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FM wants more U.S. involvement in resolving Armenia-Turk dispute

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  • FM wants more U.S. involvement in resolving Armenia-Turk dispute

    Armenia's foreign minister wants more U.S. involvement in resolving
    Armenia-Turkey dispute

    AP Worldstream; Jun 10, 2005

    WILLIAM C. MANN


    Armenia's foreign minister urged the United States to become more
    involved in settling his country's dispute with Turkey, especially in
    persuading Turkey to reopen its border and resume normal trade with
    its landlocked northern neighbor.

    The Turks closed the border in 1993 during Christian Armenia's
    six-year war with another Muslim neighbor, Azerbaijan.

    "The United States is active in this, but we would like to see them
    more engaged," Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian said Friday after a
    meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

    "I believe the United States can be more assertive on the border
    matter. Not other matters, but on the border."

    Turkey closed the border after Armenian-backed troops from
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a mainly Christian Armenian enclave ruled by
    Azerbaijan when Armenia and Azerbaijan were Soviet republics, moved
    into other parts of Azerbaijan, seized towns and approached the
    Iranian and Turkish borders. A 1994 truce largely ended hostilities,
    but a final settlement has not been reached.

    Armenia considers ending the Turkish trade embargo the key to better
    relations, but at the heart of their estrangement is Turkey's refusal
    to accept Armenia's charge that Ottoman Turks committed genocide
    against Armenians. Armenia says as many as 1.5 million Armenians died
    violently or of disease and hunger in 1915-1923 as they were driven
    from eastern Turkey. Turkey says the number was inflated and the
    deaths resulted from efforts to secure the Ottoman Empire's border
    with Russia and defend against Armenian militants.

    Oskanian said universal acceptance of the genocide remains on
    Armenia's foreign policy agenda. Argentina, Canada, France, Poland and
    Russia are among countries that have accepted that it occurred, but
    the Bush administration remains leery of it. Oskanian said he met with
    the co-chairmen of the Armenian caucus in the House of Representatives
    while he was in Washington, and they plan again to submit a resolution
    on the subject.

    Turkey, however, would not have to yield on the question before
    relations could be restored, he said.

    He said Friday that the United States should emphasize to Turkey that
    it "should not only aspire to be a bridge between East and West but
    aspire to be a bridge between parts of Europe."

    "Armenia and Turkey are not at war. We have no problem with that
    country," he said. "We have historical differences. Germany and France
    have historical differences, which they talk about ... but they don't
    close their borders."

    The genocide question "has been put on a different track" from the
    border question, Oskanian said, "and those tracks do not meet at any
    point."

    Clearly the trade embargo has eclipsed the genocide question as
    Armenia's main worry. Two weeks ago, in Helsinki, Finland, Oskanian
    made a similar appeal to the European Union to use its leverage with
    Turkey to open "the last closed border in Europe."

    Turkey is a candidate for EU membership, and such enmity among
    European states does not sit well with other members who must consider
    the Turkish application.

    Still, the politics of the situation are complicated.

    Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has offered to restore
    relations once Armenia agreed to a commission of experts from both
    sides to study the history of the late Ottoman period and determine
    whether a genocide of Armenians occurred.
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