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As Talks With Azeris/Turks Falter, Armenia Expands Access To Georgia

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  • As Talks With Azeris/Turks Falter, Armenia Expands Access To Georgia

    AS TALKS WITH AZERIS/TURKS FALTER, ARMENIA EXPANDS ACCESS TO GEORGIA/IRAN
    By Harut Sassounian

    AZG Armenian Daily
    11/10/2008

    Regional

    The budding relationship between Armenia and Turkey, which started
    with last month's "football diplomacy" with much fanfare and high
    expectations , is facing serious difficulties.

    While no one expected a quick resolution of the long-standing issues
    stemming from the Genocide and its persistent denial by Turkey,
    few anticipated that the nascent rapprochement would falter so quickly.

    After a very friendly and hopeful first meeting between the presidents
    and foreign ministers of Armenia and Turkey, occasioned by the
    unprecedented soccer match between their national teams on September
    6 in Yerevan, it appears that the Artsakh (Karabagh) conflict is the
    main reason for the sudden rift.

    To begin with, it was strange that the presidents of Armenia and
    Turkey did not hold a follow-up meeting during their attendance of the
    U.N. General Assembly sessions in New York in late September. When
    Pres. Gul was asked by Turkish journalists why no meeting was
    scheduled with the Armenian President, he first said he was not aware
    that Pres. Sargsyan was coming to New York and then assured them
    that they would run into each other during one of many diplomatic
    receptions. Despite such optimistic talk, the two presidents never
    meet. They may have been waiting for the outcome of discussions
    between the foreign ministers of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey who
    met on the last day of their stay in New York.

    On September 28, two days after Pres. Sargsyan left New Yor k, he
    told reporters that there were "no concrete results yet" from the
    foreign ministers' meeting and that he had not expected much from
    their encounter.

    On the same day, Pres. Gul confirmed that there had not been
    any significant movement to merit the lifting of the blockade of
    Armenia. Taking a tough stand , he told a Turkish group that "no
    talks on border opening are possible before Armenia's liberation of
    Azerbaijani territories," according to the AzeriTaj news agency. Thus,
    Pres. Gul was reverting to Turkey's previous preconditions that had
    been long rejected by the Armenian side. A senior aide to Azerbaijan's
    president, in his turn, confirmed this week that several serious
    issues remain unresolved on the Artsakh issue.

    Ankara and Baku assumed that since the Georgian-Russian conflict had
    temporarily deprived Armenia of the opportunity to import more than
    70% of its vital supplies from Georgia's Black Sea ports, this was
    the ideal time to force Yerevan into making serious concessions on
    the Genocide issue and the Artsakh conflict.

    Whether it was coincidence or not, several major initiatives announced
    by Pres. Sargsyan last week had the effect of countering the hard-line
    taken by Ankara and Baku in their recent negotiations with Armenia,
    and dispelling the false impression that Yerevan is desperately
    seeking to reopen the border with Turkey at any cost.

    Pres. Sargsyan announced during his last week's visit to Tbilisi that
    he had reached an agreement with Pres. Saakashvili to jointly build
    a modern highway that would considerably shorten the transport time
    between the Georgian Port of Batumi and Yerevan.

    In a nationally televised speech delivered for the first time in
    the Armenian Parliament -- akin to the State of the Union address
    by American presidents before the U.S. Congress -- Pres. Sargsyan
    announced that a new railway would be constructed to link Iran with
    Armenia, to facilitate and expand trade between the two countries. He
    also said that Armenia would build a new nuclear power plant to ensure
    that the country remains energy self-sufficient when its aging plant
    is shut down. Finally, he stated that a Pan-Armenian Bank and an
    investment fund would be established in Yerevan to finance these
    projects. He said that these "large and daring initiatives" would
    solve Armenia's important strategic and economic problems.

    Along with these major programs, Armenia just formed a new Diaspora
    Ministry to streamline and strengthen its relations with millions of
    Armenians living abroad. On September 24, during a major banquet in
    New York, Pres. Sargsyan gave the 700 Armenian guests an uplifting
    message of unity, urging them to join forces for the betterment of
    Armenia and the Diaspora. He also thanked all those assisting in the
    resolution of the Artsakh conflict, "the condemnation of the Armenian
    Genocide, and the restoration of historical justice."

    These new initiatives are bound to improve Armenia's bargaining hand
    and help negotiate with Turkey and Azerbaijan from a position of
    strength. The expansion of Armenia's alternate land routes through
    Georgia and Iran would considerably diminish the utility of opening
    the border with Turkey and circumvent more effectively the blockades
    imposed by Ankara and Baku.

    While Armenian officials do want to improve relations with all of
    their neighbors, they are not so desperate as to make unacceptable
    concessions on the Genocide and Artsakh issues.
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