Photo: AA/File
Russia does not share Turkey's view of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and will not be included in the trilateral talks between Moscow, Baku and Yerevan, according to Sergey Lavrov, the country's minister of foreign affairs.
"We disagree with the position Turkey has voiced, which was expressed several times by President Aliyev. There is no secret here, we cannot share the statement that there is ... a military solution to the conflict," Lavrov told Russia's state-run Sputnik News.
Since the start of the conflict in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region on September 27, Turkey has stated that it supports Azerbaijan "both militarily and diplomatically."
"We have never qualified Turkey as our strategic ally. Turkey is a very close partner; in many areas this partnership is strategic," he remarked, adding that "... Politics must avoid materializing the principle that war is the continuation of politics," Lavrov warned.
"We have never qualified Turkey as our strategic ally. Turkey is a very close partner; in many areas this partnership is strategic," he remarked.
On the negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan with Russia's mediation, Lavrov said that Turkey wouldn't be included in the talks. However, he added, he informed his counterpart in Ankara, Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, about the talks.
"Responding to the question about contacts with our Turkish colleagues, I got in touch with Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu and informed him that we count on support for our efforts. On Sunday, we had another telephone conversation, during which support for the Moscow document was confirmed," he said, according to Russia's state-run TASS agency.
When asked about the possibility of considering some new formats of settlement talks, Lavrov recalled that the joint statement made by the Russian, Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers "confirmed that the formats of the negotiation process of the OSCE Minsk Group remained unchanged," TASS reported.
(VK)