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Turkey's Security Council To Mull Over Armenia Ties

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  • Turkey's Security Council To Mull Over Armenia Ties

    TURKEY'S SECURITY COUNCIL TO MULL OVER ARMENIA TIES

    Asbarez
    www.asbarez.com/index.html?showartic le=41712_4/21/2009_1
    Tuesday, April 21, 2009

    ANKARA (Combined Sources)--Turkey's powerful National Security Council
    (MGK), comprising top state officials and army generals, will meet
    next week to discuss Turkey's next step in its negotiations with
    Armenia to establish diplomatic relations, the Turkish Today's Zaman
    Daily reported on Tuesday.

    President Abdullah Gul will visit Baku shortly after the April 28
    meeting to "inform the Azerbaijani administration about the decisions
    Turkey has made regarding normalization with Armenia," Zaman said.

    The agenda of the MGK meeting, chaired by Gul, will include a
    discussion of recent developments in Iraq and the possibility of
    granting an amnesty for PKK members, the normalization of relations
    with Armenia and the deployment of Turkish troops in Afghanistan,
    Today's Zaman reported, citing anonymous government sources.

    Until recently, media reports had said Turkey and Armenia would likely
    sign soon an agreement on the gradual normalization of bilateral
    relations. Talks, however, have hit a roadblock this month, following
    US President Barack Obama's visit to Turkey on April 6, where he told
    the Turkish Parliament his views had not changed in reference to the
    Armenian Genocide.

    Analysts close to the negotiations believe Ankara's recent push
    to normalize ties with Yerevan were aimed at dissuading President
    Obama from fulfilling his campaign pledge to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide. Turkey repeatedly warned Obama that any recognition of
    its crime against the Armenians would torpedo the talks to open the
    closed borders.

    Since Obama's visit, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has
    repeatedly made clear that diplomatic relations will not be established
    before a Karabakh settlement. The marked shift in Turkish rhetoric is
    being reported by Western and Turkish media as a response to Azeri
    warnings to retaliate if borders are opened before a Karabakh deal
    acceptable to Baku is signed.

    According to Zaman, the agenda item on Armenia-Turkey relations will
    primarily focus on Azerbaijan's reaction to the opening of the two
    countries' border.

    Zaman said the Turkish Army General Staff and the Government both
    agree that Ankara should not open its border with Armenia until a
    settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
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