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ANKARA: Five Caucasus neighbors to meet and mull regional security

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  • ANKARA: Five Caucasus neighbors to meet and mull regional security

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    Jan 24 2009

    Five Caucasus neighbors to meet and mull regional security


    ANKARA - Officials from the foreign ministries of Turkey, Azerbaijan,
    Armenia, Russia and Georgia will meet in Istanbul next week for the
    second five-party discussion of its kind on the Turkey-led Caucasus
    Stability and Cooperation Platform, the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic
    Review learned from diplomatic sources.


    The first was held in December on the sidelines of the "Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe" meeting in Helsinki.

    This format for technical talks between neighbors will be raised to
    the level of foreign ministers in the near future, sources close to
    the government said.

    Turkey will be represented by deputy undersecretary of the Foreign
    Ministry Ambassador Ünal Çeviköz and Russia will be represented by
    Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir Titov.

    No exact date has been scheduled as of yet but diplomats said the
    meeting would most likely take place on Monday or Tuesday.

    Turkey has moved fast in the wake of the latest Caucasus crisis to
    devise a way to bring divided parties around a single table to discuss
    the future. The proposal to create a stability pact to address
    security concerns in the Caucasus is helping improve Turkish-Armenian
    ties amid diplomatic contacts that have commenced between the two
    neighbors. Turkish diplomatic sources, however, said the Istanbul
    meeting would only focus on the technical parameters of the Caucasus
    platform instead of bilateral disputes between the parties involved.

    The recent optimistic remarks made by Turkish and Armenian foreign
    ministers signal a normalization in ties is no longer a
    dream. Armenia's Edward Nalbandian said last week Yerevan was very
    close to normalizing relations with Ankara and Turkey's Ali Babacan
    said in an interview: "I can easily say we have never come this close
    to a plan regarding the final normalization of relations with
    Armenia."

    There has been a flurry of diplomacy in recent months between the two
    neighbors, including a landmark trip by Turkish President Abdullah Gül
    to Yerevan in September to attend a football match. A Turkish diplomat
    told the Daily News that unlike in the past, a meeting between the two
    countries' officials would not come as a surprise as they were already
    in touch.

    The same diplomat, speaking anonymously, said Turkey had no plans at
    the moment to take a major step to better bilateral ties and added
    that progress in solving problems on the Armenian-Azerbaijani track
    would have positive impacts on the Turkish-Armenian dialogue and vice
    versa. "The progress in Turkish-Armenian or Armenian-Azerbaijani
    relations will undoubtedly have spillover effects," he noted.
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