Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Azerbaijan's Dangerous Dance With Russia

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

  • ANKARA: Azerbaijan's Dangerous Dance With Russia

    AZERBAIJAN'S DANGEROUS DANCE WITH RUSSIA
    by Lale Sariibrahimoglu

    Today's Zaman
    April 14 2009
    Turkey

    As Armenia and Turkey come close to normalizing ties, which will not
    only contribute to the stability of the volatile South Caucasus but
    also to relations between Ankara and Yerevan, Azerbaijan has taken a
    last minute stance that can only be perceived as an act of sabotage
    supported by Russia.

    Turkish diplomatic sources are of the view that Russia was behind
    the last-minute snag created by Azerbaijan over Armenian-Turkish
    rapprochement. Russia has long benefited from the Azerbaijani-Armenian
    and Armenian-Turkish dispute. That dispute, however, has a serious
    potential to negatively affect ties between NATO allies Turkey and the
    US, too, because the US Congress has already made several attempts
    in the past decade to recognize the events of 1915 that took place
    during Ottoman Turkish rule as genocide of Armenians.

    During his April 6-7 visit to Turkey, US President Barack Obama
    reiterated his election campaign pledge to recognize the events of
    1915 as a genocide of Armenians, but stated that the US will not
    prevent Armenian-Turkish relations to progress. This was widely read
    as a message that Obama will not use the word "genocide" during his
    April 24 speech if he makes one. April 24 is regarded as the day mass
    killings of Armenians began in 1915.

    There is a strong belief that if Obama had the intention of using
    the word "genocide" during his April speech, he would not have
    visited Ankara.

    Turkey strongly denies genocide allegations and has warned the US
    for decades that if its Congress passes a resolution to this end and
    if a US president utters the word "genocide," it will irreparably
    damage relations between the two allies, which need each other in
    this volatile region of the Middle East, the Caucasus, the Balkans
    and the eastern Mediterranean.

    But finally, Turkey, which has done nothing for decades apart from
    denying genocide allegations, came up with a proposal to Armenia
    in 2005 to set up a committee of historians to investigate the 1915
    events while broadening its package of proposals to begin relations
    with its northeastern neighbour, Armenia.

    That package includes a solution to the Nagornyy Karabakh dispute,
    an Azerbaijani territory with a predominantly Armenian population,
    an opening of the border between Turkey and Armenia that Turkey
    closed in 1993 after the Azerbaijani-Armenian dispute over Nagornyy
    Karabakh broke out, an opening of diplomatic ties with Armenia as well
    as the start of deliberations among historians of both countries on
    the genocide allegations.

    However, with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's last-minute refusal
    to participate in the United Nations Alliance of Civilizations (UNAOC)
    meeting held in Istanbul last week, it has become clear that Baku
    protests Ankara-Yerevan rapprochement before progress is made on
    Nagornyy Karabakh. Armenian-Turkish relations have once again been
    hijacked by the Baku-Yerevan dispute.

    A former Turkish ambassador to the US who also served as the Turkish
    ambassador in Baku, Faruk Logoglu, is of the belief that although
    the Armenian-Turkish package of solutions will be beneficial for the
    whole region, Turkey has neglected the public diplomacy aspect of
    the rapprochement.

    "Turkish decision makers should have informed the parties in Parliament
    about the steps taken on improving ties with Armenia while the Turkish
    public should also have been informed to a certain extent," Logoglu
    said last Sunday during a roundtable discussion hosted by CNNTurk.

    However, the question is whether the Aliyev administration in Baku
    really cares about public diplomacy and hence the reaction seen from
    his people.

    Instead, Aliyev has apparently used his state-controlled media, which
    published last week anti-rapprochement stories citing the unresolved
    status of the Nagornyy Karabakh dispute, creating a last-minute snag
    to prevent a breakthrough in Armenian-Turkish relations.

    Murat Mercan, a deputy from the ruling Justice and Development
    Party (AK Party) and head of the parliamentary Foreign Relations
    Committee, noted on the same program that Turkey informed Baku about
    all bilateral talks that have taken place between Turkey and Armenia
    formally and informally over the past several years. Mercan's remarks
    raised question marks over the sincerity of Aliyev's decision to not
    attend the Istanbul gathering. He did not cite any reason for his
    absence from the event.

    The reaction from Azerbaijan, which has already begun supplying gas to
    the European markets via Turkey, bypassing Russia, has forced Turkish
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to state on April 9 that the
    absence of a resolution between Armenia and Azerbaijan concerning the
    Nagornyy Karabakh dispute stands as an obstacle to ongoing negotiations
    for a normalization of ties between Armenia and Turkey.

    This past week's developments indicate that behind Aliyev's negative
    stance, fuelling its own media and the public against Armenian-Turkish
    progress in relations, has been Russia, which has several benefits
    in sabotaging the arrival of stability in the Caucasus.

    The implementation of the package long negotiated between Turkey
    and Armenia, with Azerbaijan being informed of almost all steps,
    has now been jeopardized by both Azerbaijan and Russia.

    The US has been of the strong belief that implementing the
    Armenian-Turkish package soon will give US President Obama
    ammunition to fire back at Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the US House
    of Representatives, and her supporters in their attempts to pass a
    resolution describing the 1915 events as a genocide of Armenians.

    Instead of conditioning the normalization of Turkish-Armenian
    relations on Nagornyy Karabakh, Turkey should unveil and implement the
    package. Such a policy will mark a big step in solving the Nagornyy
    Karabakh dispute.
Working...
X