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  • Public Talks 'Put Consensus At Risk'

    PUBLIC TALKS 'PUT CONSENSUS AT RISK'

    Hurriyet
    April 20 2009
    Turkey

    A former Armenian foreign minister criticizes the Armenian president
    for the country's reconciliation talks with Turkey. 'The new
    government's style is different for normalizing ties. Ours was
    confidential, theirs is public,' says veteran politician Vartan
    Oskanian

    Armenian President Serge Sarkisian has been criticized by former
    Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian for making public the
    progress of secret reconciliation talks with Turkey.

    "Presidents cut ribbons and then do formalities. But if you start
    formalities when the substance does not match what you project, you
    get yourself into difficulty," he said. Oskanian warned his successors
    that Turkey benefited from this exposure, not Armenia.

    A veteran politician, who served as the country's foreign minister for
    10 years and conducted similar secretive meetings with his Turkish
    counterparts, deciphered today's talks to the Hurriyet Daily News &
    Economic Review in Yerevan on Saturday.

    "We are where we were. Abdullah Gul's visit to Armenia last September
    was a formality. As long as the border remains closed and there
    are no diplomatic ties, that visit although historic, is still a
    formality. Things can only change when the border is opened and
    ties are established. Then the formality can transform to pragmatic
    diplomatic steps," he said.

    Recalling his own experience with Turkey, he argued that the
    only way to test whether Ankara was genuine was to engage them
    confidentially. "The new government continues the process of
    normalizing ties with the same intentions but the style is
    different. Ours was confidential, theirs is public. We will see
    which one succeeds but I still think that confidentiality should
    have been maintained, at least until the agreement is initialized,"
    Oskanian added.

    When you raise expectations and give publicity to the process of
    starting dialogue with, you also attract the attention of third-party
    countries, Oskanian said. "This is fine if both sides, and in this
    case particularly Turkey, are genuine about opening the border. But
    if Turkey is reluctant to do so, then these raised expectations only
    serve Turkish interest," he said.

    According to Oskanian, even if there is no deal in the end it is
    beneficial for Turkey to show the world that there is a discussion on a
    committee of historians to study 1915 events. "By this, Turks can tell
    Americans and others to stay out of the 'genocide' issue," he argued.

    The history of Nagorno-Karabakh: A bloody war The issue of
    Nagorno-Karabakh goes back to the conflict from February 1988 to
    May 1994, in the small ethnic enclave in southwestern Azerbaijan,
    between local ethnic Armenians backed by Yerevan against the state of
    Azerbaijan. Both countries were formerly part of the Union of Soviet
    Socialist Republics.

    The enclave's parliament had voted in favor of uniting itself with
    Armenia and a referendum was held with the vast majority of the
    Karabakh population voting in favor of independence. Ethnic violence
    broke out within the statelet after the autonomous parliament voted
    for Nagorno-Karabakh to be reunited with Armenia in 1988. Full-scale
    fighting erupted in the late winter of 1992. In the spring of 1993,
    Armenian forces captured regions outside the enclave itself, and by
    the end of the war in 1994, the Armenians were in full control of
    most of the enclave and also held and currently control approximately
    9 percent of Azerbaijan's territory outside the area.

    Sluggish peace talks As many as 230,000 Armenians from Azerbaijan and
    800,000 Azerbaijanis from Armenia and Karabakh have been displaced
    as a result of the conflict.

    A Russian-brokered ceasefire was signed in May 1994 and sluggish
    peace talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan have been going ever since.

    Armenia-Turkey border also has been closed since 1993.
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