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  • BAKU: Future Turkey-Armenia Relations Will Depend On Russia'sForeign

    FUTURE TURKEY-ARMENIA RELATIONS WILL DEPEND ON RUSSIA'S FOREIGN POLICY LINE

    Trend News Agency
    Feb 12 2009
    Azerbaijan

    Azerbaijan, Baku, Feb. 12/ Trend News, B. Hasanov, E. Ostapenko/ If
    Russia makes changes in the neighborhood policy it pursued so far,
    it can contribute to normalizing Ankara-Yerevan talks.

    "If Russia chooses policy to compete will regional powers and exercise
    control over the Caucasus region with help of military bases, it means
    that Russia does not want Turkey-Armenia ties to normalize. However, if
    Russia pursues cooperation policy in the region, it means Russia backs
    normalizing Ankara-Yerevan ties," Turkish expert Kamer Kasim said.

    The Turkish President Abdullah Gul will pay an official visit to
    Russia on Feb. 12-15, Turkey's Cihan news agency reported. Turkey
    and Russia are expected to hold discussions on the Caucasus region
    during the visit.

    Turkey proposed to establish Caucasus Stability and Cooperation
    Platform to ensure stability and cooperation in the Caucasus on
    the backdrop of the Georgia-Russia conflict in Aug. 2008. Turkey
    proposes the platform to cover Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, Russia
    and Turkey. Ankara seeks to promote dialogue among regional states
    in an effort to solve problems between these countries. Ankara also
    seeks to normalize Turkey-Armenia relations. Armenian-Turkish ties
    have been severed since 1993 because of Armenia's false "genocide"
    claims and occupation of 20% of Azerbaijani lands. Turkish President
    Abdullah Gul visited Yerevan on Sept. 6, 2008 at the invitation of
    his Armenian counterpart Serzh Sarkisyan to watch Armenia-Turkey
    football match of the European Cup. Efforts have been made since then
    to normalize ties between the two countries.

    Turkish expert Kamer Kasim says without Russia's pressure, Yerevan
    will not accept Turkey's conditions to halt genocide campaign across
    the world, to recognize Turkey's territorial integrity and take
    steps to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. Russia's attitude
    to normalization of Turkey-Armenia ties will be determined by the
    foreign policy line it will choose.

    "Following Georgia-Russia conflict, it is more appropriate for Russia's
    foreign policy to cooperate with Turkey. From this viewpoint, the
    Caucasus Platform meets Moscow's interests," research fellow at the
    International Strategic Studies Center Kamer Kasim told Trend News
    in a telephone conversation from Ankara.

    Expert said the energy cooperation with Ankara is important for
    Moscow. He said Russia does not want Nabucco gas pipeline project
    to be implemented so that to keep monopoly on the European gas
    market. Therefore, it seeks persuade Ankara to build a second gas
    pipeline bypassing Ukraine.

    "Russia can support Turkey in terms of issues regarding the Caucasus
    in a bid to persuade Ankara to implement the Blue Stream-2 project,"
    Kasim added.

    He said if Armenia takes concrete measures in terms of "genocide"
    and Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, it will mean that Moscow puts pressure
    on Yerevan to normalize ties with Turkey. "Moscow's position on this
    issue will be clear after Abdullah Gul's visit to Russia," Kasim noted.

    Russian expert Kyril Tanayev says energy issues will be one of
    the matters of debate during Gul's visit to Moscow. Moscow puts
    special emphasis on ties with Ankara and will back the Caucasus
    platform. Normalization of the Ankara-Yerevan ties meets Moscow's
    interests, he said. "Moscow is doing its utmost to normalize
    Ankara-Yerevan ties," director general of the Useful Policy Fund
    Tanayev said to Trend News via email from Moscow.

    American expert Michael Emerson says Moscow's attitude to normalization
    of the Turkey-Armenia ties is determined is by its interests.

    "If negative nationalism and out-of-date foreign policy line is
    pursued, Moscow will not have positive attitude to normalization of
    the Turkey-Armenia ties. Of course, political line based on good
    neighbor ties will support Ankara-Yerevan ties," senior expert at
    the Centre for European Policy Studies Emerson said to Trend News
    via telephone from Brussels.

    He said there are some forces in Moscow who seek to retain means
    of influence in the region by continuing Russia's patronage over
    Armenia. "These forces do not want Turkey-Armenia ties to normalize,"
    Tanayev said.

    Ankara and Yerevan have held meetings on the level of foreign ministers
    for several times. Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan met with the
    Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan and Armenian President
    Serzh Sarkisyan in Munich. Babacan and Sarkisyan made positive
    statements after the talks.
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