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  • ANKARA: Government steps timely but not risk-free, analysts say

    Turkish Daily News

    Government steps timely but not risk-free, analysts say

    Friday, September 25, 2009

    FULYA Ã-ZERKAN - Ä°ZGÄ° GÃ`NGÃ-R

    ANKARA - Hürriyet Daily News

    Despite opposition, Ankara has taken consecutive steps toward
    resolving the Kurdish, Armenian and Cyprus issues. Political analysts
    say leaving the three problems unresolved would result in more serious
    consequences rather than any kind of advantage

    The government's policy to settle the three challenging and drawn out
    questions, namely the Armenian, Kurdish and Cyprus issues, is
    considered `proactive' and `timely' given the current global
    conjecture under the new U.S. administration, but it is not risk-free,
    according to political analysts.

    On the Kurdish front, Ankara has pledged to resolve the long-lasting
    issue through a combination of short-, medium- and long-term projects
    in defiance of the opposition. On the Armenian front, it has launched
    a process to normalize ties with Yerevan, which also revived
    international talks under the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation of Europe's Minsk Group for a final settlement to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. And on the Cyprus front, the government
    campaigned for a `yes' vote for a U.N.-backed peace plan and despite
    the plan's failure, Ankara encourages the current negotiations between
    the Cypriot leaders, who are readying for the give-and-take stages in
    October.

    `What are the common denominators of the three problems? As long as
    the three remain on Turkey's agenda, they will all have a negative
    impact on the country's domestic policy, which is a source of
    instability,' veteran diplomat and former Foreign Ministry
    Undersecretary Ã-zdem Sanberk told the Hürriyet Daily News &
    Economic Review.

    He said international conjecture was also suitable for the
    government's `proactive policies' on the three fronts, adding that the
    United States, the EU and Russia remained agnostic or neutral, meaning
    they neither gave open support nor blocked the efforts.

    `Under the current only two options for the government: either leaving
    the frozen conflicts as they are or, despite the lack of support,
    taking further steps to overcome them,' said Sanberk. `The government
    chose the second option and demonstrated the will for peace, though I
    see the chances of success on the three issues as low,' he said.

    The government's steps to solve the three issues have all met with
    harsh criticism from opposition parties and even threatened friendly
    relations with Azerbaijan on the Armenian front, for example.

    `If all three problems could be resolved spontaneously depends on the
    government's will and determination,' said retired ambassador
    Yalım Eralp.

    `On the Armenian issue, the normalization of ties depends on Armenia's
    relations with Azerbaijan, while on the Cyprus problem, the prospects
    for a solution became weaker due to Turkey's own complicated EU
    process,' he said. `The content of the Kurdish plan is not yet clear,
    so it is hard to make an assumption.'

    Conjecture appropriate

    Fuat Keyman, professor of international relations at Koç
    University, said the ball was in Turkey's court, stressing that the
    government should utilize the positive atmosphere initiated by the
    Obama administration.

    `I believe the government will catch some extent of success. There are
    risks but I think the advantages outweigh the disadvantages if Ankara
    manages to turn them into positive results,' he said.

    On the Kurdish issue, he said public support was on the rise despite
    the political opposition, adding that recently established cooperation
    mechanisms with both Syria and Iraq, both of which have Kurdish
    populations, were also a plus.

    `Regarding Armenia, there are problems, but even if Parliament gives
    conditional support to the planned protocols with Yerevan, the process
    has already started,' he said. On Cyprus, Keyman said he believed the
    proactive policy would bear fruit in the end, referring to the Turkish
    prime minister's address to the U.N. Security Council in New York.

    Mensurt Istanbul's Kültür University, said the three problems
    were separate with different interlocutors and solution models.

    `Unilateral moves and goodwill will not be enough for a solution to
    the Armenian and Cyprus problems,' said Akgün. `If the
    pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party [DTP] insists on its current
    approach, the problem will remain unresolved. The Armenians should be
    flexible with the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. Regarding Cyprus, whatever
    action Turkey takes, it is a challenging problem that can only be
    solved with contributions from both Cypriot communities,' he said.
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