Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

TBILISI: Turkey-Armenia Rapprochement: One Step Forward, Two Steps B

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

  • TBILISI: Turkey-Armenia Rapprochement: One Step Forward, Two Steps B

    TURKEY-ARMENIA RAPPROCHEMENT: ONE STEP FORWARD, TWO STEPS BACK

    Georgian Daily
    Dec 28 2009
    Georgia

    With considerable ado, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian
    and Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu met in Zurich October
    10 to sign an agreement that would establish diplomatic relations
    and re-open the border between their two countries.

    Turkey closed that border in 1993 when Armenia invaded neighboring
    Azerbaijan, occupying Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding territories.

    Some feted the new agreement as an epochal breakthrough for peace
    and understanding. Others fretted over possible unintended negative
    consequences. But a couple of months later, the agreement has hit
    the brick wall of reality, which is blocking legislative approval in
    both countries. Now, the western leaders who comprised the backdrop
    to the Zurich signing ceremony must engage in a serious diplomatic
    effort to salvage the agreement and then channel it in a positive
    direction--Caucasus politics is a full time endeavor.

    The Zurich agreement also establishes a joint commission of historians
    to examine killings that took place between 1915 and 1918, which
    Armenians claim constituted genocide.

    External actors worked the issue hard. The US State Department let
    it be known that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made 29 telephone
    calls to leaders of the two countries. Then, in a car parked in front
    of her Swiss hotel, Clinton undertook a round of last-minute cell
    phone diplomacy--it seemed Nalbandian balked at Davutoglu's plan
    to mention Nagorno-Karabakh in his signing ceremony speech. Clinton
    resolved the matter by nixing speeches altogether.

    Even the Russians pitched in. As Nalbandian appeared to freeze just
    before signing, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, according to the
    Russian newspaper Kommersant, sent him a note that read, "Sign it
    easily and go."

    What brought all these forces together--in the Caucasus of all places?

    Just 14 months earlier, Russia wantonly attacked western interests
    along the East-West Corridor that leads through Georgia from the
    Black Sea to the Caspian. Was Moscow now joining with Washington and
    Brussels to build a wider East-West Corridor running through Armenia?

    Did diplomats believe that re-opening the Turkish-Armenian border
    could be divorced from the continued occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh,
    which was the proximate cause of its closing?

    It is likelier that the external actors came together in Zurich by a
    mixture of domestic politics, photo-opportunity diplomacy and belief
    in each capital that the apparent confluence of short-term interests
    could be used as a next step in the Caucasian geopolitical game.

    Whatever the ingredients of the Zurich signing and however clever
    Clinton's no speech solution, geopolitical reality soon boiled over.

    In Baku, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said, "The normalization of
    relations between Turkey and Armenia before the withdrawal of Armenian
    troops from occupied Azeri territory is in direct contradiction to
    the national interests of Azerbaijan."

    Two days after the signing, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayip
    Erdogan said in Ankara what Davutoglu had intended to say in Zurich:
    "We want all the borders to be opened at the same time...but as long
    as Armenia has not withdrawn from Azerbaijani territory that it is
    occupying, Turkey cannot have a positive attitude on this subject.

    Azerbaijan will not quietly watch its territorial integrity slip into
    diplomatic limbo. And Turkey can ill afford to ignore Azerbaijan.

    Erdogan's December visit to Washington and Ankara's desire to sidestep
    an American Congressional resolution next spring labeling the World
    War I era killings as "genocide" may result in some action, maybe
    even Turkish Grand National Assembly approval. However, there will
    be no meaningful progress on the October agreement until there is
    meaningful progress on Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Today, the biggest risk is that the Zurich agreement may amount to
    nothing--in an atmosphere of heightened expectations, posturing and
    western distraction.

    One of the lessons of Russia's August 2008 attack on Georgia is that
    if the west wants conflict resolution in the Caucasus, it must abandon
    stale mid-level diplomatic formats like the Group of Friends that
    addressed the conflict over Abkhazia and the Minsk Group charged with
    resolving the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh in favor of sustained
    high-level engagement.

    Regrettably--but realistically--such engagement may reveal that
    the clash of interests among Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey is more
    fundamental than was hoped and that there is also a clash of interests
    among the external actors--Russia versus the west.

    Then, even if a big diplomatic push succeeds in getting the agreement
    back on track, many underlying issues and years of mistrust will
    remain. Consequently, western leaders must remain engaged to channel
    the agreement in a positive direction. The main danger will remain
    geopolitical.

    Every effort must be made to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    and to guarantee Azerbaijan's territorial integrity and security. If
    this is done, Baku will stick to peaceful means of conflict resolution,
    continue to balance the sway of its large neighbors and remain free to
    participate in energy projects like the prospective Nabucco pipeline.

    Meanwhile, this process must encourage the constructive elements
    in Armenian society to take courageous steps, including working
    constructively with Georgia on issues pertaining to ethnic Armenians
    living in regions like Samtskhe-Javakheti and Kvemo Kartli.

    All this would nudge Moscow into dealing even-handedly with Baku and
    allowing Yerevan to steer a more independent course, thereby foregoing
    the option of using the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement to generate
    greater pressure on Georgia.

    Partisans of photo-opportunity diplomacy may scoff that all these
    requirements will simply sink the Zurich agreement. They may. However,
    experienced diplomats understand that cause and effect must both be
    addressed. If it works, the peace and economic growth that would
    seize the South Caucasus would be tremendous--far outweighing any
    emergent downsides.

    *David J. Smith is Director, Georgian Security Analysis Center,
    Tbilisi, and Senior Fellow, Potomac Institute for Policy Studies,
    Washington.
Working...
X