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ANKARA: Turkish PM Erdogan Makes Gesture To Armenia Ahead Of US Trip

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  • ANKARA: Turkish PM Erdogan Makes Gesture To Armenia Ahead Of US Trip

    TURKISH PM ERDOGAN MAKES GESTURE TO ARMENIA AHEAD OF US TRIP

    Hurriyet
    April 7 2010
    Turkey

    Progress in repairing Turkish-Armenian relations is showing potential
    again as Turkey's prime minister sends a high-level diplomat to meet
    with leaders of Armenia. Tall hurdles remain, but PM Erdogan says
    there is a good chance for him to meet with the Armenian president
    at an upcoming US conference if there's positive feedback from the
    visiting diplomat

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has dispatched a top Turkish
    diplomat to Yerevan for talks in an effort to revive the stalled
    normalization process between Turkey and Armenia ahead of a key visit
    to Washington next week.

    Turkish Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu met
    Wednesday with Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and was
    also scheduled to meet President Serge Sarkisian, diplomatic sources
    told the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review.

    Speaking in Paris, Erdogan said a possible meeting between himself
    and Sarkisian on the sidelines of an international nuclear security
    summit in Washington on April 12-13 depended on a positive response
    from Armenia.

    Sinirlioglu, who conducted talks in Yerevan as the prime minister's
    special envoy, delivered Erdogan's letter to Armenian officials and
    was exploring the possibilities of an Erdogan-Sarkisian meeting.

    Ankara to Yerevan: 'We're ready to talk'

    Diplomatic sources contacted by the Daily News said the letter included
    Turkey's commitment to the two protocols signed between Ankara and
    Yerevan in October 2009 to establish diplomatic relations, Turkey's
    resolve to move forward with the normalization process and Ankara's
    readiness to discuss ways to remove the existing obstacles.

    Ankara's major concern stems from a January ruling of a top Armenian
    court which ruled that the protocols were compatible with the Armenian
    Constitution but said they could not contradict Yerevan's official
    position that the 1915 killings of Armenians amount to "genocide,"
    a label fiercely rejected by Ankara. In the protocols, Turkey has
    proposed the establishment of a joint history commission to study
    genocide allegations.

    Armenia claims up to 1.5 million Armenians were systematically killed
    in 1915 during the Ottoman Empire. Turkey has denied this, saying any
    deaths were the result of civil strife that erupted when Armenians
    took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    In order to come to force, the Turkish-Armenian deals need
    parliamentary ratification in the two countries' parliaments, yet
    the process has been held up by a blame game.

    The process has been further marred by subsequent "genocide"
    resolutions passed last month by a United States House panel and the
    Swedish parliament, both of which labeled the 1915 events as genocide.

    'Objective is normalization'

    Despite that, Ankara says the protocols are not dead but wants the
    elements in the Armenian court ruling to be corrected for progress
    in the normalization process.

    "The objective is to normalize our relationship with Armenia," said
    a senior Turkish diplomat to the Daily News, speaking on condition
    of anonymity.

    "The [normalization] process had already begun before Obama came to
    power in the United States," said the diplomat, referring to a longer
    phase of secret negotiations between the two countries' diplomats
    under Swiss mediation in 2007.

    Open dialogue welcomed

    Analysts welcomed the Turkish initiative to send an envoy to Yerevan as
    a willingness to keep bilateral channels open in a "multi-actor game."

    "Turkey is aware of the fact that it needs to take a step to refresh
    the process because the blame policy has backfired," said Burcu
    Gultekin Punsmann, a Caucasus expert at Ankara think tank TEPAV. "The
    ball is in Turkey's court," she argued.

    Kamer Kasım, from the International Strategic Research Organisation,
    or USAK, another Ankara think tank, said he believed the Armenian
    court ruling had left the protocols empty but still considered the
    Turkish diplomat's trip to Yerevan as positive.

    "This is an important initiative before Erdogan's Washington visit,
    both to keep the pulse in Yerevan and to show Ankara's readiness to
    engage in direct dialogue with Armenia," he said.

    Erdogan-Obama meeting not yet clear

    While the Erdogan-Sarkisian meeting depends on a response from Yerevan,
    it is not yet clear whether Erdogan will hold talks with U.S.

    President Barack Obama next week during the nuclear summit. The
    White House announced Obama is currently planning to host a number
    of bilateral meetings, one of which is with Sarkisian.

    However, the final list of bilateral meetings and participating
    countries is still pending. According to the current list, Azerbaijan
    will not be represented at the summit, leading to speculation that
    the U.S. is seeking ways to eliminate Baku's pressure on Turkey
    for progress in the Turkish-Armenian normalization. U.S. diplomatic
    sources, however, earlier denied the speculation, saying the U.S. and
    Azerbaijan were working closely on a wide range of areas, including
    the Minsk process designed to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem.

    Ankara responds to EU official's remarks

    Foreign Ministry spokesman Burak Ozugergin said Wednesday that Turkey
    has been displaying strong determination from the outset of talks in
    an effort to normalize its relationship with Armenia under the vision
    of regional peace, stability and harmonization.

    "It is not necessary to remind Turkey of the mission it has already
    shouldered," the spokesman said in a written statement.

    His remarks come in response to EU Enlargement Commissioner Stefan
    Fule who urged Tuesday Turkey with reconciliation efforts with Armenia
    and linked the issue with Ankara's EU membership bid.

    "Good relations with neighbors are very important in the framework
    of any country's entry to the European Union," Fule was quoted as
    saying in Yerevan.
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