Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: US Diplomat Warns Armenia-Turkey Talks Can't Go On Forever

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

  • ANKARA: US Diplomat Warns Armenia-Turkey Talks Can't Go On Forever

    US DIPLOMAT WARNS ARMENIA-TURKEY TALKS CAN'T GO ON FOREVER

    Today's Zaman
    June 11 2009
    Turkey

    A senior US diplomat has called on estranged neighbors Armenia and
    Turkey to make progress in reconciliation talks aimed at mending
    relations and reopening their border.

    Philip Gordon, the US assistant secretary of state for European and
    Eurasian affairs, speaking at a press conference held on Tuesday
    in Yerevan, said talks should be concluded within a "reasonable
    timeframe."

    "The process can't go on forever. But I think the parties understand
    that both sides appreciated this -- they need to go forward and they
    will," he said. "There should be no preconditions [in the talks],"
    he added, underlining that the normalization of diplomatic ties
    between the two neighbors "would benefit Turkey, Armenia and the
    entire region."

    Ankara and Yerevan announced in April that they had agreed to a roadmap
    for normalizing relations, but there have been few signs of progress
    since the announcement. Gordon, who assumed his post last month, was
    due to visit the two other ex-Soviet republics of the South Caucasus,
    Georgia and Azerbaijan, on Wednesday and Thursday.

    As of Monday, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu stated that
    all actors in the southern Caucasus have a joint future that should
    be worked on together. His remarks came when he was reminded of
    recent remarks by Armenia's foreign minister, Edward Nalbandian, who
    last month suggested that it is now Turkey's turn to contribute to
    the ongoing joint efforts with his country for the normalization of
    bilateral relations between the two estranged neighbors when he said,
    "The ball is in Turkey's court now."

    "It is not a ball rolling around in the field, it is a joint future,"
    Davutoglu said, citing Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, Russia and Turkey
    as the main regional actors who should work together to build a joint
    future. An online English-language Armenian news portal, meanwhile,
    reported that Gordon also criticized the Armenian authorities'
    handling of the May 31 municipal elections in Yerevan after holding
    what he called "excellent and productive talks" with President Serzh
    Sarksyan and Nalbandian.
Working...
X