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WASHINGTON--U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was due to meet the foreign
ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan on Monday and Tuesday for
talks that will likely center on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
The talks highlight the new U.S. administration's hopes that the
long-running Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks will produce a
breakthrough soon. The presidents of the two nations will meet
in Prague on Thursday to try to bridge their remaining
differences over the basic principles of a Karabakh settlement
proposed by the American, French and Russian mediators
co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group.
Speaking during congressional hearings in Washington late last
month, Clinton said Baku and Yerevan could hammer out a
framework peace accord “in the next months.” She discussed the
Karabakh conflict as well as efforts to improve Turkish-Armenian
relations in a phone call with Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard
Nalbandian last week.
Their follow-up talks in Washington were scheduled for late
Monday. Clinton will meet Azerbaijan's Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov on Tuesday.
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza, Washington's
top Karabakh negotiator, admitted over the weekend that the
timing of the two meetings is “not a coincidence.” He said
“President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton have pointed out
in their statements that they want to achieve a breakthrough in
the Karabakh peace process,” he told the Azerbaijani APA news
agency. “That is why the two foreign ministers will meet the
secretary of state separately.”
Bryza also said that the success of the ongoing Turkish-Armenian
rapprochement would increase chances of Karabakh peace. “If the
Turkish-Armenian rapprochement moves forward we might see
Armenia act more constructively in the negotiations,” he said.
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