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Turkish Prime Minister to Send a 'Challenge'

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  • Turkish Prime Minister to Send a 'Challenge'

    AZG Armenian Daily #077, 29/04/2005


    Armenia-Turkey

    TURKISH PRIME MINISTER TO SEND A 'CHALLENGE'

    In his reply to Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan that came
    on April 26, President Robert Kocharian emphasized once again the
    necessity of establishing bilateral relations without preconditions
    and said that an intergovernmental commission may be set to discuss
    key issues in relations, then added, "Governments are responsible for
    bilateral relations and we have no right to leave it to historians".

    Despite Armenian President's unambiguous position, Turkish press wrote
    that his answer is evasive and the Turkish Foreign Ministry dubbed it
    "full of terminological inexactitudes". This was done to show the
    impossibility of establishing diplomatic relations with Armenia
    "without clarifying genocide accusation".

    For that very reason Turkish prime minister overlooked foreign
    minister Abdullah Gul's statement that the Turkish authorities will
    issue official announcement only after close examination of Armenian
    president's letter and said, "I read Kocharian's letter sentence by
    sentence. We never said that politics should be left over to
    historians and sociologists. We are of course to do the
    politics. There are important issues to be solved before taking
    political decisions. Those are issues originating from the past. We
    are sending a challenge. We are opening our archives. Open yours if
    you have. Reason controls the situation. It's impossible to reach
    anywhere by lobbying. Neither is possible through the decisions of
    some parliaments. You cannot deny significance of reason and science".

    Ankara's official announcement shows that Turkey's position on the
    matter has not changed. If it had, Turkish TV would not have labeled
    PM Erdogan's statement as challenge, nor would Aqsam newspaper write
    that "Armenia is driven into corner".

    As the reason of the challenge is the Armenian Genocide, which is
    internationally recognized, then Turkey's challenge turns
    futile. Turkey's attempts to cut short the recognition of the Genocide
    by the world community will drive Turkey, not Armenia, into
    corner. Turkey's strategy in this situation seems uncertain and US
    President's April 24 speech comes to the foreground.

    Apparently, Bush's announcement filled Erdogan with enthusiasm as he
    suggests RA President to check "truthfulness of genocide allegations"
    by the help of historians before establishing diplomatic
    relations. Thus, the Genocide issue comes to play the key role in
    Armenia-Turkey relations and turns into a precondition for Armenia.

    It's not realistic to hope that Armenia will meet Turkey halfway today
    when the process of Armenian Genocide recognition is getting momentum
    worldwide. Therefore, Turkey's offer to clarify historicity of
    Genocide is nothing but a refusal to get in touch with Armenia. In
    this view, today's super powers -- USA, EU and Russia -- remain in
    position of forging Armenian-Turkish relations the way they like.

    This stymies Armenian-Turkish relations more and more. Powers fighting
    for zones of influence are coming to battle for orchestrating these
    relations. As a result, Armenia is deprived of connection with the
    outer world and Turkey of the opportunity to jettison the burden of
    history. Being the hostage of its own history, Turkey turns meanwhile
    into the captive of the American Congress and will have to be careful
    to prevent Genocide resolution from appearing on US agenda.

    By Hakob Chakrian

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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