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  • Turkey, Armenia to Reopen Border

    Turkey, Armenia to Reopen Border

    Wall Street Journal
    EUROPE NEWSOCTOBER 11, 2009

    A WALL STREET JOURNAL NEWS ROUNDUP

    ZURICH--Turkey and Armenia signed an accord Saturday to establish diplomatic
    relations after a century of enmity, as U.S. Secretary of State Hillary
    Rodham Clinton helped the two sides clear a last-minute snag.

    The Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers signed the agreement in the Swiss
    city of Zurich after a late dispute over the final statements they would
    make.

    Officials said Mrs. Clinton and mediators from Switzerland intervened to
    help broker a solution.

    The accord is expected to win ratification from both nations' parliaments
    and could lead to a reopening of their border that has been closed for 16
    years. But nationalists on both sides are still seeking to derail
    implementation of the deal.


    Better ties between Turkey, a regional heavyweight, and poor, landlocked
    Armenia are a priority for U.S. President Barack Obama. They could help
    reduce tensions in the troubled Caucasus region and facilitate its role as a
    corridor for energy supplies bound for the West.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey was taking steps
    with "goodwill" to restore ties with Armenia but that it was keen on seeing
    Armenian troops withdrawn from Nagorno Karabakh.

    "We are trying to boost our relations with Armenia in a way that will cause
    no hard feelings for Azerbaijan," Mr. Erdogan told reporters in Turkey.

    Mr. Erdogan said Turkey's relations with Armenia after the agreement is
    signed Saturday will run parallel to the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict.

    Switzerland, which mediated six weeks of talks between Turkey and Armenia to
    reach the accord, is hosting the signing.

    The contentious issue of whether the killing of as many as 1.5 million
    Armenians during the final days of the Ottoman Empire amounted to genocide
    is only hinted at in the agreement, which calls for diplomatic ties for the
    first time and the opening of the border within two months.

    The foreign ministers of both countries are expected to sign the deal and
    both parliaments are expected to ratify it.

    Necati Cetinkaya, a deputy chairman of Turkey's ruling Justice and
    Development Party, defended the deal, saying "sincere steps that are being
    taken will benefit Turkey." He said Turkey is aiming to form friendly ties
    with all its neighbors and could benefit from trade with Armenia.

    But Yilmaz Ates of the main opposition Republican People's Party said Turkey
    should avoid any concessions.

    "If Armenia wants to repair relations...then it should end occupation of
    Nagorno Karabakh, that's it," Mr. Ates said Saturday.

    About 10,000 protesters rallied Friday in Armenia's capital to oppose the
    signing.

    The agreement calls for a panel to discuss "the historical dimension"--a
    reference to the genocide issue--that will include "an impartial scientific
    examination of the historical records and archives to define existing
    problems and formulate recommendations."

    That clause is viewed as a concession to Turkey because Armenia has said
    genocide was confirmed by international historians, and further discussion
    could lead to deadlock. Turkey denies genocide, contending the toll is
    inflated and those killed were victims of civil war.

    Another source of dispute is Nagorno Karabakh, an enclave in Azerbaijan that
    is occupied by Armenian troops. Turks have close cultural and linguistic
    ties with Azerbaijan, which is pressing Turkey for help in recovering its
    land. Turkey shut its border with Armenia to protest the Armenian invasion
    of Nagorno Karabakh in 1993.

    Turkey wants Armenia to withdraw some troops from the enclave area to show
    goodwill and speed the opening of their joint border, but Armenia has yet to
    agree, said Omer Taspinar, Turkey project director at the Brookings
    Institution in Washington.

    "We may end up in a kind of awkward situation where there are diplomatic
    relations, but the border is still closed," Mr. Taspinar said.
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