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ANKARA: Armenians Eye Moves With Deep Skepticism

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  • ANKARA: Armenians Eye Moves With Deep Skepticism

    ARMENIANS EYE MOVES WITH DEEP SKEPTICISM

    Hurriyet
    April 20 2009
    Turkey

    YEREVAN - High expectations in Yerevan of sealing the deal with Turkey
    to establish diplomatic ties and reopen the border have yielded to
    concerns that bilateral relations have been besieged once again by
    the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

    The Armenian side no longer talks about the possibility of rapid
    progress before April 24, the day that commemorates the mass-killing
    of Armenians in 1915, but maintains cautious optimism about opening
    the border within 2009. Meanwhile, the U.S. administration dispatched
    Assistant Secretary of State Matt Bryza to the region.

    Bryza arrives in Ankara today after a round of talks in Baku and
    Yerevan in search of a breakthrough on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

    While Ankara now points to the meeting of Azerbaijani President
    Ilham Aliyev and Russian President Dimitry Medvedev on May 6 as a new
    critical juncture, it was learned that Bryza hoped for a breakthrough
    on the Karabakh issue in June. Former Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan
    Oskanian, who witnessed a failure of talks with then-Foreign Minister
    Abdullah Gul, argued that what was happening today was a repetition
    of history. Speaking exclusively to Hurriyet Daily News & Economic
    Review on Saturday, Oskanian recalled his own experience with the
    Justice and Development Party, or AKP, government.

    "I remember my first meeting with Gul. The AKP had just come to power
    then and he told me they wanted to normalize relations and added that
    Turkey did not benefit from linking the Turkey-Armenia problem to third
    countries and Nagorno-Karabakh. And I told him that this was music
    to my ears because we have been advocating for this for so long,"
    he said. "But then they realized that the Azeri pressure cannot be
    dismissed or ignored. Karabakh again became part of our discussions
    and after a while it became clear that the Karabakh issue was the
    main obstacle between the two countries."

    Ankara`s efforts for an international push toward rapid progress
    on Karabakh, meanwhile, have other implications for the U.S. in
    terms of the power struggle in the Caucasus. Foreign Minister Ali
    Babacan's meeting with his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov in
    Yerevan last week, raised eyebrows in Washington, adding to the
    existing discontent over Russian-Azerbaijani negotiations over
    gas. Third-country diplomats, meanwhile, are worried that Armenia's
    cautious optimism might be lost, leading to a walk-out from the
    negotiation table if Turkey squanders too much time with the Karabakh
    problem. Assertive public statements similar to Erdogan`s on Karabakh
    to please Azerbaijan need to be particularly avoided in these days,
    according to diplomatic observers who follow the process closely.

    "Nagorno-Karabakh may play some role over Turkish-Armenian
    relations. But I think the problem is much deeper than this. Turkey
    is not ready now," said Hovhannes Igityan, one of the leading names
    of the National Armenia Party, led by the country's first president,
    Levon Ter-Petrossian. "When Turkey is ready to establish relations,
    it would not wait for a declaration from Azerbaijan," he said.

    Tevan Poghosyan, executive director of the International Center for
    Human Development, joins veteran politician Igityan in disregarding
    the Karabakh question as the threshold of a Turkish-Armenian
    rapprochement. "I believe that Nagorno-Karabakh is just a fake,
    artificial reason not to take a real step. Internal problems in
    Turkey do not allow Turkey's decision-makers to take the big step,"
    he told to the Daily News.

    While skepticism of Turkey's sincerity still exists as an important
    element of public opinion in Armenia, businessmen stand out among the
    primary actors ready to reverse suspicion into interaction. Arsen
    Ghazaryan, president of Union of Manufacturers and Businessmen of
    Armenia (equivalent of TUSIAD) noted that because of the border
    closure, the two nations that have lived together for 600 years are
    losing the chance to culturally and economically reintegrate.
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