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Secret Turkish-Armenian Talks Focused On 3 Key Areas

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  • Secret Turkish-Armenian Talks Focused On 3 Key Areas

    Secret Turkish-Armenian Talks Focused On 3 Key Areas

    Reopening border depends on Armenia's 'partial' withdrawal from
    Nagorno-Karabakh

    Ayhan Simsek
    The New Anatolian / Ankara

    Turkey is considering reopening its border with Armenia if Yerevan will
    commit to a partial pullout from the occupied Nagorno-Karabakh region of
    Azerbaijan, diplomatic sources told The New Anatolian yesterday, speaking on
    condition of anonymity. Ankara expects a pullback from four regions in
    Nagorno-Karabakh, and believes that such a move can facilitate a
    comprehensive agreement between Yerevan and the Azeri capital Baku.

    Secret talks between Turkish and Armenian senior diplomats seeking ways to
    normalize relations were focused on three key areas, according to diplomatic
    sources.

    One of the key points in the talks was the recognition of the existing
    common borders. TNA learned that at a meeting between senior diplomats last
    month, Ankara suggested an "exchange of letters" between the two countries,
    in which the both parties would reaffirm their commitment to the Kars and
    Gumru Treaties of 1921. Armenian diplomats rejected this suggestion, stating
    that while they do not have any territorial claims or problem with
    recognizing the existing borders, they cannot accept this since the treaties
    set down Nagorno-Karabakh as Azerbaijani territory. The Armenian side
    proposed other formulas to meet Turkey's expectations.

    Yerevan's demand for the reopening of the Turkish-Armenian border
    constitutes another important issue in the talks. Ankara recently conveyed
    that it would consider reopening the border if Yerevan were to partially
    withdrawal from Nagorno-Karabakh. One diplomat said that the Azeris and
    Armenians are close to an agreement which would foresee an Armenian
    withdrawal from four regions in Nagorno-Karabakh, and Turkey has a positive
    view of this. But, Turkish diplomats underline that they are not a party to
    the negotiations and what is important is that any proposal must be
    satisfactory to the Azeris.

    A third key issue in the talks between Turkish and Armenian diplomats was on
    the formation of a committee of historians. In recent meetings between
    senior diplomats, the Armenian side offered to establish a commission
    composed of parliamentarians and suggested that a committee of historians
    would be a subcommittee to it. Turkish diplomats had some reservations
    concerning the Armenians' suggestion, but the two sides agreed that the
    committee of historians should include Turkish, Armenian and Armenian
    diaspora members but no other third party.

    This April, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan sent a letter to
    President Robert Kocharian, proposing to set up a commission of historians
    who would jointly study the events of 1915-18 and the genocide allegations.
    Kocharian responded by calling for the creation of a Turkish-Armenian
    intergovernmental body that would tackle this and other issues of mutual
    concern.

    Source: TNA, 11 August 2005
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