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Turkey and Armenia sidestep 94-year-old massacre for tentative peace

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  • Turkey and Armenia sidestep 94-year-old massacre for tentative peace

    The Times
    September 2, 2009
    Bronwen Maddox, Chief Foreign Commentator
    Turkey and Armenia sidestep 94-year-old massacre for tentative peace

    It's taken only 94 years to make peace. It might have taken much longer.
    The talks between Turkey and Armenia about whether they can manage something
    like normal relations are probably more symbol than substance. But they
    represent a gesture that might easily not have been made, particularly by
    Turkey. They are an unexpected step towards calm from the tense borderlands
    between Europe and Central Asia.

    They will have an effect in the US, too, where the clash between Armenia and
    Turkey has played to a nationwide, passionate audience, from Congress to the
    singer Cher (who is Armenian). In Europe it might seem like a far-off
    dispute; in the US it is intimate, eating up congressional debates and
    national airtime.

    Even in the European Union it will have an impact greater than this week's
    tentative moves suggest. It will ease Turkey's relations with the EU after
    several years of friction.

    Yet the steps, so far, are small. On Monday the two said that they would
    sign a pact within weeks to talk about resuming ties, although that hurdle
    would need approval by both parliaments. If they get that far, it would end
    nearly a century of animosity that stems from the killing of as many as 1.5
    million Armenians under the Ottoman Empire in 1915, during the First World
    War. Armenia calls it genocide and wants an admission and an apology. Turkey
    maintains that many were killed on each side. There have not been diplomatic
    ties, other than when Armenia was part of the Soviet Union. The border was
    closed during the 1988-94 conflict over the Azerbaijani region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Now the border might open, possibly by the new year, officials on each side
    suggest, although the greater impetus for a deal clearly comes from Armenia.
    It is landlocked, and has an urgent need for trade. As its President, Serzh
    Sargsyan, said yesterday: `Armenia initiated the possibility of normalising
    relations' - adding, grandly but justifiably, that he had done so `with
    dignity as it is appropriate to the civilised world of the 21st century'.

    The agreement, brokered by Swiss officials and taking shape since April,
    baldly leaves aside history, genocide or the frozen Nagorno-Karabakh dispute
    (although Turkey insists progress on this front needs to happen in
    parallel). This is what you might call constructive evasion. We should hope
    that they manage at least to open the border. Allowing everyday contact
    would be an antidote to the understandable difficulty in forgetting who
    slaughtered whom a century ago.

    It would also take the sting out of the repeated eruptions in American
    politics over the issue, powered by the US's large Armenian community. Two
    years ago, President Bush clashed with a Democrat-led House of
    Representatives committee that denounced the 1915 deaths as genocide, even
    though a phalanx of former secretaries of state warned about the impact on
    relations with Turkey, a crucial ally. If Armenia and Turkey can be talked
    down from the embrace of this old conflict, it is even possible that the US
    Congress eventually can, too.
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