Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

BAKU: US Urges Armenia To Recognize Turkish Border

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • BAKU: US Urges Armenia To Recognize Turkish Border

    US URGES ARMENIA TO RECOGNIZE TURKISH BORDER

    Trend News Agency
    June 20 2008
    Azerbaijan

    The United States for the first time publicly called on Armenia to
    formally recognize its border with Turkey as part of proposed measures
    for reconciliation between the two conflicting neighbors. "Armenia
    should acknowledge the existing border with Turkey and respond
    constructively to efforts that Turkey may make," Dan Fried, assistant
    secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, told a hearing
    of the House Foreign Affairs Committee on recent developments in the
    Caucasus.Also in the written text of his speech at the panel, Fried
    said, "Armenia must be ready to... disavow any claim on the territory
    of modern Turkey."A top problem between Ankara and Yerevan is Armenia's
    insistent calls for the recognition of World War I-era killings of
    Armenians in the Ottoman empire as genocide, reported Turkishdailynews.

    Turkey recognizes Armenia, but has refused to set up diplomatic
    relations with it and keeps their mutual land border closed in response
    to Armenia's ongoing occupation of Nagorny-Karabakh, an enclave inside
    Azerbaijan, and some Azeri lands.Armenia and U.S. Armenians accuse
    Turkey of subjecting its northeastern neighbor to an economic blockade.

    Turkish diplomats say that Armenian efforts for international genocide
    recognition is a prelude to a larger list of demands, including
    compensation and even "return of lands."Armenia's constitution does
    not explicitly recognize the country's border with Turkey, and many
    Armenians and the Armenian diaspora view part of eastern Anatolia as
    traditional Armenian lands.Fried's remarks were important in the sense
    that it was the United States' first public call for Armenia to respect
    Turkey's territorial integrity as a prelude to better relations.The
    U.S. official also called on Turkey "to come to terms with a dark
    chapter in its history.""Reconciliation will require political will on
    both sides, and does require dealing with the sensitive and painful
    issues, including the issue of the mass killings and forced exile
    of up to one-and-a-half million Armenians at the end of the Ottoman
    Empire. Turkey needs to come to terms with this history," Fried said.

    He also reiterated a call for Turkey to open the land border
    with Armenia, saying both sides would greatly benefit from such
    reconciliation.Pro-Armenian lawmakers insistently asked Fried why
    the United States does not officially recognize last century's
    Armenian killings in the Ottoman empire as genocide."We don't use
    the term because we do not think that the use of that term would
    contribute to a reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey, nor would
    it contribute to Turkey's examination of the dark spots in its own
    history," he replied.A genocide resolution came close to passage at
    the U.S. House of Representatives last fall, and only strong Turkish
    warnings that such a move destroy the relationship with America and
    President George W. Bush's administration's focused efforts caused
    it to be shelved.But analysts here warn that Turkey almost certainly
    will face the same problem in Congress next year. Making things worse
    for Turkey, Democratic presidential contender Barack Obama strongly
    supports the Armenian position.
Working...
X