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Turkey End Play: Turkey Goes Active In The Caucasus And Plans To Res

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  • Turkey End Play: Turkey Goes Active In The Caucasus And Plans To Res

    TURKISH END PLAY: TURKEY GOES ACTIVE IN THE CAUCASUS AND PLANS TO RESTORE RELATIONS WITH ARMENIA: ARMENIA AND TURKEY INTEND TO NORMALIZE RELATIONS
    by Dmitry Yermolayev

    WPS Agency
    What the Papers Say Weekly Review (Russia)
    September 15, 2008 Monday
    Russia

    Presidents of Armenia and Turkey met in Yerevan and decided to finally
    normalize relations between their two countries, severed in 1915. "We
    all hope that we are able to express good-will for solution to the
    existing problems rather than leave them to the next generations to
    grapple with," President of Armenia Serj Sargsjan said. "We expressed
    the political will to create the atmosphere necessary to solve the
    problems that exist," his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul Enhanced
    Coverage LinkingAbdullah Gul -Search using: Biographies Plus News News,
    Most Recent 60 Days added. A meeting between Armenian and Turkish
    foreign ministers followed the summit. The ministers reiterated the
    determination to reestablish fully-fledged relations and discussed
    the Caucasus Stability and Security Platform.

    What does it mean? Could Ankara, Baku's dedicated ally in the Karabakh
    conflict settlement, decide to normalize relations with Armenia
    and even perhaps establish diplomatic relations with it? Everything
    done in the region so far (construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    pipeline and development of transport routes between Baku and Ankara
    bypassing Armenia) did not exactly endear Turkey to Armenia. Neither
    was it calculated to, for that matter.

    So dramatic a turn in Ankara's foreign policy took Azerbaijan entirely
    by surprise so that it took Baku certain time to recover its wits
    and try to puzzle it out. A statement made by Novruz Mamedov of the
    Azerbaijani president's secretariat implied that "Yerevan needed
    Gul's visit more than Ankara itself did." It was a misinterpretation,
    of course. President of France Nicolas Sarkozy appraised Gul's visit
    to Yerevan as "a gallant initiative of historic magnitude."

    What with the geopolitical changes taking place in this part of the
    Caucasus, Armenian-Turkish normalization facilitates settlement of the
    old conflict over Karabakh and, even more importantly, brings Turkey
    into the equation in a manner official Baku never expected. No wonder
    Sargsjan made a point in the talks with Gul that a dialogue was all it
    took to discuss any problem however complicated. Bearing in mind that
    Gul is also expected to visit Azerbaijan now and the United States
    on September 20, observers are stone-cold confident that some game
    on a major scale is under way, one where stakes are high indeed.

    Activization of Turkey's policy in the Caucasus in the meantime may
    have a thoroughly logical explanation. Georgian aggression against
    South Ossetia played havoc with the previous geopolitical accents
    in the region, including the ones that concern security of energy
    routs from Azerbaijan to Turkey via Georgia. What really counts
    is that this aggression put the Western community's pet Nabucco in
    jeopardy. Official Baku is understandably upset. In fact, Azerbaijani
    Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedjarov informed official Ankara on a visit
    there recently that Azerbaijan could shift all its energy export routes
    to the territory of Russia after all. Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan
    seem to be of the same frame of mind. It means that Turkey may cease
    being the route by which Central Asian hydrocarbons reach Europe.

    It may be added that Ankara's refusal to recognize genocide of the
    Armenians in 1915 was one of the factors that prevented its membership
    in the European Union. Normalization of the relations with Armenia
    now may remove this barrier and some others as well. There is actually
    more to it than meets the eye. Turkey's participation in the so called
    Caucasus Five project boosts its geopolitical weight in the eyes of
    Europe and makes it a broker in the international dialogue initiated
    by Paris.

    As for the Turkish-Azerbaijani relations, Gul's visit to Yerevan
    plainly shows that Baku is about to be asked to accept a peaceful
    solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. This is precisely the
    geopolitical end game Moscow has been telling Baku to beware. It is
    up to Azerbaijan now.
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