Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Wall Street Journal: Turkey And Armenia Pave Wy For Hstoric Acor

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

  • The Wall Street Journal: Turkey And Armenia Pave Wy For Hstoric Acor

    THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: TURKEY AND ARMENIA PAVE WY FOR HSTORIC ACORDS

    armradio.am
    02.04.2009 13:21

    Turkey and Armenia could soon announce a deal aimed at reopening their
    border and restoring relations, a move that could help stabilize a
    region that's increasingly important as a transit route for oil and
    gas, the Wall Street Journal reports, quoting diplomats.

    The timing of the deal is being choreographed with the schedule of U.S.

    President Barack Obama, who visits Turkey next week, these people say.

    The Turkish and Armenian governments have agreed on terms to open
    formal talks in three areas: opening and fixing borders, restoring
    diplomatic relations and setting up commissions to look at disputes,
    including one on the tense history between the two nations.

    Normalizing relations between Turkey and Armenia would "create a new
    and positive dynamic" in relations across the region, "as well as
    in developing the economic and transport links we have been pursuing
    ever since the collapse of the former Soviet Union," said U.S. Deputy
    Assistant Secretary of State Matthew J Bryza, the State Department's
    point man in the Caucasus.

    Mr. Bryza travels to Azerbaijan Thursday to discuss how a
    Turkish-Armenian agreement could help revive efforts for a settlement
    on Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Announcement of a Turkish-Armenian pact is also being influenced by
    Mr. Obama's campaign promise to support a Congressional resolution
    that would rec ognize as genocide the Ottoman Empire's 1915 killing
    of up to 1.5 million Armenians in what is now central and eastern
    Turkey. Turkey fiercely denies the killings were genocide. The White
    House traditionally makes a statement to mark Armenian Remembrance
    Day on April 24.

    Analysts say Turkey's government hopes progress in reviving its
    relations with Armenia could prompt the White House not to recognize
    the killings as genocide and to block the Congressional resolution.

    If the U.S. proceeds with the genocide resolution, "I cannot imagine
    any Turkish government opening the Armenian border," said Ozgur
    Unluhisarcikli, director of the Ankara office of the German Marshall
    Fund of the United States, a think tank.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey said on Turkish
    television last week he would discuss Nagorno-Karabakh, the Armenian
    "genocide" and relations between Russia and Georgia with the
    U.S. president, among other issues.

    One date under discussion for signing the deal with Armenia, diplomats
    say, is April 16. But Mr. Unluhisarcikli said he believes Turkey and
    Armenia won't be ready to sign the deal before April 24, and Turkey
    instead will "signal" its commitment to reopen the borders in the
    hope that will be enough for Washington.
Working...
X