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Think Tank Faults Turkish Approach On Armenia Ties

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  • Think Tank Faults Turkish Approach On Armenia Ties

    THINK TANK FAULTS TURKISH APPROACH ON ARMENIA TIES
    By Ayla Jean Yackley

    Reuters
    May 29 2009
    UK

    ISTANBUL, May 29 (Reuters) - Turkey is making a mistake by linking an
    improvement in ties with Armenia, including reopening their shared
    border, to a settlement of Armenia's long-running conflict with
    Azerbaijan, a think tank report said on Friday.

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said this month that the border
    would remain shut until Armenia withdrew from Nagorno-Karabakh, an
    enclave it has controlled since it fought a war with Azerbaijan in
    the early 1990s.

    His comments highlighted the seriousness of the Karabakh problem for
    Turkey, despite the announcement last month of a joint Turkish-Armenian
    "road map" towards re-establishing diplomatic ties and opening
    the border.

    "Tying the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement to the Karabakh issue, which
    won't be resolved for a long time, is a great mistake, because Turkey's
    policy of punishing Armenia has yet to yield the results it wants,"
    said Aybars Gorgulu, co-author of the report for the Istanbul-based
    Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation.

    "Normalisation appears indexed to resolving the Karabakh issue,
    making it the most serious obstacle, even if the issue is not part
    of the bilateral talks."

    Turkey shut the border in 1993 in a show of support for Azerbaijan,
    its traditional Muslim ally. Its continued closure has hampered
    Armenia's economy and is one of many factors complicating Turkey's
    bid to join the European Union.

    Gorgulu said Erdogan's latest comments -- made after a meeting with
    Azerbaijan's president -- "negatively impact the rapprochement"
    with Armenia.

    Turkey's lack of diplomatic relations with Armenia has so far failed
    to help Azerbaijan reclaim its territory, although normalisation is
    also unlikely to bring about a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict, Gorgulu said.

    Alexander Iskandaryan, his co-author, said it would be Russia
    that played the decisive role in settling the dispute, as it still
    wielded influence over Armenia and Azerbaijan, both former Soviet
    republics. The United States and France are also involved in diplomacy
    on the issue.

    Armenia and Turkey trace their dispute to massacres of ethnic Armenians
    by Ottoman Turks during World War One. Armenia says these amounted
    to genocide, which Turkey denies.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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