Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey Pushes For More Nagorno Karabakh Talks Amid Warning Ties With

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

  • Turkey Pushes For More Nagorno Karabakh Talks Amid Warning Ties With

    TURKEY PUSHES FOR MORE NAGORNO-KARABAKH TALKS AMID WARMING TIES WITH ARMENIA
    Emil Danielyan

    EurasiaNet
    9/29/08
    NY

    EURASIA INSIGHT

    Turkey is sponsoring additional Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations
    on the unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in an apparent effort
    to hasten the normalization of its historically strained ties with
    Armenia.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan sat down with his Azerbaijani
    and Armenian counterparts in New York on September 26 as Ankara
    sought to keep up the momentum in its unprecedented rapprochement
    with Yerevan. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. The
    trilateral meeting came amid signs that the United States and other
    international mediators will make another attempt to hammer out a
    framework peace accord on Karabakh before the end of this year.

    Babacan and Foreign Ministers Eduard Nalbandian of Armenia and
    Elmar Mammadyarov of Azerbaijan disclosed few details about their
    discussions, telling journalists only that they focused on a Turkish
    proposal to create a new regional organization that would include the
    three South Caucasus states as well as Russia and Turkey. "We discussed
    the Caucasus Cooperation and Stability Platform, an initiative proposed
    by Turkey, and started negotiating on some concrete regional issues
    during today's meeting," Babacan said in remarks broadcast by Armenian
    state television. He said Nalbandian and Mammadyarov reaffirmed their
    countries' support for the platform and asked the Turkish side to
    initiate more tripartite talks.

    The three ministers' meeting, held on the sidelines of the UN General
    Assembly, is widely linked to a dramatic thaw in Turkish-Armenian
    relations that culminated in Turkish President Abdullah Gul's historic
    September 6 visit to Yerevan. His talks there with Armenian President
    Serzh Sargsyan raised hopes for the establishment of diplomatic
    relations and the reopening of the border between the two neighboring
    states. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Turkey has
    long made the normalization of relations with Armenia conditional
    on a resolution of the Karabakh conflict acceptable to Azerbaijan,
    a country with which it has a close ethnic and cultural affinity.

    The Turkish-Armenian "football diplomacy" raised fears in Azerbaijan
    that Ankara might soon drop this precondition in return for Armenian
    concessions on other issues. Gul clearly sought to allay these fears
    when he flew to Baku just days after his trip to Yerevan. Both he
    and other Turkish officials stressed the importance of a Karabakh
    settlement for Turkish-Armenian dialogue. "These two processes have
    a mutually reinforcing character - any positive development on one
    would significantly have a stimulating effect on the other," Babacan
    wrote in a commentary published by the International Herald Tribune
    on September 23.

    "It will be much easier for the Turks to move forward with Armenia
    if there is progress on Nagorno-Karabakh," one well-informed Western
    observer dealing with Turkey and the region told EurasiaNet. Just
    how they hope to help achieve a breakthrough in the long-running
    Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks is not clear.

    While the Armenian leadership continues to believe that Turkey
    is inherently unfit to act as an impartial Karabakh mediator, it
    does not object to some kind of a Turkish involvement in the peace
    process. In a September 24 speech, Sargsyan stressed that the Turks
    can only "assist" in that process by creating a "positive atmosphere"
    for US, Russian and French mediators acting under the aegis of the
    OSCE's so-called Minsk Group.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan are understood to have already agreed on
    most of the basic principles of Karabakh peace that were formally
    put forward by the mediators in November 2007. The framework peace
    accord envisages a gradual settlement of the bitter conflict that
    would let Karabakh's predominantly Armenian population to determine
    the disputed territory's status in a future referendum.

    At the start of 2008, US officials involved in the peace process
    were optimistic that the conflicting parties could bridge their
    few remaining differences and conclude a peace deal by the end of
    the year. The ensuing political turmoil in Armenia, along with a
    toughening of the rhetoric coming out of Baku, seemed to dash those
    early hopes. Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev and his new Armenian
    counterpart, Sargsyan, re-energized the talks when they held their
    first face-to-face meeting in Saint-Petersburg, Russia, in June.

    Russia's war with Georgia appears to have heightened the Western
    and possibly Russian mediators' sense of urgency. Deputy Assistant
    Secretary of State Matthew Bryza, Washington's top Karabakh negotiator,
    indicated during a recent visit to the conflict zone that the
    outgoing US administration will step up its efforts to resolve the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani dispute in the coming weeks. "The recent events
    in Georgia underscore the importance of a timely resolution of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict," Bryza told a news conference in Baku on
    September 18.

    Bryza and the French and Russian diplomats co-chairing the Minsk Group
    are now pushing for another meeting of the Armenian and Azerbaijani
    presidents. According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Nalbandian
    and Mammadyarov discussed the possibility of such a meeting during
    their separate talks in the mediators' presence in New York earlier
    on September 26. Speaking to journalists after his September 16 talks
    in Moscow with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, Aliyev said there
    is now "a good basis" for ending the Karabakh conflict.

    Gul similarly spoke of his "feelings of great content and optimism" as
    he returned to Ankara from Baku on September 11. Armenia and Azerbaijan
    both have "an honest and sincere desire for a settlement," he said,
    according to the Anatolia news agency. Writing in the Turkish Daily
    News on September 25, Cengiz Candar, a veteran Turkish columnist,
    said Ankara expects an Armenian-Azerbaijani deal to be cut shortly
    after the October 15 presidential election in Azerbaijan, which the
    incumbent Aliyev is widely expected to win. "Diplomatic ties between
    Turkey and Armenia will be formed concurrently, and the sides will
    announce the opening of borders," he said.

    What the Turkish government will do if the Karabakh conflict remains
    unresolved is an open question. Ankara and Yerevan are reportedly close
    to overcoming another Turkish precondition for normalizing bilateral
    ties: an end to the decades-long Armenian campaign for international
    recognition of the World War One-era massacres of Armenians in the
    Ottoman Empire as genocide. The Sargsyan administration seems ready to
    accept a Turkish proposal to form a commission of Turkish and Armenian
    historians that would jointly study the mass killings and deportations.

    Many in Armenia and especially its worldwide Diaspora oppose such a
    study, saying that it would call into question the very fact of what
    many historians consider the first genocide of the 20th century. They
    also view the Turkish proposal as a ploy designed to scuttle the
    genocide's recognition by more foreign nation. [For background see
    the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Sargsyan appeared to dismiss such concerns as he addressed hundreds
    of influential members of the Armenian-American community in New
    York on September 24. "We must talk about all topics," he said. "Only
    those people who have nothing to say and suffer from complexes avoid
    contacts, conversations."

    Editor's Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
    political analyst.
Working...
X