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Armenia, Turkey Agree To Diplomatic Thaw

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  • Armenia, Turkey Agree To Diplomatic Thaw

    ARMENIA, TURKEY AGREE TO DIPLOMATIC THAW

    The Moscow Times
    April 24 2009

    ISTANBUL -- Turkey and Armenia have agreed on a road map to normalize
    ties after nearly a century of hostility, a move that would boost
    Turkey's relations with the EU and the United States but could upset
    its ally Azerbaijan.

    The deal came on the eve of the commemoration of mass killings of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915. Since last year, the two states
    have held high-level talks to restore ties, which could mean reopening
    a border shut in 1993.

    "The two parties have achieved tangible progress and mutual
    understanding in this process, and they have agreed on a comprehensive
    framework for the normalization of their bilateral relations," the
    foreign ministries of both countries said late Wednesday, without
    elaborating.

    The years of standoff isolated impoverished Armenia and obstructed
    Turkey's efforts to join the European Union. Turkey closed its border
    with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with Azerbaijan, which was fighting
    Armenian-backed separatists in the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    Azerbaijan, Europe's key hope as a supplier of gas for the proposed
    Nabucco pipeline that would run through Turkey and cut Europe's
    dependence on Russia, warned against any deal that does not include
    a withdrawal of troops from Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Azeri Foreign Ministry spokesman Elkhan Polukhov said it was "too
    early" to discuss what steps Azerbaijan might take in retaliation, but
    some analysts warned that it may affect European energy security plans.

    "If Azerbaijan feels that Turkey is betraying them, then why would
    Azerbaijan not move in a Russian direction? And the Russians are
    offering to buy all their gas at European prices," said Svante Cornell,
    research director at the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute.

    However, Wolfango Piccoli, an analyst for Eurasia consultancy group,
    said it was unlikely that Azerbaijan would decide to put "all its eggs
    in the Russian basket," especially after the brief Russian-Georgian
    war last year.
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