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ANKARA: Turkey is likely to take steps toward Armenia

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  • ANKARA: Turkey is likely to take steps toward Armenia

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    March 9 2009


    Turkey is likely to take steps toward Armenia



    WASHINGTON - US President Barack Obama's planned visit to Turkey
    weakens the possibility in the short term of Washington's recognition
    of the Armenians' claims of "genocide", according to analysts.

    As U.S. President Barack Obama prepares to visit Turkey in early
    April, Ankara is likely to start taking concrete measures soon toward
    reconciliation with Armenia, diplomatic sources and analysts say.

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced during a visit to
    Ankara on Saturday that Obama would visit Turkey "within a month or
    so."

    The unexpected visit will underscore Turkey's growing importance in
    Obama's new Middle East strategies, analysts suggest.

    They also say the planned visit weakens the possibility in the short
    term of U.S. recognition of the Armenians' claims of "genocide".

    Turkish efforts

    But Turkey, in return, should move soon to boost relations with
    Armenia, including taking steps to set up diplomatic relations and
    open the land border, they say.

    "So, Obama can tell U.S. Armenian groups, 'Look, there is major
    reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia, it's not the right time to
    get involved in the genocide issue," said one analyst.

    Turkey became one of the first nations to recognize Armenia's
    independence amid the former Soviet Union's disintegration in 1991.

    But Armenia's invasion and occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh and part of
    Azerbaijan proper in 1993 prompted Ankara to close the border with
    Armenia and decline to establish diplomatic ties with Yerevan.

    During his election campaign last year, Obama pledged to recognize the
    Armenians' claims of "genocide". Some analysts and pro-Turkey
    politicians have been suggesting that a Turkish-Armenian rapprochement
    may prevent Washington from recognizing these claims.

    Robert Wexler, a leading pro-Turkey lawmaker in the U.S. House of
    Representatives, said recently that he saw a historic opportunity for
    rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia that may lead to the opening
    of the land border and a normalization of diplomatic relations this
    year.

    "I came back from Turkey last week, and it seems to me that we are on
    the cusp of a historic opportunity with respect to Turkish-Armenian
    relations and the possibility in 2009 for extraordinary engagement
    between those two countries, and the possibility of opening of borders
    and then things that might follow, such as normalization," Wexler said
    in the U.S. Congress on March 1.

    Armenians not hopeful

    Brad Sherman, a key pro-Armenian lawmaker in the U.S. House of
    Representatives, recently said he was "not particularly hopeful" that
    Obama's planned message to the Armenian-American community on April 24
    this year "will contain the word genocide," according to the Armenian
    Reporter, a weekly newspaper.

    Sherman cited Turkey's importance to the Obama administration's Middle
    East priorities as the key reason.

    Top agenda items during Obama's planned talks in Turkey will likely
    include Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq and peace in the Middle East.
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