Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Should Armenian Leader Visit Turkey? Situation As Seen From Stepanak

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

  • Should Armenian Leader Visit Turkey? Situation As Seen From Stepanak

    SHOULD ARMENIAN LEADER VISIT TURKEY? SITUATION AS SEEN FROM STEPANAKERT

    Information-Analytic Agency NEWS.am
    Aug 27 2009
    Armenia

    NEWS.am continues publishing a series of comments on the advisability
    of Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan's visit to Turkey. The Armenian
    leader is to return his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul's visit
    to Armenia. However, pressured by Azerbaijan, Turkey started setting
    preconditions for normalizing its relations with Armenia, particularly,
    the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    In his turn, the Armenian leader stated he would visit Turkey provided
    the Armenian-Turkish border was reopened or a relevant process was
    under way.

    Below are Nagorno-Karabakh experts' opinions of the situation.

    Talking to NEWS.am, Vahram Atanesyan, Chairman of the Foreign Relations
    Committee, NKR Parliament, said that "Turkey is not viewing the problem
    in the context of the present situation." According to him, official
    Ankara believes the reopening of the Armenian-Turkish border to be
    such a vital issue for Armenia that the country will be ready for
    major concessions. However, Turkey should have put up with the fact
    that the Azerbaijan-dictated policy of "bringing Armenia to its knees"
    proved ineffective and "indecent of a country seeking EU membership."

    Atanesyan believes that reopening the borders and establishing
    diplomatic relations "is only a starting point for both countries
    seeking to normalize their relations, and the Turkish side is
    presenting it as an epoch-making event," and its "counterproductive"
    attitude to the process is evidence thereof.

    "Of importance is also the factor of Azerbaijan's opposition,
    which is evidence of Turkey, and especially Azerbaijan, being
    failure-states. Both the states are unable to normalize their
    relations with Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh, to say nothing of the
    Armenian people. However, this situation cannot be an everlasting one,"
    Atanesyan said. He pointed out that, to have influence on the South
    Caucasus, Turkey has to normalize relations with Armenia. One has the
    impression that too little time remains before the return visit for
    the process to show any essential progress or at least any prospects
    for it. "I do no think President Serzh Sargsyan will visit Turkey,
    it is desirable that the visit take place though."

    Speaking of the Armenian President's possible visit to Turkey, the
    former deputy foreign minister of NKR Masis Mailyan pointed out that
    the Ankara-Yerevan relations are not so good "for a top-level visit
    to Turkey to be considered necessary."

    According to him, "the international PR over the normalization of
    bilateral relations is still working in Turkey's favor." "Specifically,
    Turkish diplomats succeeded in neutralizing the threat of the United
    States recognizing the Armenian Genocide this April. The public
    Armenian-Turkish dialogue, as well as Ankara's appeals to other
    countries for not interfering in the process, proved to be the most
    substantial argument," Mailyan said.

    Good neighborly relations should be established, but "it is advisable
    now to work at a different level... Nagorno-Karabakh does not fully
    trust Turkey's initiatives."

    Mailyan stressed that Ankara's practical steps can prove the sincerity
    of Turkey's intentions to normalize relations with Armenia: giving
    up the demand for Armenian territorial concessions to Azerbaijan;
    establishing diplomatic relations with Armenia and reopening the land
    border. "The steps are supposed to show us who we are dealing with:
    a country, which is still guided by the Pan-Turkism doctrine or with
    a modern-day Turkey, which is seeking EU membership and accepting
    the EU's system of values," Mailyan said.
    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X