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WSJ, ICG And Armenia's Silence: A Familiar Fomula For A Fait Accompl

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  • WSJ, ICG And Armenia's Silence: A Familiar Fomula For A Fait Accompl

    WSJ, ICG AND ARMENIA'S SILENCE: A FAMILIAR FORMULA FOR A FAIT ACCOMPLI
    By Ara Khachatourian

    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/10/07/w sj-icg-and-armenia%e2%80%99s-silence-a-familiar-fo rmula-for-a-fait-accompli/
    Oct 7th, 2009

    A constant has emerged in the suspense/surprise-filled processes that
    have dominated our national agenda this past year. The Wall Street
    Journal and the International Crisis Group have become harbingers of
    sort for heralding a fait accompli for Armenia.

    It was in late March that the Wall Street Journal reported on
    the specifics of what became widely known as the "roadmap" to
    Turkey-Armenia rapprochement. That report was immediately-if not
    simultaneously-followed by a heavily biased report from a so-called
    independent think tank known as the International Crisis Group.

    Both foreshadowed a deal in mid-April that would pave the way for
    the normalization of ties between Armenia and Turkey. Both reports
    were also rife with hints at preconditions, including the need for
    an immediate resolution to the Karabakh conflict, by way of alluding
    to an agreement by Armenian and Azeri leaders about withdrawal of
    Armenian forces from the liberated territories and the establishment
    of a historic commission to study the Armenian Genocide.

    Fast forward to October (the eve of a meeting between Serzh Sarkisian
    and Ilham Aliyev on Thursday in Moldova and a previously announced
    schedule for Armenia and Turkey to sign the protocols on Saturday)
    and the Wall Street Journal prints an interview with Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan who says that protocols will be signed
    regardless of the outcome of the Moldova meeting and the ICG's report
    includes a multi-point assessment, which claims that Armenian and
    Azeri leaders have already "broadly" agreed to a pullout and should
    prepare their respective public for an eventual peace deal.

    Erdogan also said the two processes - a resolution of the Karabakh
    conflict and rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia - remain linked,
    and that a positive outcome at this week's talks, to be held in
    Moldova, would help overall.

    "This is perhaps the most important point - that Armenia should not
    allow its policies to be taken hostage by the Armenian Diaspora,"
    Erdogan told the Wall Street Journal.

    Erdogan also reiterated earlier claims that an agreement has already
    been reached on the withdrawal from five of the seven liberated
    territories, with the fate of Lachin and Kelbajar, reportedly, still
    up in the air.

    On the heels of these reports also came an announcement late Tuesday
    by Turkish President Abdullah Gul, inviting world historians to a
    commission that is tasked to study the Armenian Genocide.

    "There are all sorts of allegations about what happened a century
    ago. It is clear that people who do not know what happened where or
    how are not able to take decisions on this matter," Gul said in an
    interview with Agence France Presse.

    "What we hope is that historians, archive specialists study this matter
    and we are ready to accept the conclusions of this commission. To
    show that we are sincere, we even said that if a third country is
    interested in this matter, if French historians, for example, want
    to take part in this commission, they are welcome," he added on the
    eve of a visit to France.

    President Sarkisian has spent a better part of his week on Diaspora
    tour telling his audiences in Paris, New York, Los Angeles,
    Beirut and the Russian port city of Rostov that such a commission
    is not stipulated in the protocols and assuring that whatever
    historical discussion that is to take place, within the framework
    of Armenia-Turkey ties, would be a discussion of post-Genocide
    historical matters.

    Gul's statements are seen as a direct challenge to Sarkisian's
    assertions during his tour, which was met with angry protests
    during all but one stop: the Russian city of Rostov. There, leading
    Russian-Armenian organizations issued an announcement opposing the
    protocols' provisions that

    If an agreement is to be signed on Saturday clearly there is a major
    disconnect between the signatories.

    While in Beirut, Sarkisian stressed that the recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide is "not only a matter of the restoration of justice,
    but also a major circumstance from the viewpoint of the security of
    Armenia and the Armenian people." "It is a necessity," the president
    stressed.

    Furthermore, he underscored: "The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will
    get a solution only when we see that we've got what our people have
    struggled for since 1988."

    Gul's blatant denial of the Genocide also goes counter to President
    Obama's wide support for the protocols, since he urged Turkey in
    March to come to terms with its own history and acknowledge the past.

    At press time, official Yerevan had no comment.

    It is precisely for these and other more overbearing reasons that
    Armenia should immediately pull out of this process and not enter
    into such a critical agreement so hastily.
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