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Diplomats Foresee Turkey, Armenia Pact

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  • Diplomats Foresee Turkey, Armenia Pact

    DIPLOMATS FORESEE TURKEY, ARMENIA PACT
    By Nicholas Birch

    The Washington Times
    April 3, 2009 Friday

    Turkey and Armenia could be on the brink of a historic reconciliation
    that will include a joint investigation of the killing of hundreds
    of thousands of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915, Turkish diplomats
    and specialists say.

    Hugh Pope, Turkey project director for the International Crisis
    Group, said that after two years of secret talks, the historic rivals
    are nearing agreement on a sweeping package that includes opening
    a border closed since 1993, diplomatic relations and a bilateral
    intergovernmental commission on issues ranging from taxes and public
    health to the history of what Armenians have called genocide by the
    Ottoman Empire, which preceded modern Turkey.

    Turkey is also expected to issue a "road map" on a solution for
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a region in Azerbaijan that has been under de facto
    Armenian control since 1994.

    "The parameters of the deal are very much set," Mr. Pope said. "The
    only thing holding things back now is nerves."

    The Wall Street Journal first reported the potential deal on Thursday,
    and said it could be unveiled as soon as April 16, when Turkey's
    foreign minister is expected to fly to the Armenian capital.

    Turkish diplomats in Ankara and Washington confirmed the peace progress
    but not the date for an announcement, which could follow by only a
    few days President Obama's visit to Turkey.

    "These are extremely serious negotiations," said a senior Turkish
    diplomat, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the
    issue. "We are optimistic and we have been working hard and hopefully
    we will see positive developments."

    "These are highly sensitive negotiations and both sides have gone to
    great lengths to keep them secret," added a Turkish foreign ministry
    spokesman.

    Armenian officials in Yerevan and Washington declined comment.

    Aram Hamparian, executive director of the Armenian National Committee,
    a U.S. group, said, "Any durable reconciliation has got to be built
    upon Turkey's acceptance of its past, and that is acknowledging the
    Armenian genocide."

    Last month, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian acknowledged
    that Turkish-Armenian talks had taken place but said they had not
    touched on the 1915 killings.

    The deal would be a radical change of direction for Turkey, which
    closed its border with Armenia in support of its Azeri ethnic cousins
    fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh in 1993. Turkish experts said the concept
    has gained strength since the AK Party took power in Turkey in 2002 and
    that talks accelerated after Turkish President Abdullah Gul attended
    a Turkey-Armenia soccer match in Yerevan in September 2008.

    "There is very detailed specific set of steps that could be
    taken," said Mark Parris, a former U.S. ambassador to Turkey who
    now heads a program on the country at the Brookings Institution
    in Washington. "Opening borders, establishing embassies, trade
    development and a historical commission to look into the events of
    1915 would put things in a different universe."

    Mr. Parris said he was not sure what the impact of Mr. Obama's visit
    might be on the peace process. During the presidential campaign,
    Mr. Obama called the Turkish killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians
    "genocide" and said he would support a resolution in the U.S. Congress
    recognizing it. Also, on April 24, the White House traditionally
    issues a statement commemorating the killings.

    Turkey denies a genocide occurred.

    Thomas de Waal, author of a highly regarded book on the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, said the emerging deal has a lot to do
    with changes in Russia's south Caucasian policy since it went to war
    with Georgia in August 2008.

    "The war really drove home Armenia's reliance on Georgia as a trade
    conduit," he said.

    "Russia saw that blowing up one Georgian bridge was enough to deprive
    [its Armenian ally] of imports for a week. Plus the fact is that Russia
    now owns Armenia's economy. If you own the telecom sector and railways,
    opening up the border is in your interest."

    * Barbara Slavin and Eli Lake contributed to this story from
    Washington.
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