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Dialogue With Turkey Could Hurt Armenia, Says Manoyan

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  • Dialogue With Turkey Could Hurt Armenia, Says Manoyan

    DIALOGUE WITH TURKEY COULD HURT ARMENIA, SAYS MANOYAN

    www.asbarez.com/index.html?showarticle=41 427_4/13/2009_1
    Monday, April 13, 2009

    YEREVAN (Combined Sources)--The dialogue with Turkey could hurt
    Armenia, said Armenian Revolutionary Federation Political Director
    Giro Manoyan Monday during a press conference.

    Manoyan emphasized that any agreement on the border opening must
    accompany relevant documents on the establishing of diplomatic
    relations between the two countries, saying that opening of the
    borders would be meaningless with such an agreement.

    Speaking at a news conference on Friday, President Serzh Sarkisian said
    Armenia would "emerge from this process stronger" in any case because
    the international community will have no doubts about its commitment
    to an unconditional normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations.

    "In a sense, we share the president's opinion," said Manoyan, "But it
    all depends on how long those negotiations will continue and whether
    or not we will lose something else in the process."

    Manoyan said that Armenia, up to now, has successfully avoided the
    inclusion of the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process in its discussions
    with Turkey. However, he said, the recent vocal opposition to any
    agreement between Armenia and Turkey by Azerbaijan could compel Turkey
    to take a second look.

    In the event that Turkey yields to Azeri demands, Manoyan said,
    the talks will crumble.

    Manoyan explained that Turkey has entered this process because of
    its regional interests and the talks of an impending agreement were
    strategically positioned to ward off any possible recognition of the
    Genocide by President Barack Obama, who made a campaign pledge to
    properly characterize the events of 1915 as genocide.

    "One of the reasons why Turkey began the negotiations is to
    prevent Obama from uttering the word genocide on April 24," he told
    journalists. "And if the Turks succeed in doing that, I think we will
    not quite emerge stronger whatever the outcome of the negotiations."

    Obama avoided using the term during his visit to Turkey last week,
    citing the need not to undermine the Turkish-Armenian talks. He said
    those talks "could bear fruit very quickly, very soon."

    However, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has since twice
    stated that his country will not establish diplomatic relations with
    Armenia and open the Turkish-Armenian border before a resolution of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. "We will not sign a final deal with
    Armenia unless there is agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia on
    Nagorno-Karabakh," Erdogan said on Friday, according to the Anatolia
    news agency.

    Manoyan reiterated that any agreement between Armenian and Turkey
    should not call into question the veracity of the Armenian Genocide. He
    also said that the ARF would publish its assessment of the political
    and economic implications on Armenia of an Armenian-Turkey agreement
    in the near future.
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