
ArmInfo. Any resolution to the Artsakh conflict would have been more favorable for Armenia than what Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan did, as stated by Artur Khachatryan, NA member from the opposition "Armenia" faction, in response to the previously published "documents on the Artsakh conflict negotiation process" on the government website.
According to Khachatryan, the published documents essentially refute Pashinyan's assertions that the international community considered the settlement of the Artsakh conflict solely within the framework of Azerbaijan's territorial integrity. In this regard, the MP called for attention to the proposals put forward by the Minsk mediators between 2006 and 2019. As the MP recalled, in 2011, a full document proposed by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs on the conflict settlement was presented in Kazan. "After Azerbaijan's failure to implement the Kazan document, the right of the people of Artsakh to self-determination was reflected in all the working documents of the 'Lavrov plan' (Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov's plan - ed.). The documents published by Pashinyan also refute his other statements, for example, about ignoring the proposal for an interim status," the opposition leader noted.
Khachatryan also highlighted the existence of other proposals for resolving the Artsakh conflict, such as the initiative put forth by the Russian-Finnish Co-Chairs in April 1997 and the Sakharov-Starovoitova proposal from 1988. According to the MP, Pashinyan had mispresented even the meaning and purpose of the UN Security Council resolutions regarding that matter.
"UN Security Council resolutions, in particular 874 (1993) and 884 (1993), are part of a general package of norms. They endorse the settlement option proposed by the OSCE. At that time, nine participants in the OSCE Minsk Conference presented a proposal for a package settlement, which included determining the future legal status of Artsakh at the Conference, addressing the consequences of the war, including the withdrawal of the armed forces of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic from adjacent areas and Azerbaijani forces from the Martakert region. Incidentally, I note that the UN Security Council resolution was also included in the 'Lavrov plan,' which was presented to the parties in various working versions between 2014 and 2019," Khachatryan noted. The MP also criticized the reprinting of conflict resolution proposals from a book by Vladimir Kazimirov, former Russian co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, calling it a mockery. According to Khachatryan, everyone interested in negotiations on Artsakh had long been familiar with these proposals. "By the way, anyone with eyes will see that Pashinyan has misinterpreted even the logic of the 'common state,'" the opposition figure added.
Khachatryan further noted that Pashinyan had not publish the 1999 OSCE Istanbul Declaration, but had only restated the Armenian authorities' recognition of Artsakh as part of Azerbaijan. "Perhaps this declaration has simply been overlooked. In any case, it won't hurt if I reiterate that in Istanbul Armenia did not recognize Artsakh as part of Azerbaijan," the MP emphasized.
He also noted that the Key West documents had not been published. Instead, Pashinyan presented a clipping published in his newspaper, Haykakan Zhamanak, which, he claimed, he received in 2008 from the campaign headquarters of first president Levon Ter-Petrosyan regarding this stage of the negotiation process. "I wonder if they don't have the document, how did they judge its contents? If this document 'disappeared' from the Foreign Ministry in 2018, why didn't they ask the Americans, Russians, or French for a copy while in power for almost eight years? Either publish the document or admit you've been pulling the wool over the people's eyes for so long," Khachatryan concluded.