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ANKARA: Turkey: No opening border with Armenia before normalization

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  • ANKARA: Turkey: No opening border with Armenia before normalization

    Turkey: No opening border with Armenia before normalization of relations

    New Anatolian, Turkey
    March 18 2006

    Turkish officials decisively informed U.S. Assistant Secretary of State
    for European and Eurasian Affairs Daniel Fried that Ankara would not
    open a border gate with Yerevan unless there was a normalization of
    ties between Turkey and Armenia.

    Fried, who paid an official visit to Ankara, met with Turkish Foreign
    Ministry Undersecretary Ali Tuygan and Deputy Undersecretary Ahmet
    Uzumcu late Thursday. During the meeting, he urged Ankara to open its
    border gate with Armenia in order to facilitate the peace process in
    the divided-enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, still a point of contention
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    However, Ankara reiterated its previous position and made known that
    the issue was part of the normalization process of relations between
    Turkey and Armenia, sources said.

    According to sources, Fried expressed Yerevan's willingness to
    normalize relations with Ankara. He also underlined both Armenia and
    Azerbaijan's decisiveness to find a solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh
    dispute, making reference to his separate meetings with Armenian
    President Robert Kocharian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

    As a part of the U.S. efforts to contribute to a solution to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, Fried visited Ankara following his round
    of meetings in Caucuses.

    Declining to predict a possible timetable regarding a solution on the
    enclave, Fried told the Turkish officials of the U.S.' readiness to
    extend any kind of support for the solution.

    Fried took up with his Turkish counterparts Iran's nuclear program.

    Ankara and Washington agreed to seek a diplomatic solution to the
    crisis which emerged between the West and Iran over Tehran's nuclear
    ambitions, diplomatic sources told The New Anatolian. However,
    according to the sources, Fried conveyed to Ankara that Washington
    will not rule out military operations against Iran if the issue were
    to be deadlocked.

    The Cyprus problem also dominated the talks between Tuygan and Fried.

    Tuygan stressed the necessity to end the isolation of Turkish
    Cypriots. Although the Turkish side has always taken positive steps
    towards a solution on the divided island, it has not got a positive
    response from the international community, he said.

    In criticism of the international community towards the Turkish
    Cypriots, Tuygan told Fried that although the Greek Cypriots have
    always been the uncompromising side, the international community has
    always rewarded them, said the sources.

    During a press conference on late Thursday following his talks Fried
    also touched on the Armenian genocide claims, saying, "The attitude
    of the U.S. on this issue is well known. U.S. President George W.

    Bush is likely to make a statement on this issue in April, like
    every year."
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