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ANKARA: US encouraged by Turkish-Armenian progress, sees commitment

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  • ANKARA: US encouraged by Turkish-Armenian progress, sees commitment

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    June 6 2009


    U.S. encouraged by Turkish-Armenian progress, sees commitment

    ISTANBUL - The U.S. is very encouraged by the progress that has been
    made in the normalization process of Turkey and Armenia and sees
    commitment on both sides, Secretary of State said late Friday.


    "What's important is the commitment to get to a point of resolution of
    these conflicts, and I see that commitment. But I do not doubt the
    commitment, and I certainly appreciate the very strong position that
    the Turkish Government has taken," Hillary Clinton told at a joint
    press conference with the Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu in
    Washington.

    She has been very encouraged by the progress but acknowledged the
    process is difficult and requires patience as well as perseverance,
    according to the remarks published on the Web site of the U.S. State
    Department.

    Ankara cut diplomatic links with Yerevan and closed the border in a
    show of support to Azerbaijan in 1993 after 20 percent of its
    territory was invaded by Armenia in the disputed region -- a frozen
    conflict legacy of the Soviet Union known as Nagorno-Karabakh.

    In late April Turkey and Armenia announced they agreed on a road map
    for the normalization of the relations under Switzerland's mediation.

    Davutoglu thanked Clinton and the U.S. government support to the
    processes of the normalization of the bilateral relations as well as
    the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, adding Turkey is
    optimistic to achieve a prosperous and peaceful Caucasia region.

    "And in that sense, we are fully committed to our normalization
    process with Armenia, and also, we are fully committed and we are
    ready to work together with United States and other co-chairs of Minsk
    Group for the resolution of Armenian-Azeri issues," he said.

    The Minsk Group was set up in 1992 and is co-chaired by Russia, the
    United States and France. Both normalization and resolution of
    Nagorno-Karabakh issues run parallel.


    NO DEAL WITH ISRAEL

    Clinton rejected Israeli assertions that the Bush administration had
    reached a binding agreement with Israel on Jewish settlements in the
    occupied territories when asked about President Barack Obama's speech
    in Cairo.

    We have the negotiating record, that is the official record that was
    turned over to the Obama administration by the outgoing Bush
    administration," Clinton added.

    Since coming to office in January, Obama has repeatedly called on
    Israel to halt all settlement activity in Palestinian areas, a demand
    rejected by the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
    Netanyahu.

    The Israelis say they received commitments from the previous US
    administration of President George W. Bush permitting some growth in
    existing settlements.

    They say the US position was laid out in a 2004 letter from Bush to
    then Israeli premier Ariel Sharon.

    Clinton rejected that claim, saying any such US stance was informal
    and "did not become part of the official position of the United States
    government."

    She reiterated the US position that Israel is obliged to follow
    commitments made in a so-called "road map" for peace negotiations with
    the Palestinians which foresaw a halt to settlement activity.


    "Those obligations are very clear," Clinton said.


    More than 280,000 Israelis live in settlements dotted throughout the
    West Bank, which Israel captured in the 1967 war, and their fate has
    become a key early dispute between the young Obama and Netanyahu
    governments.

    Obama has notably demanded that Israel stop all its activity in the
    settlements, including so-called "natural growth" construction that
    allows for building to accommodate a rising population.
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