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ANKARA: Babacan: We Want Turkey, Armenia And Azerbaijan To Win

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  • ANKARA: Babacan: We Want Turkey, Armenia And Azerbaijan To Win

    BABACAN: WE WANT TURKEY, ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN TO WIN

    Today's Zaman
    April 16 2009
    Turkey

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan has said Turkey sees relations
    between it and Armenia from a broad perspective and that Ankara is
    looking for a solution in which Turkey, Armenia and Azerbaijan will
    all be winners.

    "As Turkey, we want a solution in which everybody is a winner. We
    want Turkey, Armenia and Azerbaijan to win," he said on his way to
    the 20th Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) Foreign Ministers
    Council in Yerevan yesterday.

    He also said Turkey is seeking "comprehensive and complete
    normalization."

    "We don't say, 'Let's first solve one problem and solve the other
    later.' We want a similar process to start between Azerbaijan and
    Armenia. We are closely watching the talks between Azerbaijan and
    Armenia," he added.

    Turkish and Armenian officials have been attempting to create
    a formula for normalizing relations between their countries, but
    Armenia's dispute with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh looms in the
    background as a potential deal breaker.

    Azerbaijan, Turkey's strategic and ethnic ally, has been uneasy with
    prospects of a rapprochement between Ankara and Yerevan, fearing
    it will lose key leverage in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute if Turkey
    opens its border and restarts diplomatic ties with Armenia. Ankara
    has previously said normalization with Armenia is contingent on a
    resolution in the dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh, which has been under
    Armenian occupation since 1991.

    A high-level diplomatic source said, "Turkey cares about Azerbaijan's
    problems at least as much as the Azerbaijanis themselves." The two
    countries have long boasted of their relationship as exemplary,
    describing themselves as "one nation with two states" to highlight
    their ethnic and strategic ties.

    Azerbaijan's concerns have been fueled by media reports indicating that
    Turkey and Armenia could reach a deal to open their border as early as
    this month. But Turkish officials, dismissing such reports, have said
    the Turkish-Armenian border could be opened in October, when Armenian
    President Serzh Sarksyan is due to visit Turkey to watch a World Cup
    qualifying match between the national teams of the two countries.

    Sources say Ankara will use the time until then to ease Azerbaijan's
    concerns and insist on progress in international efforts for the
    resolution on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue before proceeding with efforts
    to normalize ties with Armenia, even though Armenia rejects any link
    between the issues.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian said yesterday at a BSEC
    press conference, "Turkey and Armenia have gone a long way toward
    opening the Turkey-Armenia border, and they will come closer to
    opening it soon." He said there had been no agreement yet between
    the two sides regarding opening of the border.

    Asked about the potential opening of the Turkish-Armenian border,
    Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Mahmud Mammad Guliev said the solution
    to the two countries' problems should be tied to the solution of the
    dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    Nalbandian, on the other hand, said the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute is
    being handled through the Minsk Group, created to find a solution
    to the Nagorno-Karabakh issue by the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) in 1992 and co-chaired by Russia, the
    United States and France.

    Asked if Azerbaijan has reservations about Turkey's ongoing talks
    with Armenia, Guliev said Azerbaijanis believe Turkey will protect
    their interests.

    Just as there is ongoing dialogue between Turkey and Armenia,
    there is also a parallel and ongoing process between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan. Sarksyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev have met
    three times over the last year.

    Yesterday Babacan met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
    and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Guliev before leaving Yerevan. He
    also had talks with Sarksyan and Nalbandian.

    Meanwhile, Russian officials expressed a desire for better neighborly
    relations between Turkey, Azerbaijan and Armenia. Through a statement
    from their embassy in Ankara, Russian officials said, "Russia has been
    astonished to see media reports about Russia attempting to persuade
    Baku that normalization of relations between Ankara and Yerevan is
    aimed at marginalizing Baku." Russian officials said these allegations
    are baseless and that they have not changed their foreign policy of
    promoting stability and peace in the region.

    Black Sea highway agreement approved Meanwhile, the Turkish
    Parliament's Foreign Relations Committee approved the "Agreement
    to Improve the Black Sea Highway" yesterday. At the deliberations
    in Parliament the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP)
    expressed concern that the highway runs through Yerevan and requested
    a map. Officials said that there has been no map drawn yet and that
    they are only dealing with the area within the borders of Turkey.
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