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ANKARA: Turkey Readies For Dialo Gue With Armenia Over Caucasus Plan

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Readies For Dialo Gue With Armenia Over Caucasus Plan

    TURKEY READIES FOR DIALO GUE WITH ARMENIA OVER CAUCASUS PLAN

    Turkish Daily News
    Aug 21 2008
    Turkey

    With Turkey on tour promoting the creation of a Caucasus alliance
    platform following the Georgia-Russia war, it faces the difficult
    question of how to communicate this idea to Armenia. Before departing
    for Azerbaijan, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said Foreign
    Minister, Ali Babacan, will speak to his Russian counterpart Sergei
    Lavrov this week, "after which the format of the contacts with Armenia"
    will be determined.

    Diplomatic sources told the Turkish Daily News that contact with
    Yerevan could be held at the level of deputy undersecretary of the
    Foreign Ministry. Unal Ceviköz was one of the Turkish diplomats who
    held secret talks with Armenian counterparts in Switzerland.

    "We may not have diplomatic ties but Turkey recognizes Armenia,"
    said a Turkish diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity. He said
    the absence of Yerevan in the Turkey-sponsored Caucasus solidarity
    mechanism would be felt because it was Armenia that was most affected
    by the latest war in the region.

    In a conciliatory message to Armenia, President, Abdullah Gul, said
    over the weekend that Turkey is "no enemy" to any country in the
    region, stressing that the Georgia-Russia conflict has shown the need
    for "early measures to resolve frozen problems" in the Caucasus.

    Ankara has refused to establish diplomatic ties with Yerevan, since
    the former Soviet republic gained independence in 1991, because of an
    Armenian campaign to secure international recognition of the Armenian
    killings under the Ottoman Empire as genocide.

    In 1993, Turkey also shut its border with Armenia in a show of
    solidarity with its close ally Azerbaijan, then at war with Armenia,
    dealing a heavy economic blow to the impoverished nation.

    Diplomats from Turkey and Armenia met secretly in Switzerland in July
    in a fresh effort to normalize ties, following three rounds of talks
    in 2005 and 2006. No progress has been publicly made known.

    Erdogan traveled to Moscow and Tbilisi last week to discuss the
    Caucasus proposal.

    On his visit to Baku, he said he and Azerbaijani President, Ilham
    Aliyev, would discuss Ankara's proposal to establish a regional
    platform for stability and cooperation in the Caucasus that would
    include Georgia, Russia and Armenia.

    "We have vital interests in securing durable peace and stability in
    the region," he told reporters.

    --Boundary_(ID_be/gdUz9ET51KVi8inXyWw) --
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