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Turkey And Armenia Take Step Toward Diplomatic Ties

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  • Turkey And Armenia Take Step Toward Diplomatic Ties

    TURKEY AND ARMENIA TAKE STEP TOWARD DIPLOMATIC TIES
    By Yigal Schleifer

    The Christian Science Monitor
    October 9, 2009 edition

    US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will attend the Zurich signing
    that moves the neighbors toward opening their border. They have long
    been at odds over the issue of the Armenian genocide.

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    Istanbul - In what could signal a watershed moment for the troubled
    Caucasus region, Turkey and Armenia are expected to sign a set of
    protocols in Zurich Saturday that will lead toward the renewal of
    diplomatic relations after decades of hostility.

    Along with the Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers, US Secretary
    of State Hillary Clinton and her French and Russian counterparts are
    expected to attend the signing ceremony.

    But experts warn that serious hurdles stand in the way of the two
    countries actually opening up their borders.

    Ankara and Yerevan broke off relations in 1993 when Turkey closed
    its border with Armenia after it invaded the Azerbaijani territory
    of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Turkey is Azerbaijan's strongest ally. But the animosity goes backs
    decades further to what Armenia alleges was the genocide of an
    estimated 1.5 million Armenians under the Ottoman Turks during World
    War I.

    Turkey admits a significantly lower number of Armenians were
    killed, but fiercely rejects suggestions that the killings were
    genocide. Ankara argues the deaths were a result of a civil uprising
    when Armenians joined forces with invading Russians.

    Protocols may not pass in parliaments

    The protocols to be signed call for the renewal of diplomatic ties,
    the opening of the common border, and the establishment of a historical
    commission to investigate the events during World War I.

    The only catch, analysts point out, is that the protocols will only
    go into effect once the parliaments in both countries ratify them. In
    both Turkey and Armenia, domestic opposition could stand in the way
    of that happening.

    "The road to restoring Turkish-Armenian relations is rocky," says
    Amanda Akcakoca, a Turkey expert at the European Policy Centre,
    a Brussels-based think tank. "Signing it is not the same thing as
    having it ratified in parliament. That's going to be the hard part."

    In Turkey, the Nagorno-Karabakh issue could stand in the way of the
    protocols' ratification. Ankara imposed its economic blockade on
    Armenia in 1993 to support Baku's efforts to retain control over
    Karabakh.

    During a May 14 address to the Azerbaijani parliament, Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan declared "that the border between Turkey
    and Armenia will be open only after the full liberation of Azerbaijani
    occupied territories."

    Although the recently released protocols make no mention of a
    linkage between the normalization of Turkish-Armenian ties and the
    Nagorno-Karabakh peace process, parliamentarians from the ruling
    Justice and Development Party (AKP) have warned that it would be hard
    to pass the protocols without any progress on Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Meanwhile, as it deals with Turkey, the Armenian government has had to
    contend with strong opposition, both domestically and from its large
    diaspora, which is concerned that Turkey is getting a free pass on
    the genocide issue.

    Reconciliation boosts both countries in region

    Observers say restoring relations with Turkey would bring Armenia out
    of its isolation in the region and could provide the cash-strapped
    country with new economic opportunities.

    For Turkey, an EU-candidate country that has ambitions to play a
    larger political and diplomatic role in the surrounding region and
    to establish itself as an important energy transit route, restoring
    ties with Armenia is also critical.

    "The invasion of Georgia last summer really concentrated minds in
    the region. Energy routes are the biggest game in town, and you need
    security and stability and access for that. Restoring relations with
    Armenia can create all kinds of synergy for regional cooperation
    and stability," says Semih Idiz, a foreign affairs columnist for the
    Turkish daily newspaper Milliyet.

    "Restoring relations brings more credibility for the role that Turkey
    wants to play in the region. It brings credibility to the vision of
    zero problems with neighbors and for cooperating in the region and
    Turkey gains credibility in terms of its EU dimension."
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