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Protocols Could Be A Major Headache For Turkey: Zaman

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  • Protocols Could Be A Major Headache For Turkey: Zaman

    PROTOCOLS COULD BE A MAJOR HEADACHE FOR TURKEY: ZAMAN

    News.am
    12:16 / 10/15/2009

    Armenia-Turkey Protocols will become the matter of the various
    discussions and forecasts also after being signed in Zurich October
    10. Commenting on the problem, political analyst Emre Uslu draws
    attention at TV debates of four Turkish politicians, two of them are
    liberals and the rest nationalists.

    Nationalists claim that Protocols are "a major failure for Turkish
    diplomacy," bringing the signing ceremony as an argument.

    "What they were arguing was that the photograph, which shows the
    Turkish foreign minister and the Armenian foreign minister signing
    the protocols while right behind them the US, Russian, and French
    foreign ministers were standing, gives you an impression that these
    protocols were signed under the pressure of superpowers; therefore, the
    protocols do not serve Turkey's national interest.," the author says.

    NEWS.am issues the full text published in Zaman daily below:

    "I have been hearing such arguments from various segments'
    nationalists; however, similar arguments that resonate from the
    two influential neo-nationalist figures give me an impression that
    diplomats in the Turkish Foreign Ministry, although putting forth
    superb work on signing protocols, failed to find a way to manage
    public diplomacy inside Turkey.

    For instance it was Turkish diplomats' idea to invite member of the
    Minsk Group, i.e., the US, Russia and France, to the signing ceremony
    to relate the Karabakh issue to the protocols. Armenians initially
    opposed inviting the US, Russia and France to the ceremony to avoid
    giving the impression that the protocols signed between Turkey and
    Armenia were being linked to the Karabakh dispute. Yet it was a success
    that Turkish diplomats managed to invite members of the Minsk Group
    to the signing ceremony; however, this success of Turkish diplomacy
    is not going against the policy of the Turkish Foreign Ministry. Thus
    I suggest that Turkish diplomats should find a way to deal with the
    lunatics, includ understand what is going on in foreign policy.

    The second argument that has been circulated among nationalist
    circles is what if the international community put pressure on Turkey
    without putting pressure on Armenia to solve the Karabakh dispute
    to ratify the protocols. Given that concerning the Cyprus problem,
    the international community, especially the EU, without keeping its
    promises to stop the isolation of Northern Cyprus, has been increasing
    its pressure on Turkey to open its ports to ships that carry Greek
    Cypriot flags, saying such a scenario could be possible. However,
    Turkish diplomacy once again fails to convince the Turkish public
    that the Cyprus problem and the problem in Karabakh are two separate
    problems and that such a comparison has no merit.

    In Cyprus, the international community considers Turkey an invader who
    tries to take advantage of international politics for its national
    gain; however, concerning the Karabakh issue it is the Armenians
    who are considered an invader that needs to cooperate with the
    international community. Thus in a case where the international
    community decides to put pressure on Turkey to ratify the signed
    protocols, Turkey would have power to say that it is the Armenians who
    invaded the Azeri lands; therefore, we are expecting its cooperation
    with international community, i.e., the Minsk Group to find a solution
    for the Karabakh dispute first.

    Related to the second argument some argue that the powerful Armenian
    Diaspora could use its influence over states like the US, Russia and
    France to put pressure on Turkey to ratify the protocols before finding
    a solution to Karabakh, thereby aiming to separate Azerbaijan-Turkey
    alliances against Armenia. To counter this argument one could suggest
    that it is the Armenian Diaspora who vehemently opposes the protocol;
    therefore, it would be illogical to expect the Diaspora to change its
    position. More importantly the power of the Diaspora comes from the
    victimization argument that has been developed against the Turkish
    state since g the Karabakh issue it is the Armenians who victimized
    Azeri civilians when they invaded Azeri lands. For this very reason,
    the Armenian Diaspora has a tendency to avoid being involved in the
    Karabakh dispute to mount pressure on foreign powers.

    All in all, despite their shortcomings in managing the political
    debates more positively, Turkish diplomats have successfully carved
    out two protocols that give a huge advantage to Turkish and Azeri
    causes. Yet success of implementation of the protocols depends on how
    and in what direction the international developments will evolve in
    the near future. Given that there are too many unknowns in the region,
    i.e., whether Iran will cooperate with the international community
    to terminate its Uranium enrichment program, whether Russia will
    continue to support Iran, how the energy policies would change the
    attitudes of international players, it could be a wise policy for
    Turkish diplomacy to apply pressure on the Minsk Group to finalize
    the Karabakh disputes sooner than later. The sooner the Karabakh
    dispute is solved the better it is for Turkey to collect the fruits
    of the protocols. If the Karabakh disputes continue, the protocols
    could be a major headache for Turkey as well..."
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