ARMENIAN-TURKISH TIES NORMALIZATION DEEMED AS FRAMEWORK AGREEMENT
/PanARMENIAN.Net/
01.06.2009 19:50 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The recent announcement on normalizing
Turkish-Armenian relations is a potentially historic
breakthrough. However, the lack of progress in implementing the
"framework agreement" raises questions about Turkey's intentions and
resolve, Columbia University expert David Philips says in an article
published in Boston Globe. "During the conflict in Karabakh, Turkey
closed border with Armenia in support of Azerbaijan. In the meantime,
Armenian-Turkish conflict has lasted many years because of Turkey's
negation of Armenian Genocide during World War I," Philips writes.
After meeting with Turkish officials on April 7 in Istanbul,
Obama concluded that resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh was not
a formal precondition for normalization and recognition. But
as a practical matter it is a deal-breaker, the expert further
notes. "Armenian and Azerbaijani negotiators agree on 'basic ideas'
for resolving Nagorno-Karabakh's status. But Turkey responded that
Ankara's interests cannot be held hostage by Azerbaijan forever. As
regards Obama administration, it is committed to good relations
with Turkey and Armenia. Both are US allies and help counter global
extremism. Therefore, US mediation is indispensable to the agreement
on normalization and recognition," Philips stresses.
/PanARMENIAN.Net/
01.06.2009 19:50 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The recent announcement on normalizing
Turkish-Armenian relations is a potentially historic
breakthrough. However, the lack of progress in implementing the
"framework agreement" raises questions about Turkey's intentions and
resolve, Columbia University expert David Philips says in an article
published in Boston Globe. "During the conflict in Karabakh, Turkey
closed border with Armenia in support of Azerbaijan. In the meantime,
Armenian-Turkish conflict has lasted many years because of Turkey's
negation of Armenian Genocide during World War I," Philips writes.
After meeting with Turkish officials on April 7 in Istanbul,
Obama concluded that resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh was not
a formal precondition for normalization and recognition. But
as a practical matter it is a deal-breaker, the expert further
notes. "Armenian and Azerbaijani negotiators agree on 'basic ideas'
for resolving Nagorno-Karabakh's status. But Turkey responded that
Ankara's interests cannot be held hostage by Azerbaijan forever. As
regards Obama administration, it is committed to good relations
with Turkey and Armenia. Both are US allies and help counter global
extremism. Therefore, US mediation is indispensable to the agreement
on normalization and recognition," Philips stresses.