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ANKARA: Opening Doors And Hearts

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  • ANKARA: Opening Doors And Hearts

    OPENING DOORS AND HEARTS
    by Dogu Ergil

    Today's Zaman
    Sept 10 2008
    Turkey

    Despite unfair and unsavoury criticisms from the opposition, President
    Abdullah Gul went through with the expected visit to Armenia.

    No doubt, there are ultra-nationalistic elements on both sides who
    hoped this visit would never happen and that people would continue to
    live with the burden of the "historical baggage" that has disrupted
    nearly 600 years of mutual life together on Anatolian soil. The
    occasion was afforded by the invitation of the president of Armenia,
    Mr Serzh Sargsyan, to watch a European Cup qualifying game between
    the Turkish and Armenian national football teams. This historic visit
    made President Gul the first Turkish president ever to set foot in
    Armenia. That is why it has an important symbolic meaning as well as
    the practical end of starting a long-delayed rapprochement between
    the two neighbours estranged since World War I.

    The visit was a necessary one for three important reasons: First,
    Turkey had recently tabled a proposal that could help find solutions to
    tensions in the troubled Caucasus through dialogue and cooperation. The
    proposal entailed a diplomatic medium called the Caucasus Stability
    and Cooperation Platform involving the Russian Federation, Georgia,
    Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey. Surely it would not be wise to
    refrain from developing diplomatic relations with a country in the
    same organization one has proposed. In the absence of mitigating
    organizations in the Caucasus, souring relations could end up in bloody
    conflicts, as between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Russia and Chechnya and,
    most recently, between Russia and Georgia.

    Russia's military action in Georgia has persuaded both Armenia and
    Turkey that it is time to put their differences aside - of course,
    with some help from friends (meaning the US and the EU). The armed
    conflict made it obvious that oil and gas pipelines passing through
    Georgia, financed largely by the West, joining the rich Caspian region
    to Turkey's Mediterranean coast is not safe anymore.

    So far bypassing Armenia not only pushed this country closer to Russia
    and Iran but put it in a vulnerable position in terms of energy
    supplies. All of a sudden Armenia became an attractive alternative
    route. NATO seems to be encouraging its most eastern member, Turkey,
    to seek alternative routes. This position inevitably gives Turkey a
    more important role than it presently plays in the Caucasus. But then
    this requires Ankara to mend severed relations with Armenia. Armenia
    also seems to be more willing to reciprocate at a time when Russia
    has begun to flex its muscles to rebuild its firm grip on its "near
    abroad," as in Soviet times. And Armenia never wants to go back to
    those days. There is a new generation that believes the future should
    be quite different than the past. This requires better relations
    with Turkey.

    Second, the visit intends to initiate an improvement in relations
    without being captives of history and a development of ties that will
    yield mutual benefits to both peoples. Armenia is a landlocked country
    and wants an outlet to move goods and people freely and easily. The
    Turkish eastern provinces are in dire need of economic development and
    invigoration of their commercial and industrial potential. Opening up
    border gates that have been closed since 1993 and paving the way for
    a robust economic exchange can enliven both Armenia and relatively
    underdeveloped eastern Turkey.
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