Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Expert says Turkey's influence will increase in

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

  • ANKARA: Expert says Turkey's influence will increase in

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 23 2009


    Expert says Turkey's influence will increase in Caucasus


    Turkey's influence in the Caucasus will increase if Turkish-Armenian
    relations improve, but during the process of rapprochement, opposition
    forces increasingly come to the forefront, Alexander Iskandaryan,
    director of the Yerevan-based Caucasus Institute, has said.

    `There is a zero-sum game logic. It is based on the idea that Armenia
    would lose if Azerbaijan wins or Azerbaijan would lose if Armenia
    wins. This is not a true logic. There is a need to leave such a
    mentality out,' he said, speaking to a group of Turkish journalists
    this week. He added that even though Azerbaijani-Armenian relations
    should be independent from Turkish-Armenian relations, this is not the
    case in reality.

    `In Turkish-Armenian relations, Azerbaijan is a third country. This
    should be the basic principle. But we see that Azerbaijan has an
    influence when it comes to Turkish-Armenian relations,' Iskandaryan
    said, in reference to recent concerns voiced by Azerbaijan and
    Turkey's response to them. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an
    indicated in Baku last week that there would be no normalization in
    ties with Armenia unless Armenia withdraws from the Nagorno-Karabakh
    region. The statement pleased Azerbaijan but drew ire from Armenia,
    which said Turkey should not interfere in the Nagorno-Karabakh issue
    and warned that such moves by Ankara would harm efforts to resolve the
    deep-seated dispute. Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in
    a show of solidarity with Azerbaijan after Armenia invaded
    Nagorno-Karabakh and seven regions adjacent to it. Armenian withdrawal
    from Azerbaijani territory was a condition posed by Turkey for the
    normalization of ties
    with Yerevan, but the condition was apparently softened when Turkish
    and Armenian diplomats started closed-door talks to normalize ties a
    year and a half ago. Last month, they announced that they had reached
    an agreement on the framework for restoring their ties, sparking
    protest from Azerbaijan.

    Asked who opposed an increase in Turkey's influence in the Caucasus,
    Iskandaryan said there are ultra-nationalists in both Armenia and
    Turkey that opposed rapprochement. `There is also an Azerbaijani lobby
    in Turkey. In Armenia, the elite and realistic people support
    rapprochement,' he said. `And the reason is simple: Turkey is 20
    kilometers away, and there is no way to go there to drink a cup of
    tea.'

    He also said the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh would take a long time
    to change but this was not going to be the case for the border between
    Turkey and Armenia. `There is a unique situation. The United States
    and Europe support the process. And Russia is against it. This was not
    the case three, four years ago,' he told the group of journalists, who
    were in Armenia for the International Hrant Dink Foundation's
    Turkey-Armenia Journalist Dialogue Project, funded by the Heinrich
    Böll Stiftung Association.



    23 May 2009, Saturday
    YONCA POYRAZ DOÄ?AN YEREVAN
Working...
X