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  • Ex-FM Of Armenia: Armenian-Turkish Protocols Have Already Damaged Ar

    EX-FM OF ARMENIA: ARMENIAN-TURKISH PROTOCOLS HAVE ALREADY DAMAGED ARMENIA'S POSITIONS ON THE THREE MOST SIGNIFICANT ISSUES OF NATIONAL SECURITY AND NATIONAL IDENTITY

    ArmInfo
    2009-10-14 15:53:00

    ArmInfo. Ex-Foreign Minister of Armenia Vartan Oskanyan thinks that the
    Armenian-Turkish protocols have already damaged, possibly irrevocably,
    Armenia's positions on the three most significant issues of national
    security and national identity. Ex-FM of Armenia expressed his opinion
    in the Article published in today's issue of Aravot newspaper.

    "We want the documents that define our reciprocal relationship to be
    respectful, farsighted and most of all, sustainable. These protocols
    are not. Moreover, the protocols have already damaged Armenia's
    positions on the three most significant issues of national security
    and national identity", Oskanyan thinks. According to him, first,
    they will hamper the resolution of the Karabakh conflict. "The reason
    for this is simple. Any Armenian insistence of no-linkage between
    Armenia-Turkey and Armenian-Azerbaijani is not credulous. The linkage
    between the Turkey border opening and the resolution of the Karabakh
    conflict was clear from the beginning. Now, it's inarguable. If the
    presence of the Minsk Group co-chair countries' foreign ministers
    at the signing wasn't enough, there were the last minute frantic
    attempts at the signing ceremony to prevent Turkey from speaking of
    that linkage at that forum. But the coup de grace was the Turkish
    Prime Minister's unequivocal conditional announcement the day after,
    buttressed by the strength of his ruling party whose meeting had just
    concluded, that the Turkish Parliament won't ratify these protocols
    until territories are returned", Oskanyan said. "Any acceptable
    resolution will require certain compromise on the Armenian side -
    including compromise on the territories surrounding Karabakh. Many
    would say that such compromise would have been necessary eventually
    regardless of Armenia-Turkey relations. This is true.

    But in this conditional environment, when Turkey at every opportunity
    refers to the return of territories without the resolution of
    Karabakh's status, even the most reasonable compromise that Armenia
    would have been prepared to make will be more difficult for this or
    any administration to make, because it will be viewed domestically
    as a concession made under pressure, in exchange for open borders,
    not for the independence of Karabakh. Even if the Turkish parliament
    ratifies the protocols and opens the border with the mere expectation
    that Armenians will return those territories in the near future, still,
    in the context of the forceful and repeated admonitions by the Turkish
    leadership, those expectations will themselves become conditions that
    the border opening was in exchange for possible future concessions",
    Oskanyan added. "Second, the nature of the genocide debate has been
    deeply altered.

    The ink on the protocols was not even dry before major news outlets
    and international figures began to couch their terminology, retreating
    from the use of the term genocide, citing the protocol's provisions
    that a commission will determine what the events of 1915 really
    were. Armenians will now be dragged into a new cycle of denial -
    struggling against the machinery of a state bent on rewriting history
    and consolidating the consequences of genocide", Oskanyan said.

    Finally, this document succeeds in touching what had heretofore
    been a dormant but sensitive issue - the subject of borders and
    territorial claims.

    No Armenian administration had ever made such a claim of Turkey. Today,
    this sensitive issue has become a front-line issue. When Turkish
    Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu says these protocols reaffirm the
    provisions of the Lausanne Treaty, that means the issue of reparation
    and compensation is now on the table. I do not demand my ancestral
    home in Marash, but if that demand were really so illusive, then why
    is Turkey forcing me to renounce my historic links with that home?

    It is important to understand that the claim on land is not merely
    a sentimental issue having to do with Armenian properties in Turkey
    100 years ago. The issue of lands is also an important element of
    the Karabakh conflict. If a mere 100 years later, Turkey is able to
    formalize and legalize its control of lands taken forcibly, then what's
    to prevent Armenians from waiting if that offers them the opportunity
    to formalize their control of the lands surrounding Karabakh?

    On Saturday, October 10, we heard President Sargsyan's address to the
    Armenian people, issued just hours ahead of the scheduled signing,
    the content of which was directly contradictory to the content of
    the protocols.

    It can even be said that the president's arguments were the best
    reasons to reject the protocols. The address insisted that there are
    irrefutable realities and we have undeniable rights; the protocols on
    the other hand question the first and eliminate the second. Armenia,
    without cause and without necessity, conceded its historic rights,
    both regarding genocide recognition and what the address so justly
    called 'hayrenazrkum' - a denial and dispossession of our patrimony.

    The administration said one thing and signed another. Normalization
    of Armenia-Turkey relations, as an idea even, has been discredited.

    The processes - both Armenia-Turkey, and the Karabakh peace talks -
    are going to become more complicated and more intense, and not at all
    to our advantage. If Armenia does not bring this process to a halt, and
    return to square one, the consequences will be grave not just for the
    administration, but for the Armenian people", ex-FM of Armenia said.
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