Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Gul Accepts Invitation To Armenia

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

  • Gul Accepts Invitation To Armenia

    GUL ACCEPTS INVITATION TO ARMENIA
    By Gareth Jenkins

    Eurasia Daily Monitor
    Sept 4 2008
    DC

    On September 3 Turkish President Abdullah Gul announced that he had
    accepted an invitation from Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian to
    attend the soccer match between the two countries in the Armenian
    capital of Yerevan on September 6 as part of the qualifying group
    stages for the 2008 World Cup. It will be the first time a Turkish
    head of state has ever visited Armenia.

    The announcement followed weeks of speculation and has proved to be
    highly controversial inside Turkey. Opposition parties had called on
    Gul to decline the invitation in protest over Armenian support for
    the breakaway region of Karabakh in Azerbaijan and the continuing
    campaign by the Armenian diaspora for the massacres and deportations
    of ethnic Armenians during the final years of the Ottoman Empire to
    be recognized as genocide.

    Turkey was among the first countries to recognize the Republic of
    Armenia following its declaration of independence in 1991. Ironically,
    at the time, one of the leading advocates of closer ties between the
    two countries was Alparslan Turkes (1917-1997), the founder of the
    Turkish ultranationalist Nationalist Action Party (MHP). Relations
    soured, however, when Yerevan supported an armed uprising by ethnic
    Armenians in Karabakh against the Azerbaijani government in Baku. In
    addition to religious and linguistic ties, Ankara has been eager
    to maintain a close relationship with Baku in order to fulfill its
    ambition of making Turkey an energy hub for exports of oil and natural
    gas from the Caspian basin and Central Asia. In 1993 Turkey severed all
    diplomatic ties with Armenia and closed their shared land border. There
    are now regular flights between Yerevan and Istanbul; but, despite
    pressure from both the international community and local business
    organizations in eastern Turkey, the land border remains closed.

    In recent months, however, there have been signs of a possible
    rapprochement. On July 18 Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan
    confirmed rumors in the Turkish media that diplomats from Turkey and
    Armenia had met in Switzerland for several days of informal talks
    about ways of improving ties (see EDM, July 25). Hopes were further
    raised by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's proposal
    of a "Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform," following the
    outbreak of fighting between Russia and Georgia in South Ossetia in
    early August. Erdogan's plan envisages creating a regional framework
    that would enable the countries of the Caucasus to resolve their
    differences without recourse to violence.

    Erdogan's proposal appears to have been motivated by the combination
    of a genuine desire to stop the bloodshed in South Ossetia and his
    ambition for Turkey to prove itself as a regional superpower, which
    includes being recognized as a major player in the Caucasus. Erdogan
    appears to have failed to understand that Russia's policies toward
    both South Ossetia and Abkhazia were motivated by a desire not to
    avoid conflict but simply to assert its preeminence in its "near
    abroad." Nevertheless, Turkey could hardly propose dialogue and closer
    regional cooperation and then reject Sarkisian's invitation to Gul
    to attend a soccer match.

    In a statement posted on its website in the ponderous opacity of
    formal Turkish, the office of the Turkish presidency acknowledged
    that the visit would be concerned with more than the game itself.

    "The match offers important opportunities in addition to being
    a sporting event," noted the statement. "It is believed that this
    opportunity that has arisen should be evaluated in the best possible
    manner by all sides, particularly at a time when the peoples of the
    Caucasus are experiencing worrying developments. It is thought that
    the visit that will be made in relation to this match can contribute
    to the development of a new friendship in the region. It is with
    this understanding that the president has accepted the invitation"
    (website of the Turkish presidency, www.tccb.gov.tr)

    What the statement goes on to describe as "the opportunity provided
    by this visit for the two peoples to understand each other better"
    (www.tccb.gov.tr) is likely to be fairly fleeting. According to
    reports in the Turkish media, Gul will spend only five to six hours in
    Armenia. Accompanied by Babacan, he will fly from Ankara to Yerevan
    on the Airbus 319 known as Ana, which was bought by Erdogan for his
    official use, and which, as the Turkish media have proudly noted,
    has a large Turkish flag painted on its tail (Hurriyet, Milliyet,
    September 4). Gul will arrive in Yerevan about two hours before the
    match and have an approximately one hour meeting with Sarkisian at
    the Armenian presidential palace. The two will then travel to the
    stadium to watch the match together. As soon as the match is over,
    Gul will be driven to the airport and fly straight back to Turkey
    (Milliyet, Radikal, Hurriyet, September 4).

    Nobody seriously expects the visit to result in any breakthrough
    in the longstanding disputes between Turkey and Armenia. Opponents
    of the visit have criticized Gul for making what they regard as a
    meaningless gesture and warned that he is likely to face vociferous
    protests from Armenian ultranationalists in the stadium.

    "Will Armenia completely abandon the genocide claims of the
    diaspora? Will they withdraw from the Azerbaijani territory they
    have occupied?" asked columnist Altemur Kilic in the Turkish
    ultranationalist daily Yeni Cag (Yeni Cag, September 4).

    Fatih Terim, the coach of the Turkish national soccer team, has
    expressed concern that all the talk of the symbolic value of Gul's
    visit is distracting attention from the game itself. It is a match
    that Turkey should and must win in order to boost its chances of
    qualification for the finals.

    "This is just a game of soccer for us, not a war," said Terim. "We
    can't carry the burden of history on our shoulders" (Milliyet,
    Hurriyet, Zaman, NTV, September 4).

    But, on Saturday evening, when the populations of Turkey and Armenia
    tune in to watch the game on television, undoubtedly most will not
    only be remembering history but wondering whether the time has now
    come for relations between the countries to have a future.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X