was a great deal of criticism toward 
co-chairs, not only here but recently, in this town, on their activities.  But 
the co-chairs and the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a 
statement whereby we can witness certain progress in a sense that the parties 
agreed to return to the work, on finishing the work – the remaining work on the 
basic principles document, which is extremely important, because we're in this 
vacuum in post-Kazan situation.  

And in addition, the ministers stressed that there cannot be a military 
solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.  And also, the foreign ministers of 
Armenia and Azerbaijan indicated that their leaders will be ready in the near 
future to get together and continue the negotiations over the basic principles 
document.  So I think this, by itself, is a very positive fact, in terms of 
Nagorno-Karabakh resolution.  And it has a certain possibility.  

So in the sense of the Minsk Group, I think the Minsk Group is doing a great 
job.  They have been, throughout these past years, a mechanism of conflict 
prevention in a way, because in the absence of negotiations, one can imagine 
that what Mr. Merry just mentioned, the inherent possibilities of the conflict. 
 I can imagine, if there is no negotiations, what are the dangers in this kind 
of situation?

So there is – the responsibility is absolutely up to the parties.  And in this 
case, I think there shouldn't be any maximalist expectations, as one of the 
parties is trying now to push, based on certain, you know, incomes, inflows of 
world oil prices, whatever, trying to impose certain maximalist perceptions, 
which is, by the way, no way getting kind of a response based on this, because 
Armenia has been clear so far.  And I don't think it ever – our position on the 
fundamental issue of Nagorno-Karabakh, right to self-determination, would ever 
change, because this is the root cause of the conflict, and this conflict can 
be resolved only if there is a solution to the fundamental issue.  And this is 
being dealt by with the Minsk Group within the basic principle document.

I think there is – the co-chairs have found a quite equitable solution to this 
issue based, again, on mutual compromises.  

Now, as regards to the issue just touched upon, I'll briefly touch upon the 
issue that Tom de Waal raised regarding the participation of the authorities of 
Nagorno-Karabakh or about the formats.

Absolutely, this is a part of the negotiations and it has been acknowledged by 
the Minsk group co-chairs that there cannot be a solution to Nagorno-Karabakh 
conflict without the consent of the Nagorno-Karabakh authorities and its 
population, because this conflict is about Nagorno-Karabakh.  Without full 
respect to the former Azer residents of Nagorno-Karabakh and their rights – 
which is, by the way, again dealt by in the basic principal documents – there 
is absolutely no parallel trying to put together these bi-communal 
arrangements, talks.  If there can be any negotiations, this is between the 
authorities of Nagorno-Karabakh and the authorities of Azerbaijan.  This is the 
way to resolve this conflict.

The bi-communal arrangements can only just help in the terms of 
confidence-building measures on the line of contact, et cetera, et cetera.  But 
in the terms of negotiations and – (inaudible) – there is one way to deal with 
the authorities of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Now as to the way forward, if negotiations succeed, one recommendation that 
came out of just, you know, my own observations is there should be 
harmonization between the negotiating process, the letter of spirit of 
negotiating process, the letter of spirit of compromises and, you know, broader 
processes, broader, you know, perceptions in the societies.

Without this, it's impossible.  In this environment of mutual accusations and, 
you know, hate speech and hate campaign that is being instigated by one party 
and responded by the opponent parties, it's impossible, even if we have the 
best deal.

So in this sense, perhaps the idea that Tom de Waal put forward once again, the 
rhetoric cease-fire combined with imposed measures on the line of contact of, 
for instance, such measures as withdrawal of snipers.  This cannot be done 
voluntarily.  This should be imposed by the international community and the 
confidence-building measures should be in a way also imposed.  Otherwise, if 
this is left to the parties it's obvious that in one or another instance, one 
of the parties is going to reject bringing forward all kind of pretexts.

So thank you very much.  I'm sorry if I was too extended.  Thank you.

MR. OCHS:  No, thank you.

Does any of the panelists want to respond?

MR. DE WAAL:  Just briefly, just to say confidence-building measures, 
absolutely, but I think it's important when the Armenian side engages in 
confidence-building measures, it's obviously easier for them as the winning 
side in the conflict to be more generous on confidence-building measures.

They need to do so in the spirit they are measures with the aim of changing the 
status quo.  I think there needs to be, that commitment needs to be made that 
the Armenian side is not just engaging in confidence-building measures to 
perpetuate the status quo but to change it.  And if the Armenian side engages 
in measures in that spirit, I think they should be met with equal generosity by 
the Azerbaijani side.

Q:     (Name inaudible) – from the U.S.-Azeris Network.  I haven't heard in the 
presentations anything about the four U.N. Security Council resolutions, which 
were passed in '93 and have the status of international law and are mandatory 
and are calling for many of the same things which some of the people were 
asking, like withdrawal of all the snipers.  More specifically they're asking 
for withdrawal of all occupying forces, and since the only occupying forces are 
the Armenian forces, whichever ones we call, whether Republic of Armenia or 
Martian or whatever, they have to be withdrawn and then there you go, the 
conflict there is resolved.  And U.N. has been of that opinion four times in a 
row in just one year.

But more importantly, I wanted to address a question to Mr. Merry, because he 
referred to the Nagorno-Karabakh forces occupying, you know, those lands in 
Azerbaijani.  Since he has security clearances and plus, you know, he probably 
read the WikiLeaks, he's seen the memo in September of 2006 when U.S. General 
William Ward was visiting Armenia, and so the U.S. embassy cabled that to all 
the interested parties that in the exchange that took place between the general 
and the defense minister at the time in Armenia, Serzh Sargsyan, who is now the 
president and therefore is probably the most qualified person on Armenian 
military capabilities by far, he admitted that 80 percent of Armenia's army is 
in the trenches in Azerbaijan in Karabakh – 80 percent.

Since we know that Armenian army, the Republic of Armenia army is about 
40(,000) or so, 45,000 people, according to CFE 1-A Treaty, we can very quickly 
estimate, therefore, the size of the Armenian troops sitting there.  And by the 
way, he also said that if those troops would be withdrawn, if 80 percent of 
Armenia's army would be withdrawn from occupying Azerbaijan, which they have 
been doing illegally, those remaining Nagorno-Karabakh so-called forces would 
be overrun by Azerbaijan within hours.  

This is what Serzh Sargsyan said, so this is not Azerbaijani analysts or 
propaganda or something.  This is the defense minister of Armenia and the 
current president who admitted that, that the majority of troops there are from 
the Republic of Armenia, and we know that, by the way, from all the casualties, 
because every week one or two Armenian soldiers and officers are dying and then 
we found out that they've been buried back at home somewhere in whether Yerevan 
or Lori or – (inaudible) – or whatever.  

So it would be interesting to address that – why do we keep on referring to 
some mysterious Nagorno-Karabakh forces when even the Armenian defense minister 
at the time and current president and the person who has been the power broker 
since the very beginning of Armenia's independence admits clearly that this is 
not so and that this is really Republic of Armenia?  

Thank you.

MR. MERRY:  Thank you. 

Let me say that I've never been under any misapprehension, going back even to 
my role as an observer of this conflict from the American embassy in Moscow in 
1991 to 1994, that this was a conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.  That's 
never been in doubt in my mind.  The role of Armenian forces in the conflict 
from beginning to the present day is, I think, quite clear.  

I would not, however, underestimate the operational control which the Karabakh 
armed forces have over the defense of the territories they know control, and I 
wouldn't underestimate the extent to which they're prepared and very echeloned 
defenses in depth could inflict extraordinarily high losses on an attacking 
force, even with relatively little manpower on their own side.

I emphasize again that a future conflict would be a siege conflict, and the 
history of siege warfare is a rather woeful one for attackers and for 
defenders.  I would note that almost all of the island battles the United 
States fought during the Second World War were sieges in which the United 
States had colossally overwhelming manpower in both bombardment and in assault, 
and yet, without exception, those siege battles, victorious though they 
ultimately were for the United States, the very names of them are names of pain 
and loss for the United States as the winning country.

I have before publicly and privately urged both sides not to engage in war, but 
I would very much urge no one to assume that an assessment, particularly one 
that's five years old, is in any way a rationale for the notion that, well, now 
we can win.  Winning is a very dubious proposition in a conflict, in a 
situation of this kind.  And I will say that while I do not currently hold 
security clearances, which is one of the reasons why I legally can read 
WikiLeaks' messages – anyone in the United States government who has a security 
clearance is legally prohibited from reading WikiLeaks, even if the WikiLeak is 
of something they themselves wrote.  (Laughter.)  It's true.

MR. OCHS:  That is true.

MR. MERRY:  That is true.

MR. OCHS:  That is true.

MR. MERRY:  But I would simply note that being aware of the views of relevant 
people in the American military and intelligence communities who have assessed 
this situation carefully and contemporaneously, that I think my views 
concerning the probable nature of renewed conflict reflect a generalized 
consensus view among American expertise.

MR. OCHS:  Misha (ph)?

MR     :  Thank you very much.  Misha (ph) – (inaudible) – from the Embassy of 
Georgia. 

First of all, thanks for the Helsinki Commission for hosting this very 
important briefing, and I want to thank all witnesses for their very 
interesting presentations, though I found it very controversial, and we can 
argue, of course, endlessly on the issues brought up here.

Let me be very brief and say that the conflict in Georgia has never been about 
Abkhazia or South Ossetia.  These conflicts were always about Georgia's 
sovereignty, independence and the freedom of choice, and the latest statement 
made by President Medvedev was a clear statement of that, that the war in 2008 
was started to block Georgia's NATO membership, and these are undeniable facts.

Whether we can argue or not, these were not brought to the table for only 
election purposes.  These were undeniable facts, and as Dr. Hill underlined, 
Russia is bringing its baggage to the region, and Georgia is not going to 
change its course of development, democratic development in its course towards 
Euro-Atlantic integration and closer ties with the United States.  So how we 
could put all the elements together to find the resolution of this conflict, 
which is really about Georgia and Russia.  

Second element is the issues related to the internally displaced persons.  I 
was a little bit surprised that I had not heard the need for the immediate 
return of the half-million indigenous populations which have been ethnically 
cleansed and forced to leave from the Abkhazia and South Ossetian territories 
and just recent resolution of the European Parliament was quite clearly 
underlining this urgent need.

So what would be your assessment how United States and other responsible 
players of the international community could, how to say, press or force the 
Russian Federation to allow the indigenous population to be (back ?)?

And then my last point, I've heard the recommendation about engaging separatist 
leaders in the dialogue and to give some carrots to them.  Do you really 
believe that they are independent in their decision-making? 

Thank you. 

MS. HILL:  I think, you know, this point about the refugees, let's start with 
this, is a very important one, and it's one that is consistent across all of 
the conflicts, unfortunately.  

You refer to the EU and the EU parliament resolutions.  (Inaudible) – referred 
to U.N. Security Council resolutions.  I think we could just go on and on in 
referring to the number of resolutions that have called for the return of 
refugees, the change in the stance of the parties.  You mentioned, you know, 
removal of snipers, you name it.

We have more resolutions, you know, almost at times than, you know, we have 
people involved in the conflict, so it seems, and these resolutions clearly get 
us nowhere, because ultimately it's all about the politics on the ground and 
different people's attitudes, and as you've said yourself, all of these issues 
become very contentious. 

And, you know, I think while we still have the issue of the lack of resolution 
in the Middle East peace process, for example, where a huge question there is 
about the right to return, while in the case of Cyprus we still have no 
resolution, while yet again the big question there is the right of the return 
of the various displaced populations from either north or south Cyprus.

The same set of issues in Transnistria on a much larger scale, of course, in 
terms of people who were displaced from that conflict, and the same issues 
across the board.  We need to really see a larger push on the international 
context for changing the way that we approach these conflicts, and 
unfortunately right now we don't have a very good mechanism for this.

You mentioned, you know, this requires pressing Russia.  Russia would of course 
argue that no, it requires pressing – and this gets to your question about the 
independent authorities in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

As I think Tom outlined quite clearly in his opening presentation, independence 
is always in the eyes of the beholder, and South Ossetia clearly, and I think 
we can say it really without much argument, does not have much of an 
independent role in this matter.  We've seen that from the recent manipulation 
of the elections in South Ossetia, where ironically Russia did not like the 
outcome of the election and declared it fraudulent.

In the case of Abkhazia, however, there is independence of action there, and 
there's a great deal of resentment on the part of the Abkhaz authorities on 
community about heavy-handed intervention of Russia into their affairs.

And of course we had the classic case of the former now-deceased leader of 
Abkhazia, who was married to an ethnic Georgian and who had, you know, a 
relatively different perception of what should happen with IDPs, but 
constraints within his own ways of resolving this because of internal domestic 
Abkhaz politics, and then of course his larger not so, let's say, cordial 
relationship with Russia itself.

So we have so many levels of complication here that it becomes very difficult.  
We can't come up with pat answers, and this is, you know, the dilemma that we 
all have in these briefings – if only there was the miracle solution, if only 
we could – we can say of course, yes, these resolutions should all, every 
single one of them, be enforced.  

Now, of course, we've had some new resolutions and they often contradict each 
other.  They don't always pick up from the last resolution, which then enables 
anybody who wants to block this from having us move forward.  

And I think, you know, your point that you made about Georgia not changing its 
decision, this goes down also to the level of the conflicting parties as well, 
because as Tom and Wayne have both made out, and Tom made this very clear, in 
the case of each of the peoples of their respective – (inaudible) – they also 
want to exert their own freedom of choice.  

I can't remember exactly how you put it, Tom, but everyone is fighting for the 
right to make their own freedom of decision here.  And it's very difficult to 
the outside community in that regard to impose something.  I mean, the idea now 
that the United States could impose anything in the region now is frankly 
rather farfetched.  We often can't impose things in our own politics, as we're 
seeing in gridlock in these august buildings that we sit in the midst of right 
now.

So we have an incredible difficulty here.  So I’m afraid that I personally 
don’t have any great solutions here.  Everything that everybody’s said has its 
own validity and its own basis, and we’re going to have a very difficult time. 

My best bet is that if we do have a breakthrough, and again, I said I wasn’t 
holding my breath about this, on something like Cyprus, that they could change 
their way of thinking, and the best change in the way of thinking that we’ve 
had so far is frankly the breakthrough on WTO – not related to the conflict, 
but everything about the conflict.

What the Georgian government did here I think was quite inspired, and I have to 
say that nobody expected this breakthrough.  It was an extraordinarily 
enlightened one.  It was very creative, it was very modern, and the whole idea 
of outsourcing basically the supervision and the oversight of the customs, and 
if we could have more of that modern thinking outside of the box, then maybe we 
might be able to find some way of moving forward on all these resolutions we’ve 
had.

MR. DE WAAL:  I would just add you say, Mr. – (inaudible) – really that the 
conflict has never been about Abkhazia or South Ossetia, are these people 
really independent.  My fear is that this becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.  
Clearly there’s a Russian dimension here, but there is also a local dimension 
and that goes way back to the early 20th century.

We know that through 1918 to ‘21, there were conflicts between the government 
in Tbilisi and Abkhazia and South Ossetia.  And I think the Georgian task 
should be to – the motivation for the Georgian side to engage – (inaudible) – 
is precisely to lessen the influence of the Russians in order to get greater 
leverage with Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

MR. MERRY:  Since we are looking back on the 20 years, I would note that in the 
summer of 1991, then-President George Herbert Walker Bush made a speech in 
which he warned against suicidal nationalism in the former Soviet Union.  

The press guidance prepared for that speech told American reporters that that 
phrase was specifically motivated by the Georgian siege at Tskhinvali going on 
at that time.  Of course it was difficult to explain to most of these reporters 
where Georgia was, let alone where Ossetia was, let alone where Tskhinvali was, 
but 20 years ago, before there was a breakup of the Soviet Union, this was a 
concern for the United States as a humanitarian issue.

I would also just simply note on a broader sort of philosophical note that wars 
change borders and move populations.  I don’t say it’s right, I don’t say it’s 
good, I don’t say it’s just, but war has always moved borders and moved 
populations.

To my way of thinking, the worst consequence of a war is a renewed war, because 
it simply makes for more displaced populations and even more difficult problems 
to solve.  I speak coming from a background in diplomacy, which is in the 
business of trying to avoid wars and to solidify peace, but I emphasize a point 
I made a little earlier that in almost any competition, bureaucratic or policy 
competition, between diplomacy and war, war wins.  Therefore, it is terribly 
important for policymakers not to go down that road.   

MR. OCHS:  We have less than 10 minutes left and we have one, two, three people 
who would like to ask questions.

I’m not sure, frankly, if at 4:30 we have to liberate this room, so what I’d 
like to ask the three of you to do who would like to ask questions, why don’t 
you ask them all at once and then we’ll get our panelists to give brief 
responses to them so that we can wrap up on time. 

So I’d like to invite you, sir.

MR.     :  Thank you very much.  My name is – (inaudible).  I work for the 
Armenian TV company. 

I would like to refer to Azerbaijani community or minority of Nagorno-Karabakh 
to this point, about 20 years ago almost these days there was a referendum of 
independence on December 10th of 1991 in Nagorno-Karabakh, and the Azerbaijani 
people of Nagorno-Karabakh were invited to participate into this referendum.  I 
have seen the archives, the video of this referendum where the questions were 
printed in three languages.  

Do you agree that Karabakh should be part of Azerbaijan or independent?  The 
question was printed in Armenian, Russian and Azerbaijani.  And that was the 
Azerbaijani minority of Karabakh that refused to participate in this referendum 
following the instructions from Baku.  So this was a break point, this 
referendum that was mentioned was undertaken according to Soviet laws, the 
Soviet Union was still there, the red flag was still in the Red Square of 
Moscow, and there was a Soviet law of April – (inaudible) – allowing any 
autonomous region to secede from the Republic of the Soviet Union to become 
independent, whether the population of that autonomous region votes in favor of 
that or not.

My question is the – (inaudible) – meeting was unfortunately not a 
breakthrough.  It could be if Mr. – (inaudible) – hadn’t bring nine or 10 
amendments to – (inaudible).  But we could maybe get closer to peace in – 
(inaudible) – following these principles of moderate and – (inaudible).

We were close to peace also in Key West.  Before Key West we had 90, 88, 89 
common state principles that Armenia accepted and Azerbaijani unfortunately 
refused. 

Mr. Wayne Merry called for more active participation of the international 
community.  My question is what kind of more active participation this should 
be?  Should the international community, Washington, Moscow, Paris, Brussels, 
maybe new parties can be involved?  Should they bring new offers and start from 
zero, or at some point maybe the international community should try to work 
more actively with a party that refuses the offers that are on the table and 
kind of just torpedoing the process.

This is my question.  Thank you.

MR. OCHS:  Thank you.

MS.     :  Hi.  Elizabeth with the Armenian National Committee.  One of the 
issues that I don’t hear a lot about is the refugee situation as a result of 
the Karabakh situation.  I guess I have a curious question, and a question as 
to what role the international community can play in helping alleviate this.

I mean, we read about the 500(,000), 600,000 army, excuse me, Azeris that are 
currently in Azerbaijan living in squalor in IDP camps, essentially, now, you 
know, 15, 16 years after the ceasefire has already been set.

You know, there’s probably around 300,000 Armenians that were pushed out of 
Baku, that were pushed out of Sumgait, et cetera, at the same time who have 
been, you know, for good or bad reintegrated into Armenia to the level that 
they can.  I mean, the government doesn’t have oil money, it doesn’t have all 
these other things, but they’ve tried to. 

I mean, December 7th, today, actually, along with being Pearl Harbor Day, is of 
course also the day of the Armenian earthquake back in 1988.  So despite 
refugees from that, despite refugees from Karabakh, somehow they’ve 
Nagorno-Karabakh, you know, somehow they’ve been integrated.

Now, 16 years later in Azerbaijan, we’re seeing, unfortunately, that they 
haven’t been integrated, and in fact The New York Times wrote about sniper 
schools being put forth in these camps or whatnot in Azerbaijan.  

You know, can they – I’m sorry.  Can the international community, as part of 
these negotiations, do anything to perhaps get the Azeri government to maybe 
move some of the oil money they have to help these folks as we’re moving 
through this process?

Thank you very much.

MR. OCHS:  Thank you, and please ask a quick question.

MR.     :  Yeah, sure.  I’m – (inaudible) – counselor of Nagorno-Karabakh – 
(inaudible). 

Since I’m the last, I will ask just a brief question.  Today, the only document 
which is still in force, where we can say that – (inaudible) – it’s the 1994 
ceasefire agreement, and the – (inaudible) – Minsk group often refer to this 
document, which was signed by the government, official representatives of 
Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan Republic and Armenian Republic.

So since this, we have a document which we are talking today a lot about the 
security issues, about the possibility of renewing the war, how we can avoid 
it.  What kind of mechanism can you suggest that can enforce this ceasefire 
agreement between the conflicting parties since the Nagorno-Karabakh is a 
conflicted party and it’s recorded by an international organization, some it’s 
regardless what other countries, regardless of other countries’ opinion on this 
issue.

Thank you.

MR. OCHS:  Thank you very much.

MR. DE WAAL:  Just briefly on the question of IDPs, I don’t believe any of them 
are – I think the camps have all been closed.  I don’t think anyone’s living in 
tents anymore.  Some of them are living in, I think even in 2006 the last IDP 
camp was closed.  Some of them are still living, obviously, in poor 
accommodation, but I do believe also the Azerbaijan oil fund does allocate 
money to IDPs.

I think there’s a general problem about unemployment in Azerbaijan, 
unfortunately.  Oil and gas gives a lot of wealth, but it doesn’t give 
employment, and people like IDPs unfortunately suffer greatly from that.  But I 
wouldn’t say that the IDPs in Azerbaijan particularly suffer more than much of 
the rural population, and I think there’s a hidden secret here in both Armenia 
and Azerbaijan that  most of the IDPs from the conflict or refugees from the 
conflict I believe are actually probably working in Russia.  

I would actually – the Armenian population, I think, is full in its 
independence, and that implies that many of those refugees, Armenian refugees 
from the conflict just went through Armenia and ended up in Russia.  Some of 
them are actually in the United States.  I know at least one Baku Armenian in 
Washington, and I think that would be true of many of the Azerbaijanis as well.

Just briefly on the issue of the – yes, indeed, the ceasefire document is one 
of the few documents signed by the conflicting parties.  This is something I 
would fault the Minsk group, that there’s, for example, in March of this year 
there was also an agreement in – (inaudible) – to work on – investigate 
ceasefire violations, and that yesterday’s declaration from Vilnius said that 
the parties agreed that further efforts should be made to work on the details 
of the mechanism to investigate ceasefire violations that resulted from the 
joint statements of presidents – (inaudible) – of the March 2011 OSCE summit.

I have questions about such a soft statement of this.  If the three presidents 
issued a joint statement in March, why has a mechanism not been set up by 
December?  Why has a statement that the OSCE summit still urging that?  And I 
do think this is something that the international community should be more 
outspoken on, on trying to enforce the ceasefire and that indeed calling for 
increased OSCE monitoring, whether it be bodies on the ground or through 
satellites of the ceasefire.

MR. MERRY:  I’m afraid the gentleman from Armenian television misquoted me when 
he said that I had suggested more offers from the international community.  I 
would never have cited the international community, because I do not believe 
there is such a thing.

What I was talking about were the responsibilities of major powers to try to 
prevent a regional dispute resulting in conflict which could have deleterious 
impact for broader international interests.

I happen not to favor greater participation by more multilateral bodies.  Being 
a veteran of the United Nations myself, I can well understand why the secretary 
general in New York wants to keep his organization out of Caucasian conflicts.  

But for the most part, what I’m talking about is essentially a more traditional 
great power approach of even imposing at least a partial solution on some of 
these conflicts to prevent them flaring up into open conflict.  To my way of 
thinking, one of the problems with any document like the 1994 ceasefire is that 
it creates a status quo that diplomacy is then in the business of trying to 
perpetuate.  In almost any conflict situation, diplomacy can either try to 
resolve the conflict or to manage it.  

In the overwhelming majority of cases, diplomacy gets in the business of 
managing the conflict, because resolving a conflict is so difficult.  Usually 
if you’re actually going to get a signed peace agreement, you need to do it 
quickly after the shooting stops.  The more time that is lost in managing a 
conflict, the more difficult it becomes to resolve the conflict.

However, there are times when resolving a conflict becomes possible, as with 
George Mitchell’s efforts in Ireland, or becomes of overwhelming importance for 
other great power interests, and I would argue that the Caucasus is an area of 
such sensitivity that it’s one where other great powers, in which I would 
include Turkey and potentially even at some point in the future Iran, have 
responsibilities as peacemakers and peace enforcers, and that it is along that 
line rather than a notion of a participation of the international community 
that my own thoughts run.

MS. HILL:  I’ll just pick up from where Wayne left off there.  I mean, this 
issue of imposition, I already said that it’s almost impossible for anyone to 
impose from the outside, unless you’re already on the ground.

If you think about instances where there has been something of an imposed 
settlement, it’s been somewhere like East Timor, where people were there on the 
ground trying to literally separate the warring parties, or in the Balkans for 
the same reasons.  Kosovo, Bosnia-Herzegovina, everywhere else where there was 
an intervention that took place.

The interventions of sorts that took place in the Caucasus of – well, they’ve 
either been on the side of Russia, which has imposed a settlement of its own 
nature, or they’ve been long gone, in the case of 1994 and the ceasefire.

And as Wayne has made clear, ceasefires are very difficult documents.  We know 
that in the case now with the 2008 ceasefire in Georgia, there’s a lot of 
contention over that ceasefire document, because frankly, it was written on the 
back of a handkerchief and there isn’t an extant version in any of the 
languages that anybody can agree on.  

There is a Russian and a French version.  There was not a signed Georgian 
version or even an English version.  Everyone then has basically got their own 
versions and the French and the Russian versions actually say something 
different, because I’ve read both of them.

So there you are – you have a complication here.  What version do you refer to? 
 1994 is a little clearer.  It was enshrined in a different way with the basis 
of the Minsk group, but still, as Wayne has said, those become then the 
contentious documents, just like, frankly, U.N. resolutions or EU and other 
resolutions, people start to fight over and they lose sight of what the 
conflict itself is about and begin to fight on the documents.

We have a classic case, getting, you know, back, Elizabeth, to your point about 
pressing the party who doesn’t go along – Greek Cypriots.  The Turkish Cypriots 
signed on to the Annan plan, the Greek Cypriots didn’t, and we haven’t been 
able in any way to change their position on this.  We’re going to have another 
college try at what is no longer going to be the Annan plan.  I don’t know what 
we’re going to call it, but I find it very hard to believe that we’re going to 
be able to get both sides on that as well.

And you would think that the EU would be able to impose something as – 
(inaudible) – fact that Cyprus is now a member of the EU, but with a Cyprus 
presidency and everything else it seems highly unlikely, and as we know, Turkey 
is infuriated by the inability of the EU to deal with this question, and it – 
(inaudible) – cast a pall over EU-Turkish relations, the whole accession issue 
of Turkey, it’s blocked all of the various charters and chapters of the (AQI ?) 
for Turkish discussion.  And now it’s probably going to result in the whole 
disintegration of that relationship.  

So all of these issues show the problems that we have in hand here. 

And just to echo Tom’s point and just to close here, I had, about the IDPs, I 
had a very strange encounter just last month.  I was returning from Moscow via 
London to the United States and I got on a Transaero flight to Domodedovo, and 
I sat down next to a woman from Sumgait who I’d met in 1988.  A woman called 
Raisa, who’s half Russian, half Armenian.  Her brother-in-law was Azeri.  She 
spoke Russian, Azeri and Armenian.  

She lives in Moscow.  Her daughter is married to a BP and a G person who she 
met, you know, somewhere or other, and basically she was traveling to London to 
see her children and her grandchildren.

And she at the airport was trying to mediate in a little dispute with a group 
of Armenians and Azeris who were fighting about who got first to go towards the 
customs booth, because they were all going to miss their flights to Yerevan and 
Baku. 

And I heard, saw this woman, with was very, you know, kind of blonde hair and 
big red glasses moving up forward and saying, you know – (inaudible) – she said 
in Russian, first of all, and then she started speaking to them both in 
Armenian and Azeri, resolved it, and helped move people first and then came 
back.

And then I looked at her and I thought, I’ve seen you before, and she said, 
“Yes, we met in Baku in 1988, I’m Raisa,” and she’d met me when I was a student 
at the – (inaudible) – institute in Moscow, and she was a friend of the woman 
who was hosting me there.  So, and I haven’t seen her since 1988.  And her 
experience is emblematic of the tragedy of the region – who is a Raisa?  Good 
question, and she herself says she doesn’t know who she is anymore. 

She lives in Moscow, she spends most of her time in London and she misses 
Sumgait.  So I think that that really kind of sums up, I mean, where we are, 
that the conflicts are very complicated, but an awful lot of people are not 
where they started out.

MR. OCHS:  Well, we have run out of time, ladies and gentlemen, but if any 
concrete suggestion, though, comes out of this discussion, I wonder if we could 
not invite Raisa to join the Minsk group?  (Laughter.)

MS. HILL:  (Off mic.)

MR. OCHS:  I’d like to thank our panelists, Fiona Hill, Tom de Waal and Wayne 
Merry, for providing not just expert and intelligent analysis but really 
stimulating and provocative conversation on an issue that is of interest to not 
just everyone in this room but in many cases very much so to the people in this 
room for obvious reasons.

So again, many thanks to them on behalf of Chairman Smith.  I’d like to thank 
the audience.  

And now for the first time ever, I get to say this briefing is adjourned.  
(Laughter.)

(END)