It's "unreasonable" for Armenia to resume peace talks with Azerbaijan over the disputed territory without security guarantees because "the situation is entirely different now," Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan told in an interview to Bloomberg. He noted that war can break out "at any moment" in the Caucasus flashpoint of Nagorno-Karabakh and there's little prospect of talks to resolve the conflict, Bloomberg quotes Sargsyan as saying. "It's unreasonable for Armenia to resume peace talks with Azerbaijan over the disputed territory without security guarantees because the situation is entirely different now. On the one hand we'd be talking somewhere while, on the other, military officials would be engaging in war here to try to settle the conflict," he said. President Sargsyan also mentioned that Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov didn't "bring any new proposals" because "he realizes very well that it doesn't make sense to talk about negotiations immediately after a four-day war," Sargsyan said. While the chief of the defense staff in Moscow mediated the cease-fire talks, there's no place for Russian peacekeepers in the conflict zone to separate the two sides, Sargsyan said. Talk of deploying Russian forces "wasn't entirely without grounds" in previous peace negotiations, though "I don't see any such opportunity" now, he said. "If there are no negotiations, how can Russian forces appear in Karabakh or between Azeri and Karabakh forces?" Sargsyan said. Russia's pursuing a "balanced policy" between Armenia and Azerbaijan while seeking to avert "large-scale military conflict," he said. The president disclosed that he'd been willing to withdraw Armenian forces from five districts of Azerbaijan and allow in peacekeepers as part of 2011 negotiations with Aliyev in the Russian city of Kazan. The Russian, U.S. and French presidents urged both leaders to sign the agreement, which would also have postponed a final decision on Nagorno-Karabakh's status, but Aliyev refused, Sargsyan said. "That was the time when Azerbaijan was enriching itself with oil money and talking about the size of its military budget," Sargsyan said of the failed 2011 talks. "What took place now should have been expected", Sargsyan said.