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'Genocide' Question Still Haunts Armenia-Turkey Relations

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  • 'Genocide' Question Still Haunts Armenia-Turkey Relations

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep.
    July 10, 2008



    'Genocide' Question Still Haunts Armenia-Turkey Relations

    by Emil Danielyan, Ruzanna Khachatrian



    Signaling a major policy shift, President Serzh Sarkisian has
    confirmed he is ready to accept, in principle, Turkey's proposal to
    form a commission of Armenian and Turkish historians that would
    examine the 1915-18 mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.

    Sarkisian on June 26 made clear through a spokesman, however, that
    such a commission should be created only after Turkey agrees
    unconditionally to establish diplomatic relations and open its border
    with Armenia. But on June 30, the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation--Dashnaktsutiun (HHD), one of four parties represented in
    the coalition government, joined other opposition parties in
    criticizing Sarkisian's support for the Turkish proposal.

    The proposal for a joint commission was formally made by Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in a 2005 letter to then-Armenian
    President Robert Kocharian. Erdogan suggested that the proposed
    commission determine whether the massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire constituted genocide and said his government would accept any
    conclusion it reached.

    In a written reply, Kocharian effectively rejected the idea and came
    up with a counterproposal to set up a Turkish-Armenian
    intergovernmental commission that would deal with this and other
    issues of mutual concern. Other Armenian officials, backed by local
    and diaspora scholars, dismissed Erdogan's move as a Turkish ploy
    designed to scuttle international recognition of the Armenian
    "genocide." They also said that by agreeing to the proposed study, the
    Armenian side would signal a willingness to consider doubts regarding
    the genocide question.

    "We are not against the creation of such a commission, but only if the
    border between our countries is opened," Sarkisian declared during a
    visit to Moscow last week. His press secretary, Samvel Farmanian,
    reaffirmed this in a statement issued on June 26. "We are not against
    any study of even obvious facts and widely accepted realities,"
    Farmanian said. "Agreeing to a study does not mean casting doubt on
    the veracity of facts. However, the creation of such a commission
    would be logical only after the establishment of diplomatic relations
    and the opening of the border between our countries. Otherwise, it
    could become a tool for dragging out and exploiting existing
    problems."

    Armenia's leading opposition groups, including the Popular Movement
    headed former President Levon Ter-Petrossian, were quick to condemn
    Sarkisian's comments, saying that by accepting Ankara's proposal in
    principle, he called into question the very fact of what many
    historians regard as the first genocide of the 20th century. Farmanian
    rejected that argument. "It is strange that the genocide issue is
    being exploited by individuals who had done everything in the past to
    condemn that tragic page of our history to oblivion," he said in a
    jibe at the more conciliatory line that Ter-Petrossian adopted
    vis-a-vis Turkey.

    The opposition concerns have since been echoed by the HHD, which has
    for decades been known for its hard line on Armenia's relations with
    Turkey. The party's official position is that Turkey must not only
    admit to the genocide, but also compensate the descendants of victims
    and cede large swathes of its formerly Armenian-populated territory to
    Armenia. Successive Armenian governments have stressed, however, that
    Armenia has no formal territorial claims on Turkey. "Genocide
    recognition by Turkey will not lead to legal consequences for
    territorial claims," Kocharian stated in a 2001 interview with a
    Turkish TV station.

    "We have received the necessary explanation and clarification from the
    president," Giro Manoyan, a spokesman for the HHD's governing bureau,
    told RFE/RL. "Also, the president's spokesman and the foreign minister
    have publicly clarified that the president's consent pertains to
    another kind of commission." In Manoyan's words, Sarkisian believes
    the would-be commission should not determine whether or not a genocide
    occurred in 1915-18 and should instead research "various details of
    the genocide." "In any case, our approach is that there was no need to
    make such statements and create this confusion in the first place," he
    said.

    Manoyan also expressed his party's unease about Sarkisian's stated
    intention to invite Turkish President Abdullah Gul to the first-ever
    game between the national soccer teams of Armenia and Turkey, which
    will be played in Yerevan in early September. "I think that if the
    president of Turkey visits Yerevan, at least one part of our society
    will express its attitude," he said.

    On July 1, the daily "Taregir" offered an alternative explanation for
    Sarkisian's affirmation of support for the establishment of a
    Turkish-Armenian commission of historians. "As is known, Moscow has
    always been jealous about the [prospect of a] normalization of
    relations between Yerevan and Ankara," says the paper. "The Kremlin
    has always managed to torpedo all initiatives aimed reopening the
    Turkish-Armenian border, fearing the loss of its influence in Armenia.

    However, there have been suggestions lately that Russian capital,
    which is increasingly establishing itself in Armenia, is keen to use
    our country as a launch pad for occupying the vast Turkish
    market. That is, Moscow is not against an open border, provided that
    border is under its control. So maybe Sarkisian's proposal should be
    viewed in that context."
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