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Turkey and the Caucasus. Waiting and Watching

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  • Turkey and the Caucasus. Waiting and Watching

    http://www.economist.com/world/europe/displaystory .cfm?story_id=11986092

    Friday August 22nd 2008
    Europe

    Turkey and the Caucasus
    Waiting and watching

    Aug 21st 2008 | ANKARA AND YEREVAN
    The Economist
    A large NATO country ponders a bigger role in the Caucasus

    AT THE Hrazdan stadium in Yerevan, workers are furiously preparing for
    a special visitor: Turkey's president, Abdullah Gul. Armenia's
    president, Serzh Sarkisian, has invited Mr Gul to a football World Cup
    qualifier between Turkey and its traditional foe, Armenia, on
    September 6th.

    If he comes, Mr Gul may pave the way for a new era in the Caucasus.
    Turkey is the only NATO member in the area, and after the war in
    Georgia it would like a bigger role. It is the main outlet for
    westbound Azeri oil and gas and it controls the Bosporus and
    Dardanelles, through which Russia and other Black Sea countries ship
    most of their trade. And it has vocal if small minorities from all
    over the region, including Abkhaz and Ossetians.

    Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has just been to Moscow
    and Tbilisi to promote a "Caucasus Stability and Co-operation
    Platform", a scheme that calls for new methods of crisis management
    and conflict resolution. The Russians and Georgians made a show of
    embracing the idea, as have Armenia and Azerbaijan, but few believe
    that it will go anywhere. That is chiefly because Turkey does not have
    formal ties with Armenia. In 1993 Turkey sealed its border (though not
    its air links) with its tiny neighbour after Armenia occupied a chunk
    of Azerbaijan in a war over Nagorno-Karabakh. But the war in Georgia
    raises new questions over the wisdom of maintaining a frozen border.

    Landlocked and poor, Armenia looks highly vulnerable. Most of its fuel
    and much of its grain comes through Georgia's Black Sea ports, which
    have been paralysed by the war. Russia blew up a key rail bridge this
    week, wrecking Georgia's main rail network that also runs to Armenia
    and Azerbaijan. This disrupted Azerbaijan's oil exports, already hit
    by an explosion earlier this month in the Turkish part of the pipeline
    from Baku to Ceyhan, in Turkey.

    "All of this should point in one direction," says a Western diplomat
    in Yerevan: "peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan." Reconciliation
    with Armenia would give Azerbaijan an alternative export route for its
    oil and Armenia the promise of a new lifeline via Turkey. Some
    Armenians gloat that Russia's invasion of Georgia kyboshes the chances
    of Azerbaijan ever retaking Nagorno-Karabakh by force, though others
    say the two cases are quite different. Russia is not contiguous with
    Nagorno-Karabakh, nor does it have "peacekeepers" or nationals there.

    Even before the Georgian war, Turkey seemed to understand that
    isolating Armenia is not making it give up the parts of Azerbaijan
    that it occupies outside Nagorno-Karabakh. But talking to it might.
    Indeed, that is what Turkish and Armenian diplomats have secretly done
    for some months, until news of the talks leaked (probably from an
    angry Azerbaijan).

    Turkey's ethnic and religious ties with its Azeri cousins have long
    weighed heavily in its Caucasus policy. But there is a new worry that
    a resolution calling the mass slaughter of Armenians by the Ottoman
    Turks in the 1915 genocide may be passed by America's Congress after
    this November's American elections. This would wreck Turkey's
    relations with the United States. If Turkey and Armenia could only
    become friendlier beforehand, the resolution might then be struck down
    for good.

    In exchange for better relations, Turkey wants Armenia to stop backing
    a campaign by its diaspora for genocide recognition and allow a
    commission of historians to establish "the truth". Mr Sarkisian has
    hinted that he is open to this idea, triggering howls of treason from
    the opposition. The biggest obstacle remains Azerbaijan and its allies
    in the Turkish army. Mr Erdogan was expected to try to square
    Azerbaijan's president, Ilham Aliev, in a visit to Baku this week.
    Should he fail, Mr Gul may not attend the football match - and a chance
    for reconciliation may be lost.
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