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Armenia-Turkey negotiations hit a bump -- ROA FM refrains from visit

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  • Armenia-Turkey negotiations hit a bump -- ROA FM refrains from visit

    Armenia-Turkey negotiations hit a bump

    Armenian Minister of Foreign Affairs refrains from visiting Istanbul
    following statements by Turkish President and Prime Minister

    YEREVAN, 5 March 2009 -- The Armenian Yerkir Media TV reports that
    Armenian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Edward Nalbandian, did not get
    on the Yerevan-Istanbul flight late this evening, after issuing a
    terse response to announcements made by Turkish President Gul and
    Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan that Turkey will not lift its blockade
    of Armenia unless Armenia fulfils Turkish preconditions regarding the
    Mountainous (Nagorno) Karabagh issue and the international recognition
    of the Armenian Genocide.

    Responding to a question by the Interfax news agency, the Armenian
    Foreign Minister said: "The establishment of Armenian-Turkish
    relations should be realized without any preconditions and with that
    understanding we have been and are conducting the negotiations with
    the Turkish side.

    "The establishment of relations is not related to the resolution of
    the Karabagh issue and that issue has not been discussed during the
    negotiations aimed at establishing Armenian-Turkish relations.

    "It has been said many times and I wish to stress again that the
    establishment of Armenian-Turkish relations can not put into question
    the veracity of the Armenian Genocide.

    "Tens of countries and international organizations have recognized the
    Armenian genocide and Armenia has hailed that recognition.

    "I think that the announcements that put forward preconditions to the
    establishment of Armenian-Turkish relations can be viewed as an
    attempt to fail the advances registered during the negotiations,"
    concludes Foreign Minister Nalbandian.

    The Armenian Foreign Ministry distributed Minister Nalbandian's
    response just before the Armavia flight from Yerevan to Istanbul, at
    23:06.

    The Armenian Minister of Foreign Affairs was to attend a two-day
    United Nations cultural forum in Istanbul. The Armenian Minister's
    now failed visit was seen by the U.S. and Turkish media as a step
    towards the establishment of diplomatic relations between Turkey and
    Armenia, which Turkey has refused since Armenia gained its
    independence in 1991.

    The Armenian Foreign Minister's derailed visit to Turkey was to
    coincide with U.S. President Barack Obama's official visit to Turkey.
    Analysts had pointed to the issue of the Armenian Genocide as possibly
    the most challenging for the president to deal with during his talks
    with Turkish officials.

    On several occasions during his campaign for president, Obama had
    committed himself to properly recognize the massacres and deportations
    of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide. Turkey continues
    to vehemently deny that there was any genocidal intent towards the
    Armenians in the last years of the empire. Official Ankara spends
    millions of dollars in its denial campaign, which lobbies politicians,
    entices support from journalists, funds academic denial efforts,
    suppresses education efforts on the Armenian Genocide to the general
    public in North and South America, Europe, and the Middle East (Israel
    especially).

    The main battlefield for genocide recognition in recent years has been
    the United States, where a majority of Members of Congress support
    passing a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide.

    Turkish officials had hoped that the recent rapprochement between
    Turkey and Armenia can be used as a bargaining chip to keep Obama from
    speaking the truth. On numerous occasions in recent months, top
    Turkish officials have warned the U.S. that interfering in discussions
    between Turkey and Armenia and recognizing the genocide would be
    detrimental to the budding relations between Yerevan and Ankara.

    Now, announcements by the Turkish Prime Minister and the Turkish
    President, resetting preconditions to the establishment of diplomatic
    relations with Armenia and to the lifting of the blockade have
    actually led the Armenia-Turkey negotiations into a rocky road or
    maybe even an impasse.
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