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Diocese Hosts Dinner For Foreign Minister Nalbandian

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  • Diocese Hosts Dinner For Foreign Minister Nalbandian

    DIOCESE HOSTS DINNER FOR FOREIGN MINISTER NALBANDIAN

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2009 -09-29-diocese-hosts-dinner-for-foreign-minister-n albandian
    Tuesday September 29, 2009

    New York - On Saturday, September 26, Archbishop Khajag Barsamian,
    Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
    and president of the Fund for Armenian Relief (FAR), hosted a dinner
    in honor of Edward Nalbandian, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of
    the Republic of Armenia.

    Mr. Nalbandian was accompanied by Tatoul Markarian, Armenia's
    ambassador to the United States; Ambassador Garen Nazarian, Armenia's
    new permanent representative to the United Nations; and others.

    The dignitaries met with some leaders of the Armenian-American
    community in the formal reception room of the Diocesan Center in
    New York.

    In opening remarks, Archbishop Barsamian welcomed Mr. Nalbandian, who
    was in the United States to address the United Nations General Assembly
    and drum up support for his controversial recent agreement with Turkey.

    In greeting the guests, Oscar Tatosian, chairperson of the Diocesan
    Council, and Randy Sapah-Gulian, chairperson of the FAR Board of
    Directors, said that the entire Armenian-American community has been
    following with serious attention the initiatives of the Armenian
    government, in its effort to normalize diplomatic relations with
    Turkey.

    "Armenians around the world express their views and concerns about it -
    and that is natural, since so much is at stake. However, we hope that
    your visit and meetings here will shed light on the protocols signed
    recently with the Turkish authorities, and give more comfort to our
    communities in supporting the realistic and future-oriented policies
    of the Armenia government," said Mr. Tatosian.

    Mr. Nalbandian thanked the Primate and dinner guests for a warm
    reception, and acknowledged the Diocesan Center as a "bridge between
    Armenia and the diaspora," where dignitaries from Armenia's political,
    cultural, and scientific arenas are always welcomed. "This is a
    house of all Armenians," he said, "and all visitors feel proud at
    this center."

    The foreign minister proceeded to share his views on the most
    sensitive aspects of the protocols, which have generated a great deal
    of reaction around the world. He recounted in considerable detail the
    negotiation process with his Turkish counterparts, which eventually
    led to the initialing of the documents, which he characterized as
    "groundbreaking."

    "In the course of the extensive public discourse around the protocols,
    some allegations are being made that are either inaccurate and do
    not represent reality - or . . . worse, are distorting the essence
    and the letter of the signed protocols," Mr. Nalbandian claimed.

    According to Mr. Nalbandian, the entire negotiating process and the
    final documents were generated at the initiative of the Armenian
    government, and not imposed on the Armenian side, as some have claimed.

    Negotiations without any precondition

    "The history of diplomatic relations proves that all sensitive issues
    between countries could be better resolved at the negotiating table,
    in the framework of mutual respect and trust," stated Mr. Nalbandian
    in his address to the guests at the Diocesan Center.

    "We have never shied away from declaring on any possible occasion,
    from any international podium, that Armenia does have unresolved issues
    with our neighbor, including the recognition of the Genocide," he said.

    "We have made it absolutely clear to our Turkish counterparts, and
    no preconditions were ever discussed or agreed upon in the process
    of preparing the protocols."

    Turkey's three preconditions for the opening of the border and
    establishment of diplomatic relations have been (a) recognition by
    Armenia of the current borders and Turkey's territorial integrity,
    (b) an end to the campaign for universal affirmation of the Armenian
    Genocide, and (c) withdrawal of Armenian forces from territories
    claimed by Azerbaijan. The protocols explicitly recognize the
    current border and Turkey's territorial integrity. They provide for
    a commission to examine historial issues; Turkey has sought such a
    commission as a way of casting doubt on the Genocide. The protocols
    do not link normalization of relations to developments in Karabakh,
    but the Turkish prime minister has stated as recently as last week that
    Turkey would not open the border without that precondition being met.

    Mr. Nalbandian continued: "The establishment of diplomatic relations
    between our two states will set the start for a long-term dialogue
    between the diplomats and representative authorities, during which
    the two countries will seek a resolution to many historic, and new,
    bilateral problems."

    An open and cordial question-and-answer session followed
    Mr. Nalbandian's formal remarks. Guests at the dinner, representing
    a cross-section of the American-Armenian community, raised their own
    concerns and asked the foreign minister to clarify numerous matters
    that had been circulated about the protocols.

    Mr. Nalbandian fielded every question, and even shared intimate
    details about the documents and the processes and negotiations behind
    their preparation.

    "Some critics - either not deliberately, or with an obvious political
    intent - are claiming to see things that are not in these documents,
    and have never even been discussed in the negotiations," Mr. Nalbandian
    said.

    "Contrary to what is being speculated, no one-sided concessions,
    no hidden or open preconditions, were made by the Armenian side. The
    documents have clearly stated what has been achieved at the negotiating
    table:

    All issues of bilateral relations would become agenda items of
    further negotiations between the two governments, after the diplomatic
    relations between Armenia and Turkey are established, and the borders
    are open." said Mr. Nalbandian.
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