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ANKARA: Will the Armenia-Turkey drama have a happy ending?

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  • ANKARA: Will the Armenia-Turkey drama have a happy ending?

    Hurriyet Daily News , Turkey
    Oct 23 2009


    Will the Armenia-Turkey drama have a happy ending?

    Friday, October 23, 2009
    By Mansur Aslanov


    If the extent of public confusion is adopted as a measure of success,
    then the Armenia-Turkey conversation clearly qualifies, based on the
    contradictory and conflicting statements coming from both the Armenian
    and Turkish leaders.

    The most recent major episode in this saga was Armenian President
    Sarkisian's visit to Bursa for a soccer game between the two countries
    last week. Absurdity abounded: The two presidents sat together on
    Swarovski-encrusted thrones, while Turkish nationalists plottedd to
    fly into the stadium on a hang glider with an Azerbaijani flag as a
    reaction to the flag being banned from the game. The founders of the
    first Azerbaijan republic of 1918-1920 protected the flag of Turkey
    throughout Soviet rule, while in the game with Armenia, an Azerbaijani
    flag was trampled on the ground by the Turkish police after protestors
    were caught trying to smuggle it in. The image naturally provoked
    outrage in Azerbaijan.

    Ankara's openness to talking with the Armenians is a welcome change,
    which reflects new confidence and maturity of Turkish society.
    However, this is being coupled with naïveté in Ankara's regional
    policies. Most likely, this reflects a slightly superficial and
    abstract vision of foreign policy colored by ideological stereotypes
    and, as a result, a failure to see that practice doesn't always live
    up to theoretical constructs.

    The consequences are already visible: the frosty response from Baku,
    the growing tension in the region and rapidly fading hopes for
    expanding the strategic East-West natural-gas corridor. Opening the
    border between Armenia and Turkey at this time is not worth these
    consequences. Right now, opening the border between Turkey and Armenia
    would just move a sealed border further east by some hundred
    kilometers at the expense of alienating Azerbaijan, further weakening
    Georgia and cutting off strategic access to Central Asia. This is a
    good deal for Moscow, which controls much of Armenia's economy and for
    whom the country has long become a burden in search of a new sponsor.
    For Ankara, this doesn't look that appealing. Turkey is, at the
    moment, spending credit from the past, when Azerbaijan and Georgia saw
    Turkey as a more predictable and less haphazard partner. Ironically,
    Turkey's strategic value was greatly boosted by the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and Caspian gas pipelines, whereas today the
    policy Turkey is pursuing is at odds with the policy that paved the
    way for Ankara's success and strength.

    This goes to the emerging pattern of stereotypes and naïveté in
    foreign policy. Being inclusive of Turkey's own Muslim identity
    doesn't necessarily require one to immediately bash Israel and playing
    nice to Moscow shouldn't mean turning a cold shoulder on another
    traditionally friendly neighbor, Georgia. Inviting the Armenian
    President to a soccer match and instigating the necessary and overdue
    discussion of Anatolia's convoluted history certainly should not come
    with the price tag of insulting and striking a blow to the interests
    of fraternal Azerbaijan.

    A pattern of contradictions and naïveté is emerging in Turkey's
    foreign policy. Why would Turkey express its emotionally charged
    disapproval over the tragic events in Gaza, which do truly deserve
    condemnation, while so warmly welcoming Serj Sarkisian, who confessed
    publicly to his participation in the Khojaly massacre? By the way,
    while Gaza is still populated by Palestinians and led by Hamas, no
    Azerbaijanis live in Khojaly or on any Azerbaijani territories
    occupied by Armenian forces.

    For Mr. Sarkisian, this is partly a quest for legitimizing his own
    rule, marred by unprecedented post-election violence last year in
    Yerevan, when at least 10 protesters were shot point-blank by security
    forces. He finally received the coveted Obama phone call and was
    clearly treated better in Turkey than anywhere else in the world,
    including Armenia and Russia. Of course, Mr. Sarkisian can be
    negotiated with and even attend soccer games. However, the image of
    Turkish hospitality was an overstep, which raised the question of
    whether Turkey is trying to irritate Azerbaijan as a tactic so that
    Baku's frustrated response can in turn justify the ratification of the
    protocols with Armenia, without any progress on the Nagorno-Karabakh
    talks. If so, it would be a short-sighted tactic. In one lesson of
    history, in 1938, then British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain
    signed an agreement condoning Hitler's occupation of Czechoslovakia,
    hoping for peace; instead, he just paved a way for a greater war. The
    real issues of occupation and aggression won't go away simply because
    it is convenient at the moment to ignore them.

    For every country, mistakenly projecting domestic perceptions or
    ideology onto actual foreign policy decisions is ultimately costly. As
    the Russians, Iranians, and others have learned, the Caucasus is not a
    playground for testing abstract theories, but an actual and vital
    global strategic hub. Turkey can and should play this round very
    wisely to succeed. However, the visible overconfidence, misreading the
    magnitude of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue for Azerbaijan and the actual
    threat it poses to the region, and the lack of a rational cost-benefit
    analysis of trading Azerbaijan for Armenia in Turkey's national
    interests, as well as surprising obliviousness to the significance of
    Azerbaijan's national flag to the public sentiment, are just a few of
    the clear warning signs pointing to Ankara's potential lack of the
    preparedness for the high-stakes game it is attempting to play.

    *Mansur Aslanov is a free-lance writer based in Baku, Azerbaijan.

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.ph p?n=will-there-be-a-happy-end-for-the-armenia-turk ey-drama-2009-10-23
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