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Turkey's Initiative: Prospects For Armenia

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  • Turkey's Initiative: Prospects For Armenia

    TURKEY'S INITIATIVE: PROSPECTS FOR ARMENIA
    Vardan Grigoryan

    Hayots Ashkhar Daily
    26 Sep 2008
    Armenia

    The Armenian, Azeri and Turkish Foreign Ministers' trilateral meeting
    that's going to take place today in the frameworks of the 63rd session
    of the UN General Assembly arouses interest both in the diplomatic
    circles of different countries and among the politicians and political
    scientists of Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    Over the recent days, the Azerbaijani mass media have been sparing no
    effort for persuading their own society that Turkey's mediation will
    push Armenia to concession and may very soon break the unyieldingness
    of the Armenian side.

    The assessments made in our reality in this connection may be
    conventionally divided into two groups: internal political and expert.

    The first group of assessments has been mainly expressed by the
    representatives of the radical opposition who, assuming the airs of
    wise people, have finally "revealed" that Turkey cannot be a mediator
    in the Karabakh settlement talks.

    The second group of assessments deriving from serious expert circles
    views the fact of the trilateral meeting in the context of the
    concrete current situation in the region and distinguishes it from
    the settlement of the Karabakh conflict.

    At present, the Karabakh settlement format proposed by the OSCE Minsk
    Group is not only maintained but also applied. So, the Armenian20
    President has already managed to meet with the Co-Chairs in the
    frameworks of his current visit to New York. Furthermore, the latter
    haven't expressed any objection to the prospect of the meeting of
    the Armenian, Azeri and Turkish Foreign Ministers, since they do
    not absolutely consider it to be a serious alternative to the OSCE
    Minsk Group.

    Hence, the main issue does not consist in either Azerbaijan's dream to
    see Turkey in the role of a full mediator or the absence of Armenia's
    will. Our country has already expressed its standpoint in a clear
    manner and agrees to the idea of proceeding with the talks by the
    mediation of the Minsk Group.

    The heart of the problem lies behind the Armenian-Turkish dialogues
    and negotiations initiated by the real forces leading a battle against
    one another in the region. Turkey desires to expand its role in the
    South Caucasus by way of normalizing its relations with Armenia. It
    has no other way since Georgia and Azerbaijan have already given the
    country whatever it needed.

    Quite different is the nature of the present and past of the
    Armenian-Turkish relations as their regulation acquires a strategic
    importance for Turkey in the present-day conditions. In this context,
    Ankara has become faced with a hard choice which, in some sense,
    is a kind of test for it.

    With the purpose of moving forward with its recent initiative in the
    South Caucasus,=2 0Turkey has to prove to the other participants of the
    regional maneuvers that it can renounce its traditional preferences
    in the relations between Baku and Yerevan and act as a more or less
    impartial "broker", at least outwardly.

    That's why, Baku's recent statements that Turkey may mitigate Armenia's
    attitude towards the Karabakh issue were followed by the clear-cut
    and tough answer of the Armenian Foreign Minister: Ankara obviously
    has much greater potentials and levers for influencing Baku rather
    than Yerevan with which it doesn't even have diplomatic ties.

    Turkey's initiative of organizing a trilateral meeting with the
    participation of the Armenian and Azeri Foreign Ministers do not,
    as a matter of fact, imply a change in the negotiation format. The
    countries acting as mediators in the frameworks of the OSCE Minsk
    Group will never lose their holdfast of such a serious lever. Ankara
    has to make a choice between the prospects of becoming either the
    'elder brother' of Azerbaijan or a regional superpower. And the
    seeming "green light" that opens on it way towards the settlement of
    the Karabakh conflict is the "litmus test" with the help of which all
    the centers of the power interested in the South Caucasus should draw
    relevant conclusions in the near future.

    The Western strategists believe Turkey has to sacrifice its traditional
    role of being Az erbaijan's protector and become the regional power
    which is capable of persuading Baku to accept the Karabakh settlement
    conditions elaborated by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs. If the
    mediator countries are now unable to overcome Baku's persistence,
    it is for the sole reason that the latter has the "strong support" of
    Ankara behind its back. So, the meeting of the three countries' Foreign
    Ministers is an opportunity of "driving out one nail with another".

    In such conditions, Armenia could not have deprived either the
    Co-Chairs or Turkey of such "pleasure" because it loses nothing as a
    result of such complex maneuvers. But as regards Turkey, it may lose
    a lot.

    A question arises as to whether Turkey will assume the expected role
    or it will continue convincing Armenia that it has been keeping the
    Armenian-Turkish border closed since 1993 solely "because of the
    Armenian aggression in Azerbaijan". We believe that at the current
    stage of the negotiations, Turkey will avoid making attempts to
    influence any of the parties in order not to scare Armenia off and
    at the same time not to offend Azerbaijan. Ankara still hopes to
    do away with the trap standing on its path, playing on the "field"
    of the Russian-American discords, i.e. showing each of the parties
    that the "game" it is playing in the South Caucasus is the one which
    is adv antageous to it.

    Therefore, the ongoing negotiations in New York will, on the one hand,
    ensure a certain "propaganda effect" for Turkey, and, on the other
    hand, establish an "additional platform" for the OSCE Minsk Group
    Co-Chairs, enabling them to test their proposals.
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