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ANKARA: EU Envoy Says Turkey Takes "Tactical Step Backwards" On Arme

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  • ANKARA: EU Envoy Says Turkey Takes "Tactical Step Backwards" On Arme

    EU ENVOY SAYS TURKEY TAKES "TACTICAL STEP BACKWARDS" ON ARMENIA THAW

    Hurriyet
    June 18 2009
    Turkey

    ISTANBUL - Turkey has taken a "tactical step backwards" on normalizing
    relations with Armenia because of fierce domestic reaction to the move,
    the EU's envoy to the region told Reuters in an interview published
    on Wednesday.

    "A step back was taken by the Turkish side ... but this is not a
    U-turn," EU South Caucasus envoy Peter Semneby said in the interview
    conducted at the end of a visit to Moscow last week.

    "We expect the conversations will continue," Semneby said.

    Ankara and Yerevan agreed in April on a "road map" deal for U.S.-backed
    talks that could lead to the normalizing of ties and the opening of
    their border, which Turkey closed in a show of support to Azerbaijan
    in 1993 after Armenian occupation of Azeri territories in the disputed
    Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    Turkish officials, however, have said Turkey will not open its border
    with Armenia before the neighboring country ends its occupation of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, reassuring Azeri leaders that Ankara's efforts to
    reconcile with Yerevan would not undermine the country's interests.

    Reconciliation talks with Yerevan, conducted before the resolution of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, also faced fierce criticism from the
    opposition parties and a number of political analysts in the country.

    Semneby said it was important the "pause" in the peace process between
    Turkey and Armenia did not last too long because of the risk that
    impetus would be lost.

    "The normalization (with Armenia) became the subject of quite
    widespread and heated discussion in Turkey," he added in earlier
    remarks to a small group of reporters. "It seems to me, this discussion
    became more heated than was expected," Reuters quoted him as saying.

    "I see this as a Turkish tactical step backwards," Semneby said. "But
    fundamentally, the new foreign policy that has been pursued by
    the Erdogan government, I don't see that this policy is changing,"
    he added.

    AZERI-ARMENIAN TALKS The conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia began
    in 1988 on Armenian territorial claims over Azerbaijan. Since 1992,
    Armenian Armed Forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan including
    the Nagorno-Karabakh region and its seven surrounding districts --
    a frozen conflict legacy of the Soviet Union.

    Both countries continue with fruitless peace negotiations. The OSCE
    Minsk Group, set up in 1992 and co-chaired by the United States,
    Russia, and France, is engaged in efforts to resolve the conflict
    peacefully.

    Semneby, however, believes real progress is being made.

    "It is clear that if you look at the negotiating process, it is
    intensifying," he told Reuters. "We had in a month two meetings and
    there will be another relatively soon between the presidents."

    Armed clashes still occur regularly along the lines separating Azeri
    and Armenian troops. Asked about the risk of conflict, Semneby said
    it would be foolish to neglect it but he felt both sides understood
    the enormous costs which would be involved in any large-scale military
    engagement.

    "Even with this very dangerous posturing that we see sometimes and the
    fact that the forces are not separated and there are incidents all the
    time, the two sides are by now used to managing incidents," he said.

    "If anything, the Georgia war (last year with Russia), demonstrated
    the risks of military engagement ... it was also a wake-up call to
    both countries how vulnerable they are."
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