Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Gordon Urges Turkey To Drop Karabakh Condition For Armenia Ties

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

  • Gordon Urges Turkey To Drop Karabakh Condition For Armenia Ties

    GORDON URGES TURKEY TO DROP KARABAKH CONDITION FOR ARMENIA TIES

    Asbarez
    Dec 10th, 2009

    Philip Gordon , assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian
    affairs at the US State Department.

    WASHINGTON (Today's Zaman)-Within days of Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan clearly linking the normalization of relations between
    Ankara and Yerevan to a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
    a senior US State Department official urged Turkey to make progress
    on normalization efforts without setting preconditions.

    Philip H. Gordon, the assistant secretary of state for European
    and Eurasian affairs at the US State Department, who participated
    in White House talks between US and Turkish officials, said the two
    issues should not be linked Wednesday during a meeting at the Council
    on Foreign Relations (CFR).

    Reiterating US support for the process of normalization between
    Armenia and Turkey, Gordon added: "We would like to see the protocols
    ratified. We think this would benefit Turkey and Armenia and help
    peace and stability throughout the region."

    On Monday Erdogan said: "We have also discussed relations between
    Azerbaijan and Armenia, which are of great importance. This is
    important in the context of Turkish-Armenian relations. We have
    discussed the Minsk Group and what the Minsk Group - the United States,
    Russia and France - can do to add more impetus to that process. I
    can say that to have more impetus in the Minsk process is going
    to have a very positive impact on the overall process, because the
    normalization process between Turkey and Armenia is very much related
    to these issues. As the administration in Turkey, we are determined
    to move forward in this area."

    In response to a question about Erdogan's call for more momentum
    in the Minsk process, Gordon said: "We are actively engaged in
    the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. Not because we see it linked to the
    Turkey-Armenia relationship, but because we think it could be also
    contributing to peace and stability in the region that both Armenia
    and Azerbaijan would benefit from. [A] Minsk group co-chair is in the
    region right now because we think this is hugely important. But it has
    long been hugely important, and it's hugely important independently
    of any other issue. It's something we care [about], and we would like
    it to succeed. If both of these processes were to succeed, it would
    really be a historic development for the region."

    Underlining US expectations of seeing a "move forward as quickly as
    possible," Gordon said the US has been asking both the Armenian and
    Turkish governments for the ratification of the protocols "as soon as
    possible, without preconditions and independently of any other issue."

    Gordon, meanwhile, called what appeared to be the diverging approaches
    of the two NATO allies toward Iran's nuclear program "a tactical
    difference." Yet, he also noted that the US told Turkey about their
    "disappointment" over the fact that Turkey had abstained in a vote
    on a resolution in the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),
    passed on Nov. 27, which censured Iran for covertly constructing
    a second enrichment plant near the city of Qom, demanding a halt
    to construction.

    There "could be problems" if measures such as sanctions are taken
    against Iran without seeking a diplomatic solution, Erdogan said on
    PBS's "Charlie Rose" show following his meeting with Obama.

    Voicing gratitude for Turkey's support in Afghanistan, Gordon
    underlined that Richard Holbrooke, Obama's special envoy for
    Afghanistan and Pakistan, "cares deeply about the special cooperative
    relationship" between the US and Turkey in Afghanistan.

    Ruling out arguments that Turkey has been drifting away from the
    West, Gordon said what he has observed is a Turkey that is aspiring
    to become a full European Union member, a goal supported by the US
    administration.

    When reminded of Washington's silence on the influence of the military
    in Turkish politics, Gordon said: "I think we have always made
    clear that first of all we respect Turkey's democracy and the need
    for appropriate civilian-military relations in Turkey. And when the
    prime minister comes here, we believe he is speaking for Turkey and
    the Turkish government. And we are satisfied with that relationship."
Working...
X