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Armenia: Turkish Foreign Minister's Visit Resolves No Questions

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  • Armenia: Turkish Foreign Minister's Visit Resolves No Questions

    ARMENIA: TURKISH FOREIGN MINISTER'S VISIT RESOLVES NO QUESTIONS
    Marianna Grigoryan

    Eurasianet
    http://www.eurasianet.org
    April 17, 2009

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan's trip to Yerevan may have been
    brief, with little publicity, but it has nonetheless further fueled
    Armenia's ongoing debate about mending ties with Turkey.

    Arriving at Yerevan's airport on April 16 for a meeting of the
    Organization of Black Sea Economic Cooperation, Babacan told CNN-Turk
    only that "[w]e want a comprehensive solution and full normalization
    of relations." Negotiations with Armenia will proceed "in parallel"
    to talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan about the disputed
    Nagorno-Karabakh territory, he said. He refrained from further comment.

    Nonetheless, to judge by his interlocutors, the issue of a
    Turkish-Armenian rapprochement remained front and center for Babacan's
    meetings. During his one-day trip, the Turkish foreign minister
    met with Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, Foreign Minister Eduard
    Nalbandian and held separate talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
    Lavrov and Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Mahmud Mamadguliyev
    at the conference.

    Sargsyan's press office stated only that the president and Babacan
    discussed "questions regarding the settlement of Armenian-Turkish
    relations."

    Yet despite the recent uptick in bilateral contacts, some Yerevan
    analysts are skeptical that an actual deal will come about. While
    Armenia has not linked a reconciliation deal to any other issue,
    Ankara has made plain that it expects such an agreement to move in
    tandem with a resolution to Armenia's Nagorno-Karabakh dispute with
    Azerbaijan, a close Turkish ally.

    At an April 8 meeting with journalists, Turkish Prime Minister Recip
    Tayip Erdogan expressed hope that the United Nations Security Council
    would recognize that Armenia had occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, and call
    on Armenia to withdraw its troops from the territory.

    "The settlement of problems between Turkey and Armenia is possible
    after first solving the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict," Hurriyet
    newspaper reported Erdogan as saying.

    Political analyst Sergei Shakariants argues that those terms imply
    that the Armenian-Turkish honeymoon is coming to an end, "if it has
    not already done so."

    "Anyone willing to improve ties with a neighbor will start the dialogue
    without preconditions," Shakariants said. "If Turkey gets into it,
    but brings preconditions at the last minute, it means it has never
    been willing to negotiate."

    Opposition Heritage Party parliamentarian Stepan Safarian believes that
    opening the Armenian-Turkish border in the near future is impossible
    given Turkey's recent remarks.

    "[I]f Turkey, which itself faces the issues of Cyprus, the Armenian
    genocide and [disputed] territories, puts forward conditions to
    Armenia in favor of another country, Azerbaijan, this means that
    Armenian diplomacy has made serious strategic, diplomatic and tactical
    mistakes," Safarian argued.

    During an April 14 meeting with Tehran's ethnic Armenian community,
    Sargsyan, a native of Nagorno-Karabakh, affirmed that the disputed
    territory would not be given to Azerbaijan under any circumstances.

    "Sometimes suppositions and forecasts or good wishes are presented as
    facts. The truth is the following: We are ready to establish normal
    relations with Turkey without preconditions. Turkey has not been ready
    for it up to this day," Sargsyan said, according to the presidential
    press office. "Today there seem to be [the right] conditions [for us]
    to get out of this unacceptable situation, when two neighbors do not
    even have diplomatic relations."

    Parliamentarian Rafik Petrosian, a senior member of the ruling
    Republican Party of Armenia, believes that recent agreements signed
    with Iran will spur Turkey to take action. [For details, see the
    Eurasia Insight archive].

    "Turkey will definitely understand that Armenia will get other
    opportunities to communicate with the outside world through Iran,
    and this will accelerate the negotiation process over Armenian-Turkish
    relations," said Petrosian.

    Dismissing skeptics, Petrosian maintained that there has been "minor
    success" to date in talks with Turkey. "If the process had not been
    positive, Ali Babacan would not have come to Armenia," he concluded.

    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based
    in Yerevan.
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