Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia Has Been Defeated, Says Markarian

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenia Has Been Defeated, Says Markarian

    ARMENIA HAS BEEN DEFEATED, SAYS MARKARIAN

    Asbarez
    www.asbarez.com/index.html?show article=41773_4/23/2009_1
    Thursday, April 23, 2009

    YEREVAN (Combined Sources)--Armenia has been defeated in the
    Turkish-Armenian dialogue process because of key concessions
    made by Yerevan, declared Armenian Revolutionary Federation Bureau
    chairman Hrant Markarian, who urged Armenia to pull out of the talks
    immediately.

    "The Armenian side must acknowledge that it has been defeated in
    this stage of Turkish-Armenian fence-mending negotiations," said
    Markarian who was speaking .at a conference Wednesday dedicated to
    the Turkey-Armenia relations and organized by the ARF Supreme Council
    of Armenia.

    Markarian expressed concern that a tentative agreement reached by the
    two governments earlier this year envisions the creation of a joint
    commission on the Armenian Genocide. He also called on Armenia's
    leadership to abandon the talks if the preliminary principles
    envision the creation of a joint commission to study the Genocide
    and an explicit recognition of Turkey's current borders by Armenia.

    "If there were some agreements on forming some commission of historians
    ; and if there was any intention on Karabakh and the recognition
    of Turkey's territorial integrity and the existing border, we must
    abandon all of that," he said.

    The ARF repeatedly warned Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian last
    year against agreeing to the creation of such a commission which was
    proposed by the Turkish side in 2005 and rejected by then President
    Robert Kocharian. The warnings came after Sarkisian indicated that
    he does not object to the proposal in principle. Analysts close to
    the issue have long seen the commission as a Turkish ploy designed
    to deter more countries, notably the United States, from recognizing
    the Armenian Genocide.

    "One year ago we were saying that Armenia stands for normalizing
    relations with Turkey without preconditions while Turkey sets
    preconditions. We presented ourselves to the world as a peace-loving
    nation, whereas Turkey was seen as a crude and inexplicable state,"
    Markarian said.

    Markarian's remarks follow growing indications that Ankara is again
    linking the establishment of diplomatic relations with Yerevan and
    reopening of the Turkish-Armenian border with a resolution of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict favoring Azerbaijan.

    Markarian said that the Armenian side itself allowed the Turkish
    government to renew that linkage. "One year ago, Turkey did not
    have a moral right to even express views on the Karabakh issue as
    it wasn't considered a party [to the conflict,]" he said. "Today it
    is being presented as a party. It is already becoming clear why the
    Karabakh issue should be solved also for normalizing Turkish-Armenian
    relations."

    The ARF leader said that the shift occurred when Armenia stopped
    looking at all national issues as one totality and throughout this
    process has slowly conceded in several key areas.

    "We need to understand that the issues of Karabakh, the Genocide,
    Javakhk, the liberation of Western Armenia and Armenia's independence,
    are all intertwined and are a totality. They all must be tackled as
    parts of a whole, in which one cannot be sacrificed at the cost of
    another," said Markarian. "We fall into a trap when we believe that
    we cannot make any concessions on the Karabakh issue, but that we
    can make concessions elsewhere."

    "Armenia has lost out since it conceded certain principles that the
    Armenian government had adopted since 1990. If we had held on strong
    to those principles, today the Turkish side would be perceived as the
    guilty party. Today Turkey has changed its image and is represented as
    a country seeking friendly relations with its neighbors," Markarian
    said.

    The ARF Bureau urged President Sarkisian's administration in December
    to exercise caution in this process, saying that the Turks are
    exploiting it to scuttle greater international recognition of the
    Armenian genocide. Among the other speakers at Wednesday's conference
    was ARF Supreme Council of Armenia chairman Armen Rustamian who spoke
    about the unrealized possibilities of Armenia's dialogue with Turkey,
    noting that negotiations could have bore fruit if Turkey did not
    impose conditions on Armenia.

    "Armenian and Turkey should move toward normalizing relations, only if
    our national interests are not jeopardized as a result of imprudent
    steps," said Rustamian, adding that Turkey never makes a move that
    does not benefit its national interests.

    "Turkey has managed to create the impression that the process of
    normalizing relations between Armenia and Turkey exists and is
    proceeding in a constructive manner," he said.

    At the conclusion of the conference, a five-point declaration was
    presented that reiterated the aforementioned views, but specifically
    warned against any efforts that could cast doubt on the veracity of
    the Armenian Genocide.
Working...
X