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Turkey, Armenia Prepare to Take Step Toward Reconciliation

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  • Turkey, Armenia Prepare to Take Step Toward Reconciliation

    Turkey, Armenia Prepare to Take Step Toward Reconciliation

    Wall Street Journal
    EUROPE NEWS OCTOBER 10, 2009

    By MARC CHAMPION

    Turkey and Armenia look set to sign an accord Saturday aimed at reopening
    their shared border and establishing diplomatic relations, a move backed by
    the U.S. and European Union with potentially sweeping consequences for the
    region.

    But Saturday's agreement, though important, would be just a step toward
    those goals. It would also do little to end a corrosive dispute between the
    two nations over whether the World War I-era massacre of up to 1.5 million
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire was genocide.

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is due to attend the signing ceremony in
    Zurich Saturday, reflecting the Obama administration's involvement in trying
    to improve a broken relationship that has long complicated U.S. ties with
    Turkey, an important U.S. ally in the Middle East and a North Atlantic
    Treaty Organization member.


    On Thursday and Friday, in an important piece of the accord's choreography,
    the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan met in Moldova for talks aimed at
    resolving their conflict over Nagorno Karabakh, a largely ethnic-Armenian
    enclave within Azerbaijan that broke away with Armenian military aid in the
    early 1990s.

    A statement by the Minsk Group -- France, Russia and the U.S. -- which
    mediates the negotiations, described the talks as constructive. But Azeri
    President Ilham Aliyev, who has pushed Turkey not to sign the accord until
    Armenia agrees to a resolution of the Karabakh dispute, told Azeri
    television that the talks had made no progress, Russian news agency Interfax
    reported.

    Diplomats familiar with preparations said the signing in Zurich would go
    ahead on Saturday, although debate was continuing over how the ceremony,
    very sensitive on both sides of the border, would be presented.

    Turkey wants to stress linkage between the border opening and resolution of
    the Karabakh conflict by having the Minsk Group present, Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a recent interview with The Wall Street
    Journal. Armenia doesn't want the group there.

    Mrs. Clinton's planned attendance has some American Armenians up in arms. "I
    don't think Clinton should be there," said Ken Hachikian, chairman of the
    Armenian National Committee of America. "The U.S. is twisting Armenia's arm
    very hard to accept this. ... Why? Because they want Turkey to have a way
    out of recognizing genocide, and to get into the EU."

    Many Armenians object to clauses in the accord that recognize the current
    border and set up a historical commission to examine disputes, likely to
    include the 1915 massacres. Turkey, which demanded the commission, disputes
    the killings amounted to genocide.

    Some Armenians say they are willing to back the rapprochement with Turkey,
    arguing that it will ease the country's isolation. "This will test the
    courage of Turkey and whether they are sincere about the process. ... We
    expect the border to open without any preconditions," said Anthony
    Barsamian, an executive board member of the Armenian Assembly of America.
    Mr. Barsamian said he hoped the deal would free President Barack Obama to
    follow through with his campaign pledge to allow U.S. recognition of the
    genocide.

    It is the Karabakh issue, however, that is likely to hold up implementation
    of the agreement, analysts and diplomats say. After the document is signed,
    it will need to be ratified by both parliaments to take effect, a process
    that could be drawn out by either side.

    "It is a significant event, but there is a way to go," Thomas de Waal, who
    wrote a book on the Karabakh conflict, said of the signing. Turkey closed
    the border in 1993 to protest what it saw as Armenia's occupation of 20% of
    Azerbaijan's territory. Mr. Erdogan, the Turkish leader, has said he won't
    open the border until the conflict is resolved.

    Write to Marc Champion at [email protected]
    Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A10
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