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Turkey Offers Dialogue To Armenia

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  • Turkey Offers Dialogue To Armenia

    TURKEY OFFERS "DIALOGUE" TO ARMENIA
    By Emil Danielyan

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    http://jamestown.org/edm/article.php?article_id =2373076
    May 20 2008

    Turkey has offered to enter into a "dialogue" with neighboring Armenia
    that would aim at improving the historically strained relations
    between the two nations. The diplomatic overtures have prompted a
    positive response from Armenian leaders, raising fresh hopes for the
    elimination of a major source of geopolitical tension in the South
    Caucasus. Ankara, however, has given no official indication so far that
    it is ready to drop its preconditions for normalizing bilateral ties.

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul was one of the first foreign leaders
    to congratulate Serzh Sarkisian on his highly controversial victory
    in Armenia's February 21 presidential election. "I hope your new duty
    will provide the necessary atmosphere for normalizing ties between
    the Turkish and Armenian peoples who have proved for centuries that
    they can live side by side in peace and harmony," Gul wrote to the new
    Armenian leader (AP, February 21). Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan and Foreign Minister Ali Babacan sent similar congratulatory
    letters to their newly appointed Armenian counterparts in late April,
    both of them stressing the need for a "dialogue."

    According to the Armenian government's press service, Erdogan also
    spoke of unspecified "certain steps" that could be taken to normalize
    Turkish-Armenian relations. "Admittedly we have problems, some of which
    date back 100 years," Babacan told reporters in Ankara on April 21,
    "but the only way of overcoming these problems is through dialogue. Our
    doors are open to dialogue in this new period" (AP, April 21).

    "I would like to reaffirm the Armenian government's commitment to
    constructive dialogue and the establishment of normal relations without
    preconditions," Armenia's Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian said in a
    written reply to Erdogan. Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian
    told RFE/RL's Armenian service on May 1 that he had responded to
    Babacan's letter in a similarly "positive way." "We should not work
    the way we did in the past, because we failed to solve our problems
    and to normalize relations. We should work with a new style," he
    said without elaborating. Nalbandian found the very fact of a rare
    exchange of letters between Armenian and Turkish leaders encouraging
    and expressed the hope that it would be followed by "positive steps."

    Turkey closed its land border with Armenia in 1993, at the height
    of the Armenian-Azerbaijani war over Nagorno-Karabakh, out of
    solidarity with Azerbaijan, with which it has a close ethnic and
    cultural affinity. Successive Turkish governments have since made the
    reopening of that border and the establishment of diplomatic relations
    with Yerevan conditional on a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict acceptable to Azerbaijan. They have also demanded a halt
    to the decades-long Armenian campaign for international recognition
    of the 1915-1918 mass killings and deportations of Armenians in the
    Ottoman Empire as genocide. Ankara has reacted particularly furiously
    (most recently in the fall of 2007) to persistent efforts by Armenian
    lobbying groups in the United States to push such a resolution
    through Congress.

    Armenia's leaders, for their part, have rejected any linkage between
    the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute and Turkish-Armenian ties. They have
    also agitated for genocide recognition, while stressing that they
    do not regard it as a precondition for improving relations with
    Turkey. President Sarkisian reaffirmed this policy in a written
    statement issued ahead of the April 24 annual remembrance of more than
    one million Ottoman Armenians killed in what many historians consider
    the first genocide of the 20th century. He made it clear that Yerevan
    would continue to support the genocide recognition effort spearheaded
    by the worldwide Armenian diaspora "with multiplied vigor."

    Whether the proposed dialogue is a sign of a softening of the Turkish
    policy on Armenia or a public relations stunt is not yet clear. The
    offer seems in stark contrast to the Turkish government's reported
    refusal to allow an organization of Turkish and Armenian businessmen
    lobbying for cross-border commerce between the two countries to open
    an office in Istanbul. In a May 9 statement, the Turkish-Armenian
    Business Development Council (TABDC) said that it had been ordered by
    the Turkish Interior Ministry to "cease its activities in Turkey." The
    TABDC said the ban was "sending mixed signals regarding the Turkish
    government's intentions." "The rejection letter by the Ministry of
    Interior in Ankara is all the more surprising as this same government
    had sought help from the TABDC a few years ago to establish contact
    with Armenians in Armenia and the Diaspora," the group's Turkish
    co-chairman, Kaan Soyak, complained.

    Ankara has stuck to its preconditions despite years of pressure from
    Washington, which believes that the normalization of Turkish-Armenian
    relations would give a huge boost to regional stability. "I think
    that there are a lot of people in the upper reaches of the Turkish
    government who recognize that an open border would change the strategic
    map here in a very positive way," US Deputy Assistant Secretary
    of State for Europe and Eurasia Matthew Bryza said in October 2007
    (RFE/RL, October 24, 2007).

    According to David Phillips, an American scholar who chaired a
    US-sponsored "reconciliation commission" of prominent Turks and
    Armenians, Ankara came within an inch of opening that border in the
    summer of 2003. In a book published in 2005, Phillips said the Turks
    backed off after the U.S. pressure "all but disappeared" with the
    onset of the war in Iraq. With no such pressure visible at the moment
    and prospects for a Nagorno-Karabakh settlement remaining uncertain,
    a Turkish-Armenian rapprochement may still be a long way off.
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