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Turkey, Armenia Move To Establish Ties

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  • Turkey, Armenia Move To Establish Ties

    TURKEY, ARMENIA MOVE TO ESTABLISH TIES
    by Huma Yusuf

    Christian Science Monitor
    September 1, 2009, Tuesday

    A daily summary of global reports on security issues.

    Turkey and Armenia announced in a joint statement Monday the launch
    of talks aimed at establishing diplomatic ties. The announcement
    is the first concrete step toward normalizing relations since the
    two countries announced that they would resume ties in April this
    year. The negotiations, which are being mediated by Switzerland,
    mark a thaw in relations between the neighbors after a century of
    animosity. Turkey and Armenia have never had diplomatic ties; in 1993,
    Turkey closed the border with Armenia in support of Azerbaijan, which
    was fighting Armenia over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh at the time.

    Analysts say Turkey's improved relations with Armenia will help
    consolidate its position as a regional power. According to Public
    Radio of Armenia, Turkey and Armenia will engage in consultations
    on two protocols - promoting diplomatic relations and developing
    bilateral ties. The talks are expected to last six weeks, after
    which both countries will submit the protocols to their respective
    parliaments to be ratified. The border between the two countries is
    expected to open within two months, reports Reuters. The New York
    Times reports that the talks will not touch on arguably the most
    divisive issue between the two countries: the killing of more than 1
    million Armenians under Turkish Ottoman rule between 1915 and 1918,
    which the present-day Turkish government does not recognize as
    genocide. Recently, Armenian President Serge Sarkisian indicated
    that Turkey's recognition of genocide is not a precondition for
    establishing relations. The Swiss-mediated talks began last year,
    keeping a low profile to avoid exciting nationalist antagonism in
    both countries. Armenia's insistence that border and trade relations
    be normalized before any discussion of genocide began helped push
    the most contentious issue to the back burner. Although the debate
    about the World War I-era killings will not be touched upon, the talks
    could still face obstacles, reports the Associated Press. In Turkey,
    nationalist sentiment and suspicion about Armenian intentions is
    particularly high. Also, despite an agreement that the process should
    proceed without preconditions, Turkey's prime minister has linked it
    to a resolution of the dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh, an Azeri region
    that was occupied by Armenian troops. Trend News Agency, a Baku-based
    news organization serving the Caucasus and Caspian region, reports that
    the Armenian opposition party, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation,
    will likely pressure the government to remain restrained in its
    dealings with Ankara. Despite these hurdles, analysts in Armenia are
    optimistic that the talks will lead to improved bilateral relations,
    reports A1 Plus, a Yerevan-based news channel. An analysis in The
    Economist suggests that improved relations with Armenia are part
    of Turkey's foreign policy strategy under Foreign Minister Ahmet
    Davutoglu. [Mr. Davutoglu's] approach rests on two pillars. One is
    to have "zero problems" with the neighbours, many of them troubled or
    troublesome. The other is "strategic depth". This calls for a Turkish
    zone of political, economic and cultural influence, primarily among
    neighbours (many of them former Ottoman dominions) in the Balkans, the
    south Caucasus and the Middle East. On the issue of Turkish-Armenian
    relations, The Economist also suggests that Turkey's relations with
    the United States may have instilled a willingness to negotiate. Mr
    Davutoglu insists that Turkey wants peace with Armenia. But one
    Western diplomat says that "rapprochement with Armenia is on its
    last legs." This has raised the spectre of a row with Turkey's most
    powerful ally, America. Armenian-Americans want Mr Obama to honour
    his election pledge to insist that the massacre by Ottoman forces of
    more than a million of their ancestors in 1915 was genocide.
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