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The EU Should Help Resolve The Turkish-Armenian Conflict

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  • The EU Should Help Resolve The Turkish-Armenian Conflict

    THE EU SHOULD HELP RESOLVE THE TURKISH-ARMENIAN CONFLICT
    by Nicolas Tavitian

    EUobserver.com
    November 1, 2006 Wednesday 8:44 AM GMT

    EUOBSERVER / COMMENT - Turkey's accession process provides a historic
    opportunity to bring about a transformation of the country, and of
    its relationship with its neighbours. But in embarking in this new
    enlargement in 1999, the EU seems to have taken on more than it
    initially believed.

    A case in point: the recent vote in the French parliament in favour
    of criminalising the denial of the Armenian genocide. The vote
    generated an unprecedented interest in relations between Turkey and
    the Armenians. It is the clearest demonstration yet that, by opening
    enlargement negotiations with Turkey, the EU has unwittingly taken
    on the Armenian issue as well.

    This is a welcome crisis. In 2000, the European Commission and the
    council [EU member states] both curtly dismissed the entire matter
    as a "historical debate,"and left it off the agenda of enlargement
    negotiations.

    They should have known better. The issue is anything but historical.

    The republic of Turkey - with 65 million inhabitants and the largest
    NATO army in Europe - has blockaded the tiny Republic of Armenia -
    3 million inhabitants - for more than 13 years now, and refused to
    establish diplomatic relations with it.

    The issue of the Armenian genocide is quite different: most of the
    million or so Armenians in the EU are the descendants of the survivors
    of the 1915 genocide, which happened on the territory of modern Turkey
    but which is still being denied by Ankara. Without dwelling on the
    point, let us note the incredibly dehumanising barbarity of the
    event. It marked the survivors, and their descendents, for generations.

    The current blockade of Armenia lends credibility to the notion that
    Turkish politics are still driven by a strong anti-Armenian impulse -
    or so Armenians generally see it. Little has happened in past decades
    to prove them wrong. It is hardly surprising that Armenians in the
    EU are not thrilled by the prospect of Turkish accession.

    The Armenian government, by contrast, pins its hopes on the beneficial
    transformation of Turkey which EU accession is bound to bring about.

    Turkish-Armenian border

    At the same time, a great many Turks - businessmen in particular -
    would like to see the Armenian border opened. Many more aspire to
    opening up Turkish society and rediscovering its past. But Turkish
    leaders are unlikely to take the political risk of engaging with
    Armenia or Armenians of their own accord without some encouragement.

    The EU could help. Regrettably, over the past four years, the
    commission not only ignored the whole problem, but helped it fester
    on occasion.

    In 2002, Guenter Verheugen, enlargement commissioner at the time,
    persuaded the European Parliament not to include wording on the
    closed border and the genocide in one of its Turkey resolutions,
    arguing this would interfere with a dialogue which was ongoing in
    the US-sponsored Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Commission.

    The Armenian members of this commission, who saw the dialogue was
    being abused as an excuse for EU inaction, soon after withdrew from it.

    Yet there is another way. By addressing the question of relations
    between Turkey and the Armenians head on, the EU could help resolve a
    conflict, contribute to Turkey's transformation and generate support
    for Turkey's membership in the EU.

    In the first place, the EU should contribute to the establishment of
    two dialogues: one governmental and one between civil societies. The
    first is to be conducted between the republics of Armenia and Turkey:
    together, the two states must decide, with EU help, on the steps
    required to establish diplomatic relations and open the border.

    Two dialogues

    The second dialogue should involve Turkish society and EU citizens of
    Armenian descent - the Armenian Diaspora. That will be a more open
    and diffuse process, but it is indispensable to Turkey's successful
    integration into Europe.

    It must involve the rediscovery by Turkey of its own Armenian heritage,
    and by Armenians of a changed Turkey. Most importantly, a successful
    civil society dialogue will contribute to appeasing Turkey's still
    strident sense of national pride, open the way to rediscovering
    history, and help anchor Anatolia to the European mainland.

    The experience of the only existing Turkish-Armenian group, the
    Turkish-Armenian Business Development Council, should be valuable
    in this regard. Since 1997, against the odds, this non-governmental
    network has helped establish links between Armenians and Turks at
    all levels, and on several continents.

    Both these dialogues must be sponsored and monitored by the EU.

    Without a credible mediator, and publicity where possible, dialogues
    are unlikely to produce results.

    Secondly, the EU should lay down the rules with clarity. The
    commission has indeed relentlessly and effectively fought for freedom
    of expression. But Turkey is also already obliged in theory, under
    the current customs union agreement which entered into force in 1995,
    to entertain commercial relations with Armenia.

    It should be made quite clear to the country that it will not join the
    EU until those borders are opened and trade relations fully functional.

    Finally, whatever else it does, the EU should not subsidise the
    blockade of Armenia. The most destitute part of the Turkey is along
    the closed Armenian border, just 50 km from the Armenian capital,
    Yerevan, and its million consumers. But rather than opening the border
    to trade with its neighbour, Turkey prefers to rely on subsidies from
    Brussels - ¤40 million this year - to sustain the local economy.

    Ultimately, the EU public opinion's acceptance of Turkish membership
    depends in large part on whether it feels that Europe is changing
    Turkey or that Turkey is changing Europe. Turkey's Armenian question
    will help us find out whether the EU is still serious about its ideals.

    Nicolas Tavitian is director of the Turkish Armenian Business
    Development Council (TABDC) in the EU and also heads the Inside
    Europe Resource Centre, a public policy centre dedicated to EU affairs
    relating to Armenia.

    --Boundary_(ID_UTdcmLc721L9lHpYwZxIVg)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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